Vagabondish is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Read our disclosure.
Spain’s Prado Museum has a copy of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa that was most likely painted alongside the master in the same studio.
The Mona Lisa immitation has been part of the Prado collection for years and has been displayed occasionally to the public but it wasn’t until last year, when the work was re-examined, that the importance of the painting was revealed. Layers of black overpaint were stripped away from the copy to reveal a much clearer image of the model than even the original DaVinci masterpiece, which has aged over the centuries.
Miguel Falomir, the Prado’s director for Italian painting, said that the newly restored copy gives both art lovers and art experts the chance,
“to admire the Mona Lisa with totally different eyes.”
There are dozens of surviving Mona Lisa replicas from the 16th and 17th centuries, but this particular painting is thought to be the earliest copy of the da Vinci masterpiece.
Read more at the Washington Post.