Scientists pry new secrets from Leonardo’s Mona Lisa

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Scientists Pry New Secrets From Leonardo’s Mona Lisa
France Mona Lisa, © Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
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By John Leicester, Associated Press

Scientists have pried another secret from the Mona Lisa that shines a light on the techniques used by Leonardo to create her exquisitely enigmatic smile.

Using X-rays to peer into the chemical structure of a speck of the celebrated work of art, scientists suggest that the Italian Renaissance master may have been in a particularly experimental mood when he set to work on the Mona Lisa early in the 16th century.

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The research, published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, shows that the oil-paint recipe that Leonardo used as his base layer to prepare the panel of poplar wood appears to have been different for the Mona Lisa, with its own distinctive chemical signature.

France Mona Lisa
Other experts have called the research ‘very exciting’, saying that any new insights into Leonardo’s technique are ‘extremely important’ (AP Photo/Aurelien Morissard, Pool, File)

Victor Gonzalez, the study’s lead author and a chemist at France’s top research body, the CNRS, said: “He was someone who loved to experiment, and each of his paintings is completely different technically.”

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Mr Gonzalez has studied the chemical compositions of dozens of works by Leonardo, Rembrandt and other artists.

“In this case, it’s interesting to see that indeed there is a specific technique for the ground layer of Mona Lisa,” he said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Specifically, the researchers found a rare compound, plumbonacrite, in the first layer of paint.

The discovery, Mr Gonzalez said, confirmed for the first time what art historians had previously only hypothesized: that Leonardo most likely used lead oxide powder to thicken and help dry his paint as he began working on the portrait that now stares out from behind protective glass in the Louvre Museum in Paris.

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Carmen Bambach, a specialist in Italian art and curator at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, who was not involved in the study, called the research “very exciting” and said any scientifically proven new insights into Leonardo’s painting techniques are “extremely important news for the art world and our larger global society”.

Finding plumbonacrite in the Mona Lisa attests “to Leonardo’s spirit of passionate and constant experimentation as a painter – it is what renders him timeless and modern,” Ms Bambach said.

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The Mona Lisa is on display at the Louvre Museum in Paris (Mike Egerton/PA)

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The paint fragment from the base layer of the Mona Lisa that was analysed was barely visible to the naked eye, no larger than the diameter of a human hair, and came from the top right-hand edge of the painting.

The scientists peered into its atomic structure using X-rays in a synchrotron, a large machine that accelerates particles to almost the speed of light, which allowed them to unravel the speck’s chemical makeup.

Plumbonacrite is a by-product of lead oxide, allowing the researchers to say with more certainty that Leonardo likely used the powder in his paint recipe.

“Plumbonacrite is really a fingerprint of his recipe,” Mr Gonzalez said. “It’s the first time we can actually chemically confirm it.”

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After Leonardo, Dutch master Rembrandt may have used a similar recipe when he was painting in the 17th century. Mr Gonzalez and other researchers have previously found plumbonacrite in his work, too.

 

Mr Gonzalez added: “It tells us also that those recipes were passed on for centuries. It was a very good recipe.”

Leonardo is thought to have dissolved lead oxide powder, which has an orange colour, in linseed or walnut oil by heating the mixture to make a thicker, faster-drying paste.

“What you will obtain is an oil that has a very nice golden colour,” Mr Gonzalez said. “It flows more like honey.”

But the Mona Lisa — said by the Louvre to be a portrait of Lisa Gherardini, the wife of a Florentine silk merchant — and other works by Leonardo still have other secrets to tell.

“There are plenty, plenty more things to discover, for sure. We are barely scratching the surface,” Mr Gonzalez said. “What we are saying is just a little brick more in the knowledge.”

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