Mona-Lisa; The Painting And Art Enjoy The Rules and Beyond
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...created by Leonardo da Vinci
The Mona Lisa; created by Leonardo da Vinci, dating period between 1503 -1506. As the painter seems to have done in his work, Mona-Lisa Painting Work Of Art, Enjoy the rules and beyond. This is an oil painting on poplar board 77 x 53 cm, whose working technique was the "sfumato", a procedure typical of Leonardo da Vinci in the overlapping layers of paint very thin and delicate, achieving an effect that is vaguely vaporous with contours giving a sensation of blurring. In addition, the artist skillfully plays with perspective, drawing a horizon higher than another, which is what makes the Mona Lisa showing as higher if viewed from the right side.
The Work of Art is owned by the FrenchState since the sixteenth century and can be seen in the LouvreMuseum in Paris. But despite the available technical and historical information about the Mona Lisa, the truth of the matter that we never have gotten to know a number of things in relation to this amazing painting: who is this mysterious woman and, above all, why she smiles or appears to be smiling effortlessly and mysteriously.
Our emotions, like the spectrum of color, clearly do not reside permanently in our souls; happiness, contentment… here appears fleeting too, clear from certain angles but not from others—that is the mysteriousness it hence holds. Few other works of art have been subject to as much scrutiny, study, myth and parody as the Mona Lisa. Venturing to the LouvreMuseum andseeing the Mona Lisa can be quite a disappointment to many, often because the crowds are so enormous, you can't get close enough. It is almost a cult event.
Italians Arts are famous for many pleasant things including fashion, romance, food, entertaining. Italian people and culture are rich in a history that includes art, classic architecture, religious roots and conquering activities of ancient worlds. The minds and imagination of artists only lives one wondering still, with Leonardo’s “Mona Lisa,” this feeling comes boiling to the fore. We will look in into the composition and wonder, we will look at the portrait and we will not be anywhere near close to understanding the smile or the person in it.
The Mona Lisa at Louvre Museum 1503 - 1506
...the separation of imagination and reality?
While numerous themes do come up in this work of art, the divided self, a controlled expression and a separated self. All of these impact the Mona Lisa in different ways and illustrate that the painting is far more valuable than to just entertain; the separation of art or imagination and life or reality. The image shows which is most important to the individual or to see if there is some way of balancing them both; the reality, it is often difficult to tell the difference. Sometimes though, the real world and all too real things will rear their ugly head. They are real, but even their reality is something fragile, and easily taken away.
The imaginative creature may live imaginative lives, and not be subjected to harsh real ones. Hoping that it may still be able to live life like imagined. While it does seem to be possible to live in an imaginative world, it cannot last without reality intruding. But, it is also dull to live in the real world, without imagination intruding. Some realm where both can be applicable; art or imagination must be able to co-exist with life or reality in order to make existence worthwhile.
While there are several rules and standards that govern our world, the main one seems to be that da-Vinci knows that there should be a firm set of rules hence his apparent use of perspective lines. When there are none, or the rules make no sense to him, he becomes creative and imaginative making the natural eye look at the picture on varied levels. His understanding that there is a lack of firmly placed rules often leads to his applying his own.
When working the various views, it seems he spends the entire time trying to figure out what the rules are, perhaps not... His ability to have everything well structured, naturally helps him to understand things. When these things do not go according to his traditional standards or at least in ways which he might expect, he is not unsure of what to do.
His inability to understand that rules seem to have no place and change as and when it is suited gives him great flexibility and imaginative ground. The lack of completeness causes him to engage and enjoy what he thinks he knows and finally blurs the whole work of art in the way it completes itself like no other. …and That’s Mona Lisa; the Work Of Art, the person, the mystery.
MonaLisa is always imitated never re-captured...
Happiness, contentment… here appears fleeting too, clear from certain angles but not from others—that is the mysteriousness it hence holds. Life's realities or Loading...
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