Leonardo da Vinci may have drawn 'Nude Mona Lisa,' experts say | Inquirer News

Leonardo da Vinci may have drawn ‘Nude Mona Lisa,’ experts say

/ 12:25 PM September 30, 2017

In this photo provided by the Conde museum, Chateau de Chantilly, and dated Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2017, chief curator of heritage, Bruno Mottin, left, examines a charcoal sketch through a microscope, depicting a nude woman while Mathieu Deldicque, curator at Conde museum, looks on, at the Center for Research and Restoration of the Museums of France in Paris, France. There’s something vaguely familiar about this charcoal sketch of a woman’s face and nude torso as this could be an unclothed precursor to the Mona Lisa? (Domaine de Chantilly via AP)

A nude drawing that bears a striking resemblance to the Mona Lisa masterpiece may have been done by Leonardo da Vinci, experts told AFP.

Scientists at the Louvre in Paris, where his masterpiece is held, have been examining a charcoal drawing known as the “Monna Vanna,” which had been attributed to the Florentine master’s studio.

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The large drawing has been held since 1862 in the huge collection of Renaissance art at the Conde Museum at the palace of Chantilly, north of the French capital.

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Curators from the museum believe that after a month of tests at the Louvre the “drawing is at least in part” by Leonardo.

“The drawing has a quality in the way the face and hands are rendered that is truly remarkable. It is not a pale copy,” museum curator Mathieu Deldicque told AFP.

“We are looking at something which was worked on in parallel with the Mona Lisa at the end of Leonardo’s life,” he added.

“It is almost certainly a preparatory work for an oil painting,” he added, with the obvious inference being that it is closely connected to the Mona Lisa.

Almost identical

The hands and body, Deldicque said, are almost identical to Leonardo’s inscrutable masterpiece.

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The drawing is almost the same size as the Mona Lisa, and small holes pierced around the figure point to the fact it may have been used to trace its form onto a canvas, he argued.

Louvre conservation expert Bruno Mottin confirmed that the drawing dates from Leonardo’s lifetime at the turn of the 15th century and that it was of a “very high quality”.

Tests, he told the Parisien newspaper, had already revealed that it was not a copy of a lost original.

But he said that “we must remain prudent” about definitively attributing it to Leonardo, who died in France in 1519.

“The hatching on the top of the drawing near the head was done by a right-handed person. Leonardo drew with his left hand.

“It is job that is going to take some time,” he added.

“It is a very difficult drawing to work on because it is particularly fragile.”

But Mottin said that they hoped to pin down the identity of the artist within two years, in time for an exhibition at Chantilly to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Leonardo da Vinci’s death.

More than 10 experts have been poring over the drawing for the past few weeks, using a variety of scans and other scientific methods.

Their investigations have been centred on working out if the drawing was made before or after the Mona Lisa, which was painted sometime after 1503.

The Chantilly drawing had originally been attributed to the Tuscan master when it was bought by the Duc d’Aumale in 1862 for 7,000 francs, a substantial sum at the time.

But later specialists had their doubts and thought it more likely that it came from a member of the artist’s studio.

Around 20 paintings and drawings of nude Mona Lisas exist in collections across the world but most have proved very difficult to date.

This sketch, previously attributed to Leonardo’s students, is part of a collection at the Musee Conde du Domaine de Chantilly, north of Paris.

“This drawing is quite mysterious because we know it was made in Italy, maybe in the studio of Leonardo da Vinci or by the master himself,” said Deldicque.

There are tempting clues that Leonardo’s hand could have been behind the sketch.

“For the moment we know that the paper on which this (sketch) is drawn was dated from the time of Leonardo da Vinci…  that is to say the beginning of the 16th century,” Deldicque said in an interview Friday with The Associated Press. “We know that this paper comes from Italy, between Venice and Florence, so it is similar.”

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Art historians believe Leonardo drew or painted a nude version of the Mona Lisa. Deldicque acknowledged that the belief is feeding hopes that the Chantilly museum’s sketch was indeed made by Leonardo’s hand. With a report from Associated Press / jpv

TAGS: art, da Vinci, Mona Lisa, painting

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