But the case could have been different. The need for a deeper reason for the
fascination which the smile of Gioconda exerted on the artist from which he
could not rid himself has been felt by more than one of his biographers. W.
Pater, who sees in the picture of Monna Lisa the embodiment of the entire erotic
experience of modern man, and discourses so excellently on "that unfathomable
smile always with a touch of something sinister in it, which plays over all
Leonardo's work," leads us to another track when he says: cheap oil paintings
"Besides, the picture is a portrait. From childhood we see this image
defining itself on the fabric of his dream; and but for express historical
testimony, we might fancy that this was but his ideal lady, embodied and beheld
at last."
Herzfeld surely must have had something similar in mind when stating that in
Monna Lisa Leonardo encountered himself and therefore found it possible to put so much of his own nature into the
picture, "whose features from time immemorial have been imbedded with mysterious
sympathy in Leonardo's soul." art oil paintings for sale
Let us endeavor to clear up these intimations. It was quite possible that
Leonardo was fascinated by the smile of Monna Lisa, because it had awakened
something in him which had slumbered in his soul for a long time, in all
probability an old memory. This memory was of sufficient importance to stick to
him once it had been aroused; he was forced continually to provide it with new
expression. The assurance of Pater that we can see an image like that of Monna
Lisa defining itself from Leonardo's childhood on the fabric of his dreams,
seems worthy of belief and deserves to be taken literally. large oil paintings on canvas
Vasari mentions as Leonardo's first artistic endeavors, "heads of women who
laugh."The passage, which is beyond suspicion, as it is not meant to prove anything,
reads more precisely as follows:"He formed in his youth some laughing feminine
heads out of lime, which have been reproduced in plaster, and some heads of
children, which were as beautiful as if modeled by the hands of a
master...." flower oil paintings on canvas
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