In 1500 Leonardo was back again in Florence, and his next important work was
the designing, though probably not the actual painting, of the beautiful picture
in the Louvre, The Virgin and Child with S. Anne, the commission for
which had been given to Filippino Lippi, but resigned by him on Leonardo's
return. In 1501 Isabella d'Este wrote to know whether Leonardo was still in
Florence,oil paintings for sale, and what he was doing, as she wished him to paint a picture for her in
the palace at Mantua, and in the reply of the Vicar-General of the Carmelites we
have a valuable account of the artist and his work. "As far as I can gather," he
writes, "the life of Leonardo is extremely variable and undetermined. Since his
arrival here he has only made a sketch in a cartoon. It represents a Christ as a
little child of about a year old,original oil paintings, reaching forward out of his mother's arms
towards a lamb. The mother, half rising from the lap of S. Anne, catches at the
child as though to take it away from the lamb, the animal of sacrifice
signifying the Passion. S. Anne, also rising a little from her seat, seems to
wish to restrain her daughter from separating the child from the lamb; which
perhaps is intended to signify the Church, that would not wish that the Passion
of Christ should be hindered. These figures are as large as life,art oil paintings for sale, but they are
all contained in a small cartoon, since all of them sit or are bent; the figure
of the Virgin is somewhat in front of the other, turned towards the left. This
sketch is not yet finished. He has not executed any other work, except that his two assistants paint
portraits and he, at times, lends a hand to one or another of them. He gives
profound study to geometry, and grows most impatient of painting."
The history of this cartoon—as indeed of the Louvre picture—is somewhat
obscure, but it is certain that the beautiful cartoon of the same subject in the
possession of the Royal Academy is not the one above described. cheap oil paintings
Lastly, there is the famous—or, may we say, now more famous than
ever—portrait of Mona Lisa. "Whoever wishes to know how far art can
imitate nature," Vasari writes, "may do so in this head, wherein every detail
that could be depicted by the brush has been faithfully reproduced. The eyes
have the lustrous brightness and watery sheen that is seen in life, and around
them are all those rosy and pearly tints which, like the eyelashes too, can only
be rendered by means of the deepest subtlety; the eyebrows also are painted with
the closest exactitude, where fuller and where more thinly set,buy oil paintings online, in a manner that
could not be more natural. The nose, with its beautiful and delicately roseate
nostrils, seems to be alive. The mouth, wonderful in its outline, shows the lips
perfectly uniting the rose tints of their colour with that of the face, and the
carnation of the cheek appears rather to be flesh and blood than only painted.
Looking at the pit of the throat one can hardly believe that one cannot see the
beating of the pulse, and in truth it may be said that the whole work is painted
in a manner well calculated to make the boldest master tremble. abstract art oil paintings
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