
Curators of the Italian artist Leonardo Da Vinci, who was a man behind the "hot Mona Lisa" drawings. The charcoal drawing, located in the second art collection for more than 150 years, could have been a sketch for Mona Lisa, a French art expert. The magical portrayal of naked women, known as Monna Vanna, was previously attributed only to Leonarda da Vinci's studio. But experts found enough traces to make the artist work on both. After testing at the Louvre Museum in Paris, curators believe the sketch is "at least partially" Leonardo. Since 1862, he has been in the collection of Renaissance art at the Conde Museum in the Chantilly palace, north of the French capital, museum curators believe that after a month of testing at the Louvre, "drawing at least partially" Leonardo. "The drawing has quality in the way the face and hands are delivered, which is really remarkable. It's not a pale copy," said curator Mathieu Deldicque. "We look at something that worked parallel to Mona Lisa at the end of Leonardo's life. It's almost safe to prepare for oil on canvas," he added, with an obvious conclusion that he was closely related to Mona Lisa. Hands and body, claim Deldicque, are almost identical to Leonard's unmistakable masterpiece. Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) was one of the great painters of the Italian Renaissance, and his oil on canvas Mona Lisa (also known as La Gioconda) remains one of the most recognizable and most admired works of the world. It is believed that this is the commission of the merchant fabric and Florentine official Francesco del Giocondo for his wife's portrait, Lisa Gherardini.

Photo Credit: Getty
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