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MONA LISA - from Baroque till Modernism
Mona Lisa has been one of the most frequently interpreted works of art since the time of its creation. She could not be avoided by almost none of famous artists till today.
Mona Lisa was very different from other portraits made until that time, because she was painted sitting down and not as a bust or drawn in profile like Italian painters did. This invention of Leonardo's influenced the development of a completely new way of portrait drawing which was followed by many until the 19th century.
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Self Portrait
Nicolas Poussin
1650
Oil on canvas, 98 x 74 cm
Paris, Musee du Louvre
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Las Meninas
Diego Velazquez
1656-1657
Oil on canvas
Madrid, Museo del Prado
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Self Portrait
Michiel Sweerts
1658-1661
Oil on canvas
Ohio, Oberlin, Allen Memorial Art Museum
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Self Portrait
Rembrandt
1659
Oil on canvas, 84.5 x 66 cm
Washington, National Gallery of Art
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Madame Regnault
Francois Gerard
1798
Oil on canvas, 103 x 74 cm
Paris, Musee du Louvre
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Raphael and La Fornarina
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres
about 1814
Oil on canvas, 26 x 21 1/2''
Cambridge, Fogg Art Museum
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Monna Vanna
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
1866 (repainted in 1873)
Oil on canvas, 35 x 34 in.
London, Tate Gallery
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Sibylla Palmifera
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
1866-1870
Oil on canvas, 38 3/4 x 33 1/4 in.
Port Sunlight, Lady Lever Art Gallery
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Kannon
Kanzan Shimomura
1868-1912
The painting is also known as Goddess of Mercy.
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