SAINT ANNE
The painting of Leonardo which in point of time stands nearest to the Monna
Lisa is the so-called Saint Anne of the Louvre,
representing Saint Anne, Mary and the Christ child. It shows the Leonardesque
smile most beautifully portrayed in the two feminine heads. It is impossible to
find out how much earlier or later than the portrait of Monna Lisa Leonardo
began to paint this picture. As both works extended over years,cheap oil paintings, we may well
assume that they occupied the master simultaneously. But it would best harmonize
with our expectation if precisely the absorption in the features of Monna Lisa
would have instigated Leonardo to form the composition of Saint Anne from his
phantasy. For if the smile of Gioconda had conjured up in him the memory of his
mother, we would naturally understand that he was first urged to produce a
glorification of motherhood, and to give back to her the smile he found in that
prominent lady. We may thus allow our interest to glide over from the portrait
of Monna Lisa to this other hardly less beautiful picture, now also in the
Louvre. abstract oil paintings on canvasSaint Anne with the daughter and grandchild is a subject seldom treated in the Italian art of painting; at all events Leonardo's representationdiffers widely from all that is otherwise known. Muther states:
"Some masters like Hans Fries, the older Holbein, and Girolamo dei Libri, made Anne sit near Mary and placed the child between the two. Others like Jakob Cornelicz in his Berlin pictures, represented Saint Anne as holding in her arm the small figure of Mary upon which sits the still smaller figure of the Christ child." In Leonardo's picture Mary sits on her mother's lap,modern abstract art oil painting, bent forward and is stretching out both arms after the boy who plays with a little lamb, and must have slightly maltreated it. The grandmother has one of her unconcealed arms propped on her hip and looks down on both with a blissful smile. The grouping is certainly not quite unconstrained. But the smile which is playing on the lips of both women, although unmistakably the same as in the picture of Monna Lisa, has lost its sinister and mysterious character; it expresses a calm blissfulness. paintings reproductions
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