![]() Because her dazzlingly lit face is basically framed with a variety of much darker elements, the viewer’s attraction to this mysterious woman is increased, but has to stay at a distance as if she were not an ordinary human being. The painting shows the female figure clearly sitting upright with her hands folded only her eyes are fixed on the viewer. The woman’s breast, neck, and face shine in the same light that shapes her hands, and Leonardo efficiently modified the pyramid design so as to create the visual impression of distance between Mona Lisa and the viewer. Leonardo employed a pyramid design technique to position the seated female figure simply and peacefully in the space of the painting in which her folded hands represent the front corner of the pyramid. Currently, the famous portrait is found in the Musée du Louvre in Paris, France. Historians believe that it was transferred from the Louvre to undisclosed location somewhere in the country during the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71). Napoleon had it transferred to the palace for adorning his bedroom and when he was banished from France, the painting yet again returned to the care of the Louvre. ![]() Following the French Revolution, Mona Lisa was taken to the Louvre. It has received the world’s attention since then. Years later, the King of France purchased it for 4,000 gold crowns, supposedly through the successors of Leonardo’s assistant Salai. Since it was its best painting, he went with it throughout his journeys, working and reworking it for almost four years and he kept it himself for some years after, finishing it just before he died in 1525 (Karlz, 2003). ![]() It is believed that Leonardo started working on the portrait in 1503 or 1504 in Italy. Although it was not signed or dated, the novel qualities of the painting has made it to be recognized as the most famous and mystifying work of art of all time. The woman’s smile, often described as enigmatic, is the most intriguing aspect of the painting and it is also the subject of much speculation.
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