The Rest Is History - 667. The Mystery of the Mona Lisa
Episode Date: May 6, 2026Is there a secret meaning behind the Mona Lisa’s famously ambiguous smile? What light does the painting shed upon Renaissance Italy, and Leonardo da Vinci himself? And, who is the mysterious man or ...woman in the painting…? Join Dominic and Tom as they unfold the secret history behind the world’s most famous painting, and delve into the story behind its creator and creation. Join The Rest Is History Club: Unlock the full experience of the show – with exclusive bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access to every series and live show tickets, a members-only newsletter, discounted books from the show, and access to our private Discord chatroom. Sign up directly at therestishistory.com To read our new newsletter, sign up at: therestishistory.com/newsletters _______ Lloyds. 250 years on and still backing the nation's aspirations. _______ Advertise with us: Partnerships@goalhanger.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Video Editors: Jack Meek, Harry Swan + Adam Thornton Social Producer: Harry Balden Producers: Tabby Syrett & Aaliyah Akude Senior Producer: Callum Hill Executive Producer: Dom Johnson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hers is the head upon which all the ends of the world are come. And the eyes. And the
eyelids are a little weary. It is a beauty wrought out from within upon the flesh, the deposit
little cell by cell of strange thoughts and fantastic reveries and exquisite passions. Set it for a moment,
beside one of those white Greek goddesses or beautiful women of antiquity, and how would they
be troubled by this beauty into which the soul with all its maladies has passed? All the thoughts and
experience of the world have edged and moulded there in that which they have of power to refine
and make expressive the outward form, the animalism of Greece, the lust of Rome, the mysticism of
the Middle Age with its spiritual ambition and imaginative loves, the return of the pagan world,
the sins of the Borgias. She is older than the rocks among which she sits. Like the vampire,
she has been dead many times and learned the secrets of the grave, and has been a dine.
dive her in deep seas and keeps their fallen day about her and trafficked for strange webs with
eastern merchants, and as Lida was the mother of Helen of Troy, and as St Anne, the mother of Mary,
and all this has been to her, but as the sound of liars and flutes, and lives only in the delicacy
with which it has moulded the changing lineaments and tinged the eyelids and hands.
So that was the Victorian art critic Walter Pater in very Victorian prose.
And he was describing one of the most celebrated women who's ever existed.
Her face familiar to probably not millions of people, but hundreds of millions, if not billions.
A woman who's often regarded as the ultimate fam fatal.
A woman into whom is poured, certainly according to Walter Pater, every woman who has ever existed.
Beautiful, mysterious, exotic, irisodes.
erotic and dangerous. Well, I say a woman, he's describing actually a painting of a woman,
a painting, which is surely the most well-known painting in the world, the Mona Lisa. Tom,
the Mona Lisa. You a fan? Well, I've always taken it so for granted that I wouldn't really
have called myself a fan. Its fame is of itself such a fascinating thing that that's what
prompted me to think that this might be a good topic for the rest of history. But having
plunged into the deep waters of the Mona Lisa's history and explored the rocks that are older
than time among which she sits, I am now definitely a fan, yes. Oh, tremendous. It's a painting
that is a lot more interesting than I had thought. I mean, I think basically I've kind of been
anisitized to its beauty, and I guess that's true of lots of people. You kind of see it as a
fridge magnet rather than this painting, don't you? But it's, it is fascinating. And,
And one of the reasons for its fame is actually that passage that you read.
It's one of the most kind of famous passages of purple prose in the whole of English literature.
He wrote that in 1869.
Back when he wrote that, the Mona Lisa was not remotely as famous as it is today.
And the reason for that is that the paintings that had cut through in the Victorian period were those that were very easily copied.
So paintings with kind of clear boundaries.
but there's a quality to the Mona Lisa which seems to defy reproduction.
It's actually very, very hard to reproduce.
And this wasn't for want of trying.
People have been trying to capture the essence of this extraordinary painting right from the beginning.
So there's a famous copy of it in the Prado, which was done while the Mona Lisa had only just been painted.
But it doesn't get its essence at all.
Then going into the 18th into the 19th century,
they try and do it with copper plate prints.
Then of course, photographs, but even photographers, apparently, to begin with, struggled to
capture the Mona Lisa in their photographs because the technology just wasn't up to reproducing
it.
And it's only by the 1880s that photography has evolved technologically enough to allow for kind
of accurate photographs of the Mona Lisa to be reproduced on a mass scale.
And as a result of that, of course, the image of the Mona Lisa gets spread across Europe, across the world.
And I think it is, I mean, you said maybe it's the most recognizable painting.
I would say there's no doubt about it at all.
It is the most recognizable painting that has ever been in the whole of history.
And yet, at first glance, well, I mean, as you say, at first glance, you barely notice it because it's ubiquitous.
So you don't really think anything of it.
It's part of the furniture.
But when you look at it, there's nothing.
remarkable about it. There's nothing exceptional about it compared with, for example, some of the
paintings that you did on the Restis History Club miniseries in Laura Cumming. A painting like
Las Maninas by Balafcathfketh is much more, you know, appears much more nuanced, much more layered,
much more sophisticated. The Mona Lisa is just a woman sitting on a balcony looking out at you.
What's so special do you think about this that makes it hard to reproduce?
Before we get into that, we should just describe it for the three people perhaps in the world
I've never seen it.
So there's something distinctive about her pose.
Distinctive certainly when it was painted.
So she's kind of sitting in profile, but her torso has turned around so that her face is
almost staring into the eyes of the person who is standing in front of the painting.
Her face is pale.
She's got brown eyes.
She's got quite full cheeks.
She's certainly not thin.
She has no eyebrows.
She has long, delicately curling hair,
but this is covered by an almost translucent veil.
She has a very plain, dark dress.
She has no jewelry, no adornments of any kind.
And of course, the most famous thing about her expression,
probably the most famous thing about the entire painting,
is her smile.
And we'll be coming to that.
Yeah, people go.
about that but I mean I don't even think it really is much of a smile if someone looked to me like
that and said I'm smiling at you I'd be like are you really that is part of the mystery is that
people respond to the smile in many different ways but just before we come to that
the one thing about the painting that is overtly fantastical is the landscape against which the
Mona Lisa is set so this is a landscape that's very barren it's it's kind of wild it's
tortured you have jagged mountains rocks lakes
And the only signs of a kind of human physical presence, there's a winding road and there's
an arch bridge crossing a river.
Tom, I commend you for this because you made me look at the painting already in a new way.
I've never even noticed the background, to be honest.
I'm sorry.
Okay, so if you're looking at it, the striking thing about the quality of the paint,
and I think this is the reason why it is so difficult to reproduce, isn't the subject.
It's the way in which this woman and the landscape have been painted.
Because there's a very distinctive quality to it, and it's traditionally described as Fomato, as smoky.
And the effect of this is brilliantly described by certainly the leading British expert on the Mona Lisa,
who is Martin Kemp, who isn't the basis from Spandau Ballet.
Not him.
I think he's the professor of art at Oxford or something.
You know, you're a Oxford doctorate.
Yeah, he actually is the same person.
So Martin Kemp describes the effect of Sumato as being the paradox of a precisely rendered indefiniteness.
So it's not precise.
I mean, there's a sense of kind of smokiness to it.
Now, how do you render indefiniteness precisely?
This is the kind of question that already, by the beginning of the 19th century, was puzzling
German idealist philosophers. So let's quote the most famous German idealist philosopher who is
Hegel and he was lecturing in the 1820s on the Renaissance. Great to get Hegel on the show.
Great to have Hegel back. So he wrote, here is evident a supreme rounding. Nowhere is that any
harsh or sharp line transition is everywhere. Light and shadow are not effective as purely direct light
and shadow but they both shine into one another just as an inner force works throughout an external
Now, what that means in practical terms for the impact of this portrait of Mona Lisa is that
the corners of her eyes and of her mouth are blurred.
It's hard to get an exact sense of what they actually look like.
And as we've mentioned, there are no visible eyebrows.
And this makes it difficult to read her expression.
And you've already touched on the most famous puzzle.
Is there a smile at all?
If it is a smile, is she looking happy?
Is she looking sad?
Is it a knowing smile?
Is it a modest smile?
Is this the smile of a Florentine matron?
Or is it the smile of a vampire who is older than the rocks among which she sits?
See, to me, do you know, I recognise that smile straight away.
It's the weak smile of somebody who's heard a joke about the Kaiser a thousand times.
It's thinking, I should never have come to this rest of history get together.
is awful. Well, you see, there is the power of the sphermato, because each person will see in the
smile what he or she, what they fear, or perhaps desire, who knows. But certainly this is where
I think Walter Pater is coming in with his notion of her as, you know, a kind of timeless, infinite,
vampiric figure. The fact that there is a mystery to her, that her smile is something elusive and
enigmatic and potentially tantalizing. And it's this that really since the 19th century has made
the Mona Lisa seem almost a sinister figure in the imaginings of many people. And the painting
to be something that contains codes, clues, directions to something that seems to lurk just
beyond human comprehension. And this is an idea that, of course, is still going incredibly strong
and friend of the show Dan Brown,
he's notoriously all over it.
So in the Da Vinci Code,
the Mona Lisa, he says,
embodies the sacred feminine.
And in the plot of the Da Vinci Code,
the Mona Lisa is in the Louvre behind its stained glass window
and a clue is found written in blood on this stained glass window.
And even though the Mona Lisa,
it actually doesn't feature very prominently in the plot of the divinci
code. When they came to make a film and they wanted a poster, it's the Mona Lisa that is on the
poster. Of course. And obviously, the reason for why the Mona Lisa is on the film poster is because
it's the world's most famous painting. And one of the reasons that it's the world's most
famous painting is precisely because it seems so full of mystery, a painting suited to a film
about kind of codes and ancient mysteries. So two obvious questions then. So first of all,
is it only famous because of the mystery rather than because of any other quality?
And secondly, what actually behind all the stuff about the mystery and the murk and the smokiness,
what actually do we know about it?
So let's take the first one.
Is it so famous purely because of this sort of the questions rather than because of any innate quality?
I mean, I think that is the big question.
And let's come to that later.
So we'll kind of explore what it is that has made the Mona Lisa as famous.
as it is. And I think it's really interesting because it tells us a lot about the history
of how conceptions of culture have evolved over the centuries, and particularly perhaps
in the in the in the 20th century. Your second question. Yeah. I mean, let's assume the
Mona Lisa isn't a portrait of a vampire. Then, then who is it a portrait of? When was the
painting begun? When was it finished? I mean, was it ever finished? And these are all kind of
pretty basic questions that have been furiously debated for centuries and centuries and centuries.
But not unusual questions. No, Tom. Not unusual questions. I mean, these are the questions that
people ask about all kinds of Renaissance paintings, don't they? Absolutely. You know, who painted it,
why, when, where, who's the sitter, all of that kind of thing. Yeah. And I think that the intensity
of the controversy that seems to lie around these questions when it comes to the Mona Lisa is actually
just another marker of how incredibly famous it is. Because every art historian, everybody who
who aspires to be an art historian,
knows that if you come up with a new theory about the Mona Lisa,
you'll immediately get it into the newspapers.
So there's a kind of incentive there to come up often with quite mad theories.
Yeah.
However, there is one thing that we absolutely do know about the painting,
and that, of course, is the identity of the person who painted it,
and even Dan Brown gets that right,
because it's there in the title of his book.
It's Leonardo.
Although he gets the name wrong.
It does.
He gets the name wrong because Leonardo da Vinci,
Da Vinci, I mean, I can't believe there are any listeners who don't know this.
Da Vinci is not his surname.
Da Vinci just means from Vinci, which is where he was born.
Like if Dan Brown wrote a book about you and he called it the From Salisbury Code.
Yeah, exactly.
So Leonardo da Vinci, we know that he paints it.
And he, of course, is one of the great figures of European culture,
and extraordinary man, I think, entirely deserving of his own series on the rest of history
in due course. But for now, let's zoom in on one particular moment in that extraordinary life of his.
And it is April 1500. And we are in Florence, which is Leonardo's native city. This is almost
certainly where he'd been born 48 years before. And he is the illegitimate son of a Florentine notary,
Sir Piero da Vinci, who came from the small town of Vinci, which is about 20 miles west of Florence.
hence the name. And Leonardo, right from the beginning, everyone recognizes that he is an astonishing
talent. So he gets apprenticed very early to a famous Florentine artist, works in his workshop. He
qualifies as a master. And he is recognized even in Florence, which is a city, I mean, it's the
archetype of a great center of culture, Renaissance Florence. As a man of really stupefying,
talent and what strikes people as stupefying about him isn't necessarily his talent as an artist.
I think he is rated slightly below his younger contemporaries Michelangelo and Raphael on that score,
but the sheer range of his interests. So he's a complete polymath. He's not just a painter.
He's also a would-be engineer. He's a natural philosopher. There is no limit to the things that
he's interested in. And this, of course, makes him an object of great interest to the cultural
elites in Florence at the time, which Dominic, we've done a series on, and this is the Medici,
and specifically Lorenzo, the magnificent, the guy who serves in the popular imagination
as the archetype of the Florentine patrons of great art.
Lorenzo took him up, didn't he, and used him as, among other things, as a kind of ambassador,
but also as a kind of gift.
So he sends him to Ludovico Schwarzse,
who's the Duke of Milan, Florence's relations with Milan,
enormously important in this period.
And Schwarzer, who's a patron of the arts himself,
is very taken with Leonardo, doesn't it?
And Leonardo basically ends up working for Schwarzer
for about almost 20 years, 18 years.
Yeah, 18 years in all.
So by 1500, Leonardo, who's returning from Milan via Venice to Florence,
He's done pretty well for himself in Milan.
So he's famous as a great painter.
He's done this mural, The Last Supper, very important in the Da Vinci Code, very important also in the history of Western art.
And two very innovative portraits of women.
And one of these portrays Ludovico Sforza's young mistress, Chichilia Galarani.
And she is shown rather coyly kind of fondling and ermine.
Yeah.
And Tabby's favourite picture, I think.
I think so, yeah.
She loves fondling and ermine.
But the other thing about Leonardo is that he's got a utilitarian value as well as an aesthetic one, hasn't he?
Because he's also designing all kinds of, I mean, obviously he's designing all his mad stuff like parachutes and helicopters.
Tanks.
But he's designing kind of hydraulics projects and stuff and city works and all these kinds of things.
And fortifications and defenses and things like this.
I mean, your claim about him being a problem.
Polymath is well borne out by all this.
I gather the kind of the mad stuff, so the tanks and the helicopters.
It's unlikely any of them would have worked even had the technology been available to make them work.
But the fortifications and the canals and everything, absolutely.
And that essentially is why Switzer loved him.
I mean, the ability to paint his mistress fondling and ermine was a kind of an advantage.
But it's the engineering that really makes Leonardo's fortune.
and he returns to Florence pretty well off.
So he's four months before he arrives in Florence.
He sends a very large sum of money, about 600 ducats, to a Florentine bank.
So he'll have something there waiting for him when he returns to Florence.
And just to give people a sense of how much that is, 20 ducats will rent you a very nice house in the central Florence for a year.
So Leonardo, you know, he's done well for himself.
But what did you say?
this was 1500. So 1500, by the time he comes back, Florence's golden age has passed. They've
been through the whole business with the bonfire, the vanities and southern Arola. The
Medici have actually been kicked out of Florence, haven't they? And Florence is a republic again.
And the biggest development, you know, one of the great developments in medieval Italian or early modern
Italian history, the French invasion of 1494 has thrown Italy into total tumult.
Schwarz has been kicked out in Milan. The French have been rampaging through the Italian
Peninsula and they are the big power brokers now. And basically Leonardo, that leaves Leonardo a bit
adrift, doesn't it? He needs a new patron because he doesn't have the menacee, he doesn't have
Schwarzse. Yeah. So that's why he's left Milan is, as you say, Schwarzis been kicked out. But the
problem is that even though he's a very big name, I mean, he's famous across Italy, he does also
bring a certain amount of baggage with him. So in particular, he has a reputation for never finishing
projects. So, George Vasari, who will write the first biography of Leonardo, famously says of
Leonardo that he started many things and never finished them. And the most notorious example of
this had happened in Milan, which was a massive equestrian monument to the father of
Ludovico Sforza, that ends up being aborted when the French invade Italy, because
the Milanese need the bronze that was going to be used for the mould, they need to turn it
into artillery to try and stop the French, it doesn't work. And when the French Occupy Milan,
they shoot up the great clay model of this equestrian statue that Leonardo had made. So there's
nothing left of it. And this casts a slight shadow over his reputation. So there's a story that
when Michelangelo, who is younger than Leonardo and should properly be showing him respect,
when Michelangelo meets Leonardo, he scoffs at him and says that the casting of the bronze
had been beyond Leonardo's technological abilities.
And I think that this is a kind of a reproach that he has to bear, however unfairly.
There's also the problem that he hasn't actually done that many paintings while he was in Florence.
And the most famous painting, The Last Supper, I mean, this isn't readily accessible for anyone
from Florence.
And it's probably already starting to fade because Leonardo's exceptional.
experimented with mad kinds of paints. So he is actively looking for commissions and not just to
make money, but also I think as a way of advertising what he can do as an artist, because every
painting will be able to serve him as a kind of calling card. And so the first two years that he's
back in Florence, we know from his records that he is taking on a lot of work. He's doing a
taking a lot of commissions. These commissions do not include the Mona Lisa because, as I say, we have
detail records, the Mona Lisa isn't mentioned in them. And in fact, it is a part of the mystery
of the painting that the Mona Lisa isn't mentioned in any of Leonardo's surviving drawings,
any of his surviving notebooks. So that, you know, that adds a certain quality of mystery to it.
So he goes on. He works, I mean, unbelievably, one day we'll do a series on the Borgias. And he works
for Cheslery Borgia, doesn't he, as chief engineer. So making tanks and helicopters for the Borgias.
Yeah. So that's in 5002 through to the early months of 1503.
And then 1503, the spring of 1503, he is back in Florence.
Some critics and biographers think this is the point when he did the Mona Lisa.
Others like Kenneth Clark, who did the Great Civilization BBC series at the end of the 60s.
He thought it might have been a year later, 1504.
So let's say 1503, 1504, or possibly even a later date.
That's when he does the Mona Lisa.
Yeah, so this is a debate.
that again has been running and running and running.
So it's 1503 to perhaps 1511, 1512.
This is the kind of the range of dates.
But the bigger question, which I suppose is allied to that,
is who is the person in the picture?
And I mean, the name Mona Lisa, it's later.
I mean, it becomes popularized in the 19th century,
but it's first coined in what, the 1540s by Georgie Oversary,
who you've already mentioned in his great book,
The Lives of the Artists,
the great biographer of Renaissance Italy.
Yeah, so kind of 160 portrait sketches of the artists of the age.
Bissari's great hero is Michelangelo, but he does give Leonardo a decent write-up.
And so if we estimate that the amount of space that Bessari gives to an artist is a reflection of how much he esteems the artist, then Michelangelo's number one, then Raphael, then Jotto, much earlier painter, of course.
And then Leonardo. So Leonardo is number four.
Pretty good podium. I mean, one of them is not getting a medal.
Leonardo not quite podiuming there, is he? He's just missed bronze.
Yeah.
So this is what Fassari has to say. He mentions the Mona Lisa explicitly.
He writes, Leonardo undertook to paint the portrait of the wife of Francesco del Giacondo,
Mona Lisa. So, I mean, there's one thing. It's not the Mona Lisa. It's the Mona Lisa properly.
but it gives us the name.
And Mona Lisa is Ma, Donna Lisa, so my lady Lisa.
But that sentence also gives us the name that is used in Italy and in France.
So in Italy it's La Gioconda.
In France, it's La Jaconde.
And there's a pun there.
So it's the feminine form of Lisa's husband's name.
So essentially, it's kind of Mrs. Giacondo, La Giaconda.
But Giaconda and Giacond, they mean in Italian and Frenchond.
French respectively, kind of happy, cheerful, joyous.
And Vasari implies in his life of Leonardo that Leonardo leaned into this pun and that
Mona Lisa's smile was key to his vision of the painting right from the very start.
So Vasari writes, while he was painting Mona Lisa, who was a very beautiful woman, he had her
constantly entertained by singers, musicians and gestures so that she would be merry and not look
melancholic as portraits often do.
As a result, in this painting of Leonardo's, there was a smile,
so enchanting that it was more divine than human.
And those who saw it marveled to find it so similar to that of the living original.
I mean, I think, again, that's attributing the smile with more jollity than the painting deserves.
Anyway, that anecdote may not even be true, right?
Possibly, but possibly not, because when Vasari wrote up that anecdote, he was living in Florence,
just a short distance from the Giacondo family home at a time when Mona Lisa was still alive.
So it is perfectly possible that he got that directly from La Giaconda's mouth.
I mean, we can't know, but it's possible, I would say.
So who is she?
Who's a husband?
What's going on there?
I mean, he's literally called Mr. Happy, but.
Isn't he?
Well, as well, he should be because Francesco del Giacondo is doing very well for himself.
So he's very ambitious.
He's very upwardly mobile and he's becoming incredibly rich.
of humble background, his grandfather had begun as an artisan in the barrel-making business,
and he ends up running an entire barrel-making empire.
Then Francesco's father had moved on from the barrel-making into textiles,
which is the obvious place that you go for kind of high-end products,
much more money to be made.
And Geocondo himself then expands into silks, into money-lending, and into sugar.
So this is the early days of the Atlantic sugar economy.
Yeah, yeah.
And it has been thought that perhaps Mona Lisa had access to lots of sugar and her teeth
rotted.
And this is why she's not showing her teeth.
And that's one of the clues to the mystery of the smile.
That's really trying too hard.
But this is a very familiar Florentine journey.
You start like the medit you did.
You make money in one thing.
Then you move into, I mean, textiles wool is what Florentine.
money is based on and then you move into banking or money lending or whatever and you diversify.
So what Francesco was doing is absolutely standard. And then he does the standard thing,
which is that he invests a lot of his money into land, doesn't he? So especially now that the war
is broken out with the French and Italy is absolutely being ravaged and ripped apart.
It makes sense to invest in property and in land because that is the safest possible bet.
And of course, what you also do, and this is a timeless story, I mean, we see it so much in English
history as well, is that if you are socially mobile from a humble background, you invest in
an upper-class wife. And this is what Francesco does by marrying Lisa Gerardini, because Lisa
Gerardini is from an ancient Tuscan family that ranked as one of the original founders of the
Florentine Republic. So a tremendous aristocratic pedigree. It is obviously a bit of
embarrassing for Lisa that she has to marry the grandson of a barrel maker. But her father is
is not a good businessman. He's running short of money. He needs money. And so he essentially sells
Lisa to Francesco. And it's a good marriage. So Lisa is 15 when she marries Francesco. Francesco is 30.
And she is his second wife. And as we've heard, we'll end up outliving him. And I think that although
the context for the marriage is a mercenary one, it seems to have been a relatively successful
marriage. So Francesco keeps his side of the bargain by becoming fabulously rich, and Lisa
sticks to hers by having lots of children. And she has six in all. Four of them survive
infancy. And she also brings up a son of Francesco's by his first wife. And again,
their relationship seems to have been very good. All the evidence points to the fact that she was a very
kind and supportive stepmother.
There is one scandal which erupts in 1512, and it's focused on Lisa's daughter, Camilla,
who the year before so in 1511, had become a nun at the age of 12.
So, I mean, it's quite early.
But it's a way essentially of avoiding having to pay a dowry for her.
So you either marry her off or you park her in a nunry.
And that's what they do with Camilla.
and in 1512, four men, including madly, a brother of the Cardinal of Pavia, are reported to have climbed up a ladder into the convent where Camilla was installed.
And two nuns, it is said, were waiting for them.
And the intruders, I quote, touched the breasts of the said nuns.
And there was apparently lots of fondling and groping.
And Camilla is said to have been one of these two nuns.
and the four men were found guilty, but the two nuns were absolved.
So a whiff of scandal, but perhaps no more than that.
Yeah.
But apart from that, Lisa's life is pretty uneventful, isn't it?
So, as you said, Francesco, 15 years are senior.
He dies in 1537.
And in his will, he says she is his beloved, noble spirit, a faithful wife.
She lives to a pretty good age for the time, 70, shows she dies about 12 or 13 years later.
We don't know exactly when.
and that's all we know.
That's all we know of this character.
Which is amazing because if she is the person in the Mona Lisa,
then her face has a claim to be the most famous face
of anyone who's lived in the whole of history,
which is a kind of jaw-dropping thought.
Wow. Yeah.
But is she the woman?
Because there are some critics who say this is not the woman.
She may not have existed at all.
This may be a fictional person.
This may be a kind of just a generic,
embodiment of a female beauty or of, you know, a feminine elegance and grace or whatever. Because,
for example, there is no record of Leonardo having been paid by anybody for this painting, right?
And if he had done it for a rich patron, you would assume he would have been paid and he would have
kept the receipt. Yeah. And he seems to have kept the painting with him until he died. We've got that
landscape, which is not a realistic landscape. It's not a landscape that anyone can identify.
So is this fantastical background painted in that way because it's appropriate to a woman who also is invented?
And we do know from his notebooks that Leonardo was very interested in the kind of the notion of their being ideal beauty.
Is the Mona Lisa not a real person at all?
But what if she's a real person?
I think that certainly for the past 200 years, there's been a feeling that the Mona Lisa,
is a bit boring.
I mean, she's just the wife of an Italian businessman.
Couldn't she be someone slightly more interesting?
So there have been various candidates.
So one of them is a woman called Pacifica Brandano,
and she was the mistress of the son of Lorenzo the beneficent,
a guy called Giuliano de Medici.
And he ends up returning to Florence,
reestablishing Medici rule,
and he's essentially the kind of the autocrat of Florence,
between 1513 and 1516.
Why does anyone think that the Mona Lisa might be this woman, Pacifica Brandano?
There's actually quite a good reason.
It's because the only person that we know of who saw the Mona Lisa in the lifetime of Leonardo
and described it in writing, he claimed that the painting had been commissioned by Giuliano.
And if so, then wouldn't it be his mistress?
Then there's another much more famous woman who is identified with the Mona Lisa, and this is Isabella Desti, who was the marquise of Mantua, and she's the most famous, the most celebrated female patron of the arts in the Renaissance. And again, there are reasons for thinking that it might be her. So she was always imploring Leonardo to paint her portrait. Leonardo actually went to Mantua and made sketches of her. We've said that the backdrop to the Monaco,
Lisa, the landscape is fantastical. Assuming that it isn't, assuming that it is actually a portrait of
somewhere in Italy, it might be the Dolomites. I mean, it's much more likely to be the Dolomites than
Tuscany. And Mantua is quite near the Dolomites. And also in the painting, she's seated
on a chair with an armrest, and the armrest apparently is often used to symbolize a ruler.
I think the way that you're narrating that suggests to me that you absolutely do not believe it.
I mean, it doesn't look like the dolomites at all.
I think that there is a slight quality of people not wanting to believe that Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare's plays.
And it would be much more fun if it was the Earl of Oxford or Christopher Marlowe or someone.
That is exactly what I thought when you started to down this line.
I thought this is exactly what it is.
People just do not want a humdrum explanation.
And they're groping desperately for something exotic.
Okay, well, let's continue with some slightly more exotic ones.
So, Sigmund Freud, guess who he thinks about Lisa is.
Amaze me and tell me that it's not his mother.
It is his mother.
So Freud suggested that the smile, this famous smile, was inspired by Leonardo's childhood memories of his mother's smile.
Sometimes a smile is just a smile, Sigmund.
Yeah, sometimes.
Another very popular theory recently is that it's this guy, Sallai, who was Leonardo's apprentice, his friend, worked in his workshop.
and was almost certainly his lover.
Hold on. Salai's a bloke.
Salai's a bloke.
Yeah.
Okay, this is a stretch.
So Salai is, you know, he serves Leonardo as a model for his painting of John the Baptist,
which is in the Louvre, together with the Mona Lisa.
He provides the model for a sketch of an angel.
And the idea that the Mona Lisa might be another portrait of Salai was proposed 15 years ago
by an Italian art historian
called Silvano Vincetti.
The reason that he advances
is that Vincii says
that the Mona Lisa's facial features
do resemble those of Salai
and you can see them
if you compare it to Leonardo's painting
of John the Baptist.
Also, he says that you can see
the letter S in Mona Lisa's eyes
if you look very closely
and squint and stand on your head
while you're doing it.
Right.
Yeah, good luck doing that in the Louvre.
And we compared it to Shakespeare.
There was a guy, wasn't there,
who wanted to dig up.
Shakespeare's body to prove that it wasn't actually Shakespeare.
And Cichetti has, he's kind of, he's very much on that groove because he wanted to go to
the site where Lisa Gerardini had been buried and to dig her up and to find her skull,
use it to reconstruct her features and thereby prove that she couldn't have been the sitter
in the Mona Lisa.
Then two final theories, just before we come to the break.
One theory is the Mona Lisa is a portrait of Leonardo himself.
self. And this was first suggested back in 1913 by a French painter called Maurice Valle. And he argued that the lower half of the face is female, but the upper half is Leonardo's. And in 1987, an American artist called Lillian Schwartz made a famous computer mashup of the Mona Lisa with the self-portrait of Leonardo, the kind of famous one. It's presumed to be self-portrait. We don't know for sure. But it's the one where he kind of looks like Gandalf. He's got the long white hair.
that, you know, they match up pretty well
and can kind of see
how perhaps there's a hint there of them
having the same facial features.
And then finally, we have
a theory that's been proposed by
top symbolologist Robert Langdon
and he proposes
that the Mona Lisa
is an androgynous fusion
of the Egyptian god Amun,
so A-M-O-N,
an anagram of Mona,
and the goddess Isis.
aka Lisa.
So Mona Lisa, it's all there.
And Robert Langdon, of course, is the hero of Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code.
And this is what Dan Brown has Langdon say.
Gentlemen, not only does the face of Mona Lisa look androgynous,
but her name is an anagram of the divine union of male and female.
And that, my friends, is Da Vinci's Little Secret,
Da Vinci again, and the reason for Mona Lisa's knowing smile.
God, do you know who says this? Tom Hanks. Tom Hanks says it in the film, a person who's been on the rest of history and had no shame about his involvement in that film.
So, are you convinced by any of those?
No, of course. I mean, I have to say, Tom, I think the way you've set it up suggests to me that it's none of these people, because you've said it with a degree of skepticism.
I mean, it's definitely not that bloke who's a bloke. I think that's a definite note. And I also don't think it's half of it is Leonardo da Vinci's face.
Okay. However, what is undoubtedly the case is.
throughout the 20th century, it was generally accepted by art historians that absolute certainty
about the identity of the Mona Lisa was impossible. So I will quote Donald Sassoon, who is the author
of the definitive history of the Mona Lisa. I've drawn a lot on his book for this episode.
And at the end of his book, he declares himself agnostic as to who the painting portrays,
so to quote him, my conclusion is that the evidence is too scanty for us to arrive at any firm
identification, we shall never know, not that this will stop people from trying. And of course,
he's quite right. People do continue to try. He then added this reflection. There is always the
remote possibility that some new evidence will be unearthed. And do you know, Dominic, do you know
listeners? He was not wrong, because four years later, after Donald Sassoon wrote that in 2005,
exactly such a piece of new evidence was on earthed.
And the brilliant thing about it, it conclusively proves who the woman portrayed in the Mona Lisa had been.
And more than that, it specifies pretty precisely exactly when Leonardo had begun painting it.
Criky, what a bombshell.
Ladies and gentlemen, do not go away.
we will return after the break with these stunning revelations.
Welcome back everybody to the rest is history.
I am waiting with bated breath to find out who the Mona Lisa really was
and when the great painting was painted.
Tom, you promised us an absolute bombshell.
I hope you're going to deliver.
Okay, so let's go to the Florentine Chancellery in October 1503
where a clerk in the Chancellery is reading an edition of,
the letters of the great Roman orator Cicero.
This is a guy called Agostino Vespucci.
He's a very clever, very well-connected man.
So he's a humanist scholar.
And of course, humanist scholars,
all they do at this point is read Cicero.
Yeah.
He's an assistant to Niccolo Machiavelli,
famous author of political treatises.
And he is a professional associate of Leonardo,
because he's one of the administrators
who just recently have signed a contract with Leonardo
to paint the great council hall in Florence with a spectacular battle scene, an illustration
of a great Florentine victory.
And as he's reading this book, this guy Vespucci comes across a reference in one of Cicero's
letters to a famous Greek painter called Apele's.
And Cicero describes Apele's as someone who had completed with the most polished art,
the head and bust of Venus, but left the other part of her body in Kuwait.
Vespucci is very struck by this and he reaches for a pen and he makes a note in the margin and he writes,
Apele's the painter.
That is what Leonardo da Vinci does in all his pictures, as in the head of Lisa del Giacondo and Anne, the mother of Mary.
We will see what he will do in the hall of the Great Council, which he is now contracted to decorate.
And then he dates it, 50-03 October.
Whoa.
So a massive, massive bombshell.
Freud is wrong. Dr. Robert Langdon is wrong. I mean, everyone who thought it wasn't the Mona Lisa
is wrong. And so a huge shout out to Dr. Amin Schlechter, who is a librarian in the university
library in Heidelberg, and he made the discovery in 2005. And just to list what it proves to make
it clear, Vasari was absolutely right. The Mona Lisa is a portrait of Francesco del Giaconda's wife,
Lisa Garadini. Leonardo began the painting in 1503, which makes perfect sense because as we said,
in 1502, he'd been off in Rome working as chief engineer for Cesare Borgia. And in 1504, of course,
he's going to start work on this great battle scene in the La Forentine Council Hall.
We also know that Lisa had just given birth to her second son. And so you can imagine that
that might be a cause of celebration, something that her husband might want to mark by
commissioning a portrait. And we can even work out who might have introduced Leonardo to
Francesco because Leonardo's father, Sir Piero, was Francesco's lawyer. And so I think that
this clearly in a sense demothologizes the Mona Lisa. It's not a portrait of Leonardo
in drag. It's not his mother. It's not the sacred feminine. We can set the commissioning
of the Mona Lisa
absolutely in the context
of daily life in Florence
these kind of networks
of social relations
that made the city run
family proud businessman
commissions
lawyers all of this
so on one level
there's no mystery
however
yeah there are lots of questions
aren't there
because for example
if he did this as a commission
why does he not hand it over
and get paid for it
why doesn't he give it to the
Gicondo family
yeah I mean that's that is a massive
question. So, I mean, various answers to that question have been suggested. Maybe the chance to use it as a
calling card, as an advertisement for his talents, it ends up being worth more to him than the fee he would
have got from Francesco. Maybe he can't bear to finish it. So Vasari in his biography says that
Leonardo never finished it. Or maybe, you know, it does have some special meaning for him. Maybe he does
see it as his great masterpiece. Maybe he just can't bear to be separated from it. And it's certainly
the case that right from the beginning, it is viewed by everyone who sees it as a really revolutionary
painting. So the pose of its sitter, the lifelike quality of the portrait, the mysterious quality
of the landscape, all of this combines to make it seem to people who come and see it really
kind of thrilling, really innovative. So that really surprises me because as a Mona Lisa
skeptic as it were, I'd always assumed that the aesthetic value of it was, as it were, projected onto
it later. Once it became famous, people said, oh, it's obviously brilliant, blah, blah, blah,
but people probably didn't think it was brilliant at the time. But you're telling me that's wrong.
And even at the time, for example, other Renaissance painters thought, this is special.
Yeah, so Raphael is in Florence at the time when Leonardo is painting it. He comes and sees it,
and he's blown away by it. And it's patently a massive influence on.
Raphael's painting.
And this distinctive pose that the Mona Lisa has, it's very widely copied, so much so that
that pose comes to be called the Giaconda.
So it's that famous.
And by the end of his life, Leonardo has become a tourist attraction in his own right.
And having the chance to see the Mona Lisa is a part of the package.
When people come and visit Leonardo, they want to see this painting.
Now, when Leonardo dies, he's not actually in France.
He's not even in Italy.
He is in France at Embois on the Loire.
He dies there on the 2nd of May 1519.
And the story is that he dies in the arms of the French king,
Francois Prémié, Francis I, because Leonardo had gone to the court of Francis I first in 1516.
And he goes there partly because there are just no patrons worthy of his status
who are willing to employ him in Italy.
And partly because Francis I really, really wants him and is willing.
willing to pay anything. And it actually reminds me a bit of the way in which Mohammed bin Salman,
the strong man of Saudi Arabia, paid an obscene amount of money for the Salvatamundi, this painting
that has been attributed to Leonardo. There are, you know, there are plenty of people who think
it isn't a Leonardo. But it's now gone to Saudi Arabia rather in the way that Leonardo went to
the court of Francis I. And when Leonardo dies, Francis I, the first, makes shorter.
to buy the Mona Lisa.
And the result of this is that the painting is going to end up becoming part of the cultural
patrimony, not of Italy, but of France.
And this is crucial for its future history.
So it's become part of French tradition.
But in the next couple of centuries, the French don't make a huge amount of it, do they?
So for example, in 1625, Louis XIII, actually gives it away.
he agrees to give it away to the Duke of Buckingham with his famously long legs, great favourites
of James I first. Basically, Buckingham's going to give him a Holbein and I think a Titian. And it's
actually Louise Cortius who say, hold on. This is actually quite a good painting. Don't give it away.
Yeah, it's such a shame because the Mona Lisa could have ended up in London. See, I think if it had
ended up in London, maybe it wouldn't have been such a big deal. I think you're absolutely right.
But it is, you're right that kind of for two centuries after Leonardo's death, the painting does
go into eclipse. So, you know, it's not showcased. It's not a great treasure of the French king. In 1695,
it gets moved to Versailles, but it's put in a pretty obscure corridor. I mean, it's not something
that most people would notice. And then in 1750, there's a very clear demonstration of how the
Mona Lisa is rated, because 110 of the best paintings in the Royal Collection at Versailles are put on
display at the Palais de Luxembourg in Paris for the delectation of invited visitors. So 110 paintings,
the Mona Lisa is not one of those 110 paintings. So it's not even top 100. So that complicates
things because you said right at the beginning, oh, people thought it was amazing right from the
start. But obviously now there's a period where people don't think it's amazing. And something
changes, doesn't it? That is because Renaissance painting goes out of fashion. There isn't a category
of Renaissance painting at that point.
And Leonardo's luster has dimmed.
The posthumous reputation of Leonardo is also bound up with the kind of the decline in the
value of the Mona Lisa.
So what's changed?
What changes and when?
Is it the wake of the French Revolution?
It's always the French Revolution, isn't it?
Yeah.
French Revolution is crucial because, of course, suddenly, you know, these paintings are
not stuffed away in a royal palace.
They are being brought out for the people to admire and enjoy.
And the revolutionaries set up a great new museum in the Louvre.
And the Mona Lisa is moved there.
It is briefly transferred to Napoleon's bedroom, along with a load of other paintings.
So it's in Napoleon's bedroom from 1800 up to when he becomes emperor in 1804.
And the Mona Lisa then goes back to the Louvre.
And from that point on, the Mona Lisa is on public display in the world's largest and most prestigious museum.
You know, Paris is the acknowledged capital of European high culture.
And so it's in the right place now for it to start ascending the list to go up, you know, towards the kind of the top of the pops.
But slower process than you would think.
So in 1852, there was a list drawn up a sort of estimate of all the artworks in the Louvre.
And they ranked their value, didn't they?
And the Mona Lisa was ranked at 90,000 francs.
But there's a painting by Titian at 150,000.
There's one by Raphael at 400,000 francs.
Another Raphael at 600,000 francs.
So by those criteria, the Mona Lisa is still a relatively minnow.
Yeah.
But then progressively, over the course of the 19th century,
the Mona Lisa starts to benefit from really quite profound changes
in cultural and intellectual tastes.
And I guess that the most influential of those is romanticism.
You know, it's a very broad brush word, but let's use it as a shorthand.
So it's shorthand for the worship of genius, admiration for works of art that have a sense of mystery,
perhaps of incompletion about them.
And of course, a fascination with wild and sublime landscapes.
Romantics love a wild and sublime landscape.
And all of this massively helps to inflate the reputation of Leonardo, who over the course of
19th century, starts to be seen as not just a genius, but the supreme genius of, as we will see,
what comes to be called the Renaissance. And the reason for this is precisely the range of things that he does.
You know, he's a painter. He leaves lots of his paintings unfinished. Romantics love that.
But he's also someone who's interested in mountains and tanks and fetuses and swans and eyeballs and everything,
just everything. And so, you know, Romantics.
love that. And so he comes to be seen as a universal genius. And if he's a universal genius,
then what can the Mona Lisa be but a universal woman? So in other words, the fating of Leonardo,
the establishment of Leonardo as the archetype of a great genius is the absolutely necessary
precondition for the fating of the Mona Lisa as the greatest painting of all times. So to quote
Donald's Assune, the Mona Lisa acquired its special status because of its association. And
with Leonardo, not the other way round. So I think Leonardo as supreme genius, that is one crucial
influence on the inflation of the Mona Lisa's reputation. The other one, and this is what
Walter Pater is all about, Romantics have a massive thing for predatory females, for fam fatal,
as they come to be called. And there's a brilliant book, which was,
published way back in 1933, which covers this. It's called The Romantic Agony, translated into English.
It's by an Italian critic called Mario Praz. And he writes brilliantly about how over the course
of the 19th century, male artists and writers become obsessed with a very distinctive vision of
female beauty. And to quote Praz, tainted with pain, corruption, and death. And Praz writes about
how by the end of the 19th century, this beauty had to be a very important.
become illumined with the smile of the geoconda.
And this is where Walter Pater comes in.
He's a massive, massive influence on the English-speaking world.
That passage that you read, I mean, it may seem kind of, you know, purple to us.
But it determines how people in the English-speaking world see the Mona Lisa for generations
and generations.
But the guys who really go big on this are unsurprisingly, since they own it, are the French.
So I'll cite two writers in particular.
And the first is Teofield Gautier, who was a poet, a novelist, a critic.
And he is the guy who before Peter establishes Mona Lisa as not just as an archetype of beauty, but as an eternal archetype of beauty.
Someone who has essentially existed since the beginning of time.
She's older than Egypt.
She's older than Greece, older than Rome.
So to quote Gautier, she is always there smiling with sensuality, mocking,
her numerous lovers. So a bit like Cleopatra there, who Cleopatra was supposed to sleep with
men and then kill them. She has the serene countenance of a woman sure that she will remain beautiful
forever and certain to be greater than the ideal of poets and artists. So again, perhaps the hint there
of the vampire, someone who is always beautiful, feeding off the blood of her prey. People are projecting
an awful lot onto Mona Lisa, aren't they? But, I mean, another example, the historian Jean-Michelais
to read an enormous history of the French Revolution.
The first historian to use the word Renaissance, by the way,
or at least to take it back up from Vasari and to popularize it.
And Michelet goes even further, doesn't he?
He basically says, you know, the Mona Lisa is a dominatrix?
Is that going too strong, a dominatrix?
Well, you can read what he said about her.
This canvas attracts me, revolts me, consumes me,
and I go to her in spite of myself as the bird to the snake.
But you can see, I mean, this is all kind of very exciting for people in Victorian parlors reading this kind of thing.
And of course, as the 19th century goes on towards the 20th century, photography for the first time is starting to be equal to the challenge of capturing the image of the Mona Lisa.
So by the end of the 19th century, you've got all this purple prose about vampires and snakes and things.
and for the first time
you have images of the Mona Lisa
that are very easy to reproduce
and so people can actually look at it
without having to go to the Louvre
and kind of see it in the flesh
as it were.
And I would say that by the beginning
of the 20th century
the Mona Lisa is probably
the most famous painting in the Louvre,
probably one of the most famous paintings in the world.
It's kind of had a very meteoric rise.
But there's one final thing
that's needed to complete.
its ascent to the absolute top of the echelon. And this happens on the 21st of August
1911 and what happens puts the Mona Lisa on the front page of newspapers
around the world. So 21st of August 1911 it's a Monday and the Louvre is shut for
cleaning. While it's shut people walk through the room in which the Mona Lisa is
kept and they find that it's gone.
There is only the empty frame in which it had been contained.
And there is complete outrage.
The director of France's museums is sacked.
The Petit Parisienne, which at the time was the world's largest circulation newspaper,
splashed the painting on the front page together with the brilliantly caustic comment.
Well, at least we still have the frame.
The news goes around Paris, around France, around the world.
Huge crowds kind of descend on the louvre.
go to look at where the painting had been much larger crowds than had ever assembled when the
Mona Lisa was actually in situ. And there's a desperate kind of Inspector Cluzo-type pursuit of the
painting, which is always raking up ludicrous suspect. So one of them is the famous poet, Guillaume
Apollinaire, who is arrested. And Apollinaire and a friend of his, who is an up-and-coming Spanish painter
resident in Paris at the time called Pablo Picasso, actually end up on trial, both Apollinaire.
and Picasso are acquitted. It's a suggestion of how this crime is not only inflating the reputation
of the Mona Lisa, but is also kind of rubbing up against artists and poets and painters who are the
cutting edge of the avant-garde, which I think is another part of why the Mona Lisa suddenly comes to
seem much more interesting to people than it had previously done. However, the police seem helpless. A year
passes, there are no leads, and by 1913, so that's a couple of years after the theft,
the Mona Lisa is removed from the catalogue of the Louvre. It's basically an admission of defeat.
You know, this painting is gone. We're never going to get it back. But then, as dramatically as
it had vanished, the Mona Lisa reappears. And it reappears because in Florence, where of course
the Mona Lisa had originally been painted, an antique dealer,
called Alfredo Jerry gets a letter which has been signed Leonardo.
And in this letter, Leonardo says that he wants to hand over the Mona Lisa to the
Afizi, the great gallery in Florence, and he hints that he wants to do this for patriotic reasons.
He does also say that he wants 500,000 dearer to cover his expenses, but he's going very big
on the fact that he's Italian and he's doing this for patriotic reasons.
So the antique dealer arranges to meet him and Leonardo, Julie arrives from Paris and Jerry and the head curator from the Ephizi asked to see the Mona Lisa.
He kind of pulls the Mona Lisa out from his suitcase, unwraps it.
The head curator of the Ephizzi inspects it.
It's clear it is indeed the Mona Lisa.
And so they have the thief arrested.
And he turns out to be a guy called Vincenzo Perugia.
And he was an Italian painter-decorator who had been working in the Louvre, painting the walls on the Fateful Monday that the painting was stolen.
And he seized his chance.
And he just lifted it out from his frame, hidden it under his coat, walked off across the courtyard of the Louvre.
He kind of waved at a guard and gone out through the door.
And that was that.
And he kept it for a year and a half hidden under his bed.
And, you know, his motivation, which he holds to throughout his subsequent trial,
is that he was outraged that the Mona Lisa was in Paris.
He thought it should be in Florence.
And one of the reasons why he's so outraged is he thought that Napoleon had stolen it from the Ephizzi.
So this was his motivation.
And there's no reason to doubt that he was genuinely suffused with kind of nationalist enthusiasm, is that?
The problem is he turns out to be really boring.
You know, people had wanted a master criminal, a kind of gentleman, cracksman, and he's not at all.
And because he does not become the focus of media retention, which he might otherwise have done,
instead, the star is Mona Lisa.
And what previously the painting had been called it, it's from this point on that the
Mona Lisa starts to be feminized.
The Mona Lisa is she.
She is coming back to Paris.
She is returning to the Louvre.
She is being put back in her frame.
And when she is put back in her frame in the Louvre, she sits from that point on as the
absolute symbol, the absolute embodiment of high art, of high culture, with capital letters.
And from that point on, the reputation of the Mona Lisa as the embodiment of the Renaissance
of Western art, of art, full stop, is absolutely secure, although it does have the kind of paradoxical
effect that now the Mona Lisa is the icon of high art. Of course, enthusiasts of high art start
to turn against it and to say, oh, it's a bit vulgar, it's a bit trashy.
She becomes the embodiment of middlebrow art enthusiasm, doesn't she?
I mean, isn't that the, you know, somebody, if you're a student and you go in and somebody's
got a printer the Mona Lisa on their wall, you kind of think you don't really know much about art.
Do you not think?
Yeah, it's the classic FM of art.
But this in turn, of course, I mean, it only fuels her further assent into the stratosphere of fame.
And you can see it operating in all kinds of ways.
So because she's famous, because people are meant to take her seriously in.
and kind of offer her obeisance, of course she starts to be parodied.
And the most famous of these parodies is done in 1919, so only, you know, a few years after
her abduction and return.
And this is done by the artist Marcel Duchamp, who's also very keen on urinals.
And he gets a postcard of the Mona Lisa, and he draws a moustache and a goatee on it.
And he calls it in English, uses the letters L-H-O-O-Q, but Dominique.
with your mastery of French.
Do you want to just explain to people
what that means in French?
It's a tremendous example of French humor.
L-H-O-O-O-Q, in French is L-H-O-Q,
which means she is hot, basically,
she's hot in the ass.
She's hot in the bind.
So tremendous banter there from Marcel Dichon.
Outrage and consternation,
and of course the scandal
just further amplifies the Mona Lisa's fame.
Then, of course, there's mass reproduction.
So the more scope for reproducing the Mona Lisa, the more she's reproduced.
And it's really telling that in 1963, she is the first painting to be reproduced by Andy Warhol.
I mean, that's the true measure of fame.
And Warhol had been inspired to do it by the fact that in 1963, the Mona Lisa had come to America,
a kind of diplomatic gift from DeGold to Kennedy.
And so that makes the Mona Lisa even more famous in America than in the United.
1974, it visits Japan, and that kind of lights the fuse on Japanese enthusiasm for going to
the Louvre and taking photographs of the Mona Lisa. And I would say that it's not an exaggeration
that now the Mona Lisa ranks not just as the archetype of high art, but kind of as the ultimate
global icon of tourism. I mean, it's the one object in the world, probably that tourists, the
massive tourists want to see more than anything else. I mean, it is the single most popular
object held by any museum in the world. And the Louvre is the most visited museum. You have
nine million people going there a year. And I think according to surveys, more than half of
those people say that they're going specifically to see the Mona Lisa. So it now has its own
dedicated room. It's got its own kind of crowd management procedures. It's got its own security
arrangements, but it's still kind of messing up the ability of the Louvre to present all its other
paintings, because the curators in the Louvre have always insisted that the Mona Lisa be
presented as a Renaissance painting, so alongside other Renaissance paintings. And the effect is that
people just, you know, they rush past all the other Renaissance paintings, including Leonardo's
picture of John the Baptist, and they all kind of gather around the Mona Lisa. And so the plan now,
this is part of President Macron's kind of a post.
Holianist ambitions, his grand project, is going to be his kind of final legacy project, and he's called it the
New Renaissance. So the Mona Lisa is going to be moved to an underground gallery. It's going to be
entirely exclusive to the Mona Lisa. There will be no other work of art inside it, and that is
scheduled to open in 2013. So Lisa Gerardini will end up having a very own suite of rooms in the most
visited museum in the world. And I think that I love it that an otherwise entirely obscure
Florentine woman is so astronomically insanely famous. Such an interesting story. And yet,
I have to say, I find it quite an unbelievably uninteresting painting. But it is a fascinating story.
I think the more I trace the history of how it's come to be famous. And the many ways in which it's
been understood, the more you can see that all these, everything that people have seen in it
is kind of there. I mean, it is kind of infinite in the ways that it can be interpreted and seen.
And that might not be true of other paintings. I think the story is so interesting. And it's such
an interesting case study in art history and art criticism. But frankly, as a painting, I can think
of hundreds of paintings I'd rather look at than the mainly say, anyway, that does not in any way
diminish the story, which is fascinating. Tom,
Thank you very much and
Arrivedeci.
Bye-bye.
Why did we really go to war with Iraq?
And did Saddam Hussein really have weapons of mass destruction?
I'm Gordon Carrera, National Security Journalist.
And I'm David McCloskey, author and former CIA analyst.
We are the hosts of The Rest is Classified
and in our latest series,
we are telling the true story of one of history's biggest intelligence failures,
Iraq WMD.
In 2003, the US and you have,
The UK told the world that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, but they were wrong.
This wasn't a simple lie, it was something far more complicated, far more interesting, and far more dangerous.
Spies who believed their sources, politicians who wanted the public to believe in the threat,
and a dictator who couldn't prove he'd already destroyed the weapons.
In this series, we go deep inside the CIA and MI6, go into the rooms where decisions were made.
were made and look at the sources who fabricated the intelligence that took us to war.
The Iraq War reshaped the Middle East and permanently weakened public trust in governments
and intelligence agencies, and its consequences are still playing out today.
Plus, in a declassified club exclusive, we are joined by three people who were at the heart
of the decision to go to war.
Former head of MI6, Richard Deerlove, Tony Blair's former communications director, Alistair Campbell,
and former acting head of the CIA, Michael Morel.
So get the full story by listening to The Rest is Classified
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