"In was in 1503 that Leonardo da Vinci began work on the portrait of a Florentine lady." "It was to become the most personal and obsessive project of his career." "He worked on the picture for over a decade, and kept it by his side until his death." "She is known as the Mona Lisa, and she's become the most famous image in the history of art." "A good painter has to bring out 2 things, the physical appearance of the subject he's painting, but also what is in the mind, the intentions of the soul." "Achieving the first is easy, the second very hard." "Mona Lisa." "Mona Lisa." "Yeah- she's a man." "She's ltaliana." "When I was 8 years old, I saw it for the first time." "Leonardo da Vinci." "It's beautiful, man." "Wow." "This is the story of the most famous work of art ever created by human hand, a painting so valuable it's impossible to put a price on it." "In the Louvre Museum in Paris, it's simply known as 'Painting No. 779' lt's the portrait of an unknown Italian lady, who seems to be smiling." "Her name, Mona Lisa.... ..simply means Madonna, Lady Lisa." "Yet from the moment she was painted, 500 years ago, she has obsessed and intrigued the whole world." "But who was this mysterious lady and how did she become the superstar she is today?" "And what is the secret of her smile?" "I see a woman that's looking at someone and saying you've got me on my worst day of the month!" "What am I doing here?" "And you're trying to get me to smile at you." "That's what I'm seeing." "She's trying her best, but she's pretty annoyed about it... and I don't blame her." "Today like a Hollywood star, the Mona Lisa has her own bodyguards and special security." "She lives in a humidified air-conditioned concrete box, protected by triple, bullet-proof glass, but it doesn't seem to deter over 6 million tourists every year." "So what's the secret of her fascination?" "Why has this of all the images in the world, gripped the imagination of so many people for the past 500 years?" "Kings, Emperors and Presidents have all paid their respects to her." "On her American tour in 1962," "President Kennedy greeted her as the ultimate symbol of western civilisation." "We citizens of nations unborn, at the time of its creation, are among the inheritors and protectors of the ideals which gave it birth." "For this painting is not only one of the towering achievements of the skill and the vision of art, but its creator embodied the central purpose of our civilisation." "She's been exploited and replicated in so many forms, that it's easy to forget she was once a living breathing person, her image and expression caught in one moment of time, and immortalised by the hand of the artist." "This is how I think the Mona Lisa first looked when Leonardo painted it in 1503." "It's a very cleaned up version of the picture that we're now familiar with, but to get to this there's have been a great deal of changes and stages involved in making this picture." "I'll show you some of those stages." "This is a board of poplar wood, and this is what the Mona Lisa was painted on." "Everybody thinks people used canvas, but in those days they didn't, they painted on wood." "In the south of Europe it was generally poplar wood, in the north of Europe it was generally oak." "It was this nice solid wood that became a masterpiece." "Chalk drawing, now almost certainly Leonardo would have done a chalk drawing or some kind of a-an image perhaps in pen, or silver point, or something, to give an idea of the kind of look of the portrait," "the feel of the portrait." "The drawing would be transferred to the panel by a process called pricking and pouncing." "The little lines would have been effectively joined up by some red- via the wet fluid paint." "This will surprise you, the green face, brown dress, blue background." "What's happening here?" "Well basically Leonardo's just roughing in what goes where colour-wise." "And we're starting to rough in the warm flesh tones over the-the green, so it still comes through in some areas." "And of course the background and the sky now, the marvellous blue, deep sort of ultramarine type sky." "Mona Lisa." "Painting excels because it does not fade as music does as soon as it is born." "It endures, and keeps all the appearance of being alive, though in fact it's confined to one surface." "It can preserve the transient beauty of mortals and endow it with a permanence greater than the works of nature, for these are the slaves of time, even when death has destroyed nature's original, painting preserves the image of divine beauty." "To find the only mention of the Mona Lisa in Leonardo's lifetime we have to travel 150 miles from Paris to Amboise in the Loire Valley." "Leonardo came to live and work here near the end of his life, at the invitation of King Francis I." "This is the fine house the King gave him to live in" "On October 10th 151 7 the Cardinal of Aragon came to pay his respects to the great painter." "He and his secretary were then given a tour of his studio." "This is what the secretary recorded in his diary." "Leonardo showed the Cardinal three pictures." "One of them was of a certain Florentine lady, painted from life at the request of Guliano de Medici." "It was absolute perfection." "This I have seen with my own eyes." "By 1530, the Mona Lisa found her way into the Royal Collection." "Unfortunately King Francis decided she would look particularly good on the walls of his suite of bathrooms." "She was kept there for many years, and present day experts believe that the crack allure on the surface of the picture is partly due to the steam, from the royal ablutions." "And from the bathroom to the bedroom the King also possessed this curious striptease version of the Mona Lisa, called the Mona Vanna." "What could possibly connect this and Leonardo's masterpiece?" "Its origins are obscure, but it's clearly related to the portrait of the Mona Lisa except she's not wearing anything!" "Now there is a rather unusual taste at the Court of Francis I, for nude portraits of respectable women." "There's a great one of 2 women, his mistress and her sister in the bath, pinching each other's nipples." "Now this is actually a way of celebrating their fecundity, because breast milk is a symbol of the way that you create children." "So the Mona Vanna may fit in best with the taste of the French Court." "The Mona Vanna was probably the work of Leonardo's assistant Salai." "The original Mona Lisa stayed locked away in the Royal Collection of Francis and his successors, until the people of France decided they didn't want a monarchy any more." "When the French Revolution began in 1 789, the aristocracy was sent in their thousands to the Guillotine." "Soon King Louis xvi and his Queen, Marie Antoinette, would themselves be executed." "The royal collections were plundered and the Palace of the Louvre became a people's museum, there that the Mona Lisa was put on public view for the first time." "When Napoleon came to power and was crowned Emperor of France, one of the first demands he made was to have the Mona Lisa and placed in his private bedroom in the Tuileries, thus reviving the tradition of the Royal Collection." "He kept her there for nearly a decade, and he called her Madam Lisa." "His fascination with Leonardo continued, as he invaded Italy ." "and there he found Leonardo's drawings and notebooks." "He took them back to France too." "He said all men of genius are French, no what their country of birth." "After the fall of Napoleon, the Mona Lisa returns to the Louvre, and starts its life as a major tourist attraction in the French capital." "Then 100 years on August 21 st 191 1 in the early hours of the morning she becomes the leading player in a story of crime, politics and extortion." "The thief had probably spent the Sunday night hiding in the building, after it was closed to the public." "When the security guard was asleep, he slipped out through a back door, into the courtyard ." "and then made his escape along one of the quays of the River Seine." "Visitors to the Louvre were undeterred, for some time afterwards they queued up to view the space on the wall, where the Mona Lisa had once hung." "The theft made headline news around the world, a massive police hunt was launched and among those suspects brought in for questioning was a radical young Spanish artist, called Pablo Picasso." "But by this time the Mona Lisa was a long way away." "On November 1 1th, 1913," "Alfredo Gerri, a Florentine antiques dealer, received a letter offering him the Mona Lisa." "The price would be half a million lira, in today's terms about a million pounds." "The letter was signed "Leonardo"" "A month later the mysterious Leonardo instructed Signor Gerri to meet him at this hotel in the Via Panzani." "Gerri took with him Giovanni Poggi, a Leonardo expert and the Director of the Uffizi Museum." "The 2 men then made their way to the man's room on 2nd floor of the hotel." "What happened next, Signor Gerri recalled as the most exciting moment of his life." "At first all we could see was dirty, festering old clothes, but then we noticed the trunk had a false bottom." "As soon as it came into our view, we had the conviction that this indeed was the authentic work of Leonardo da Vinci." "Poggi had been told by the Louvre to look for a tell-tale splinter mark on the back of the wooden panel, it was there." "It confirmed that this was the real Mona Lisa." "The smile of the Mona Lisa was again alive in Florence!" "Leonardo the thief was also a Florentine, an unemployed house painter, whose real name was Vincenzo Peruggia." "He claimed to be a patriot, who had stolen the Mona Lisa simply so she could be returned to her motherland." "He was tried, he got 6 months, a very lenient sentence incidentally,vand er in a way he became famous." "Er when he died er there- he had an obituary in the- in the press." "The man who stole the Mona Lisa." "The Italian government was in a slightly embarrassing situation, because there was a wave of nationalism it was the moment where Italy was trying to build an empire in Africa." "so the government was under pressure, this is after all our painting" "..er-er Leonardo is Italian," "Mona Lisa is an Italian woman" "Let's keep it." "So it was shown in Rome, in Florence, in Milan." "It travelled and er crowds flocked." "Unfortunately the French wanted their painting back." "She's then er taken back to Paris in a train and welcomed by a huge crowd at er the er train station." "And then for 3 days, er there is a special exhibit with her and again the crowds flocked." "So you can see that the interest piles on the interest every little thing can be built up." "I mean one should also add that other paintings had been stolen before, and they did not receive such publicity." "So there was something about the Mona Lisa, but particularly something about Leonardo." "The story of the Mona Lisa begins in 1503." "Leonardo had returned to his native Florence, after 1 7 years in Milan, but it was no longer safe for him there." "His patron had been deposed and imprisoned by the invading French Army." "By now he was totally absorbed with his inventions and scientific experiments." "He wasn't painting any more." "When he came to live here at the Servite Monastery the monks clearly expected some paintings in return for his board and lodging, but as one of the priests Father Pietro noted," "Leonardo was by now weary of the brush." "Then in 1503, something happened to rekindle Leonardo's interest in painting." "A woman arrived in his studio for him to paint her likeness, and Leonardo agreed." "He began work on the portrait, that would obsess him for the rest of his life." "So what happened then, to make him change his mind?" "Why did he take on this commission, while turning down some of the wealthiest and most influential patrons of the day?" "I think what is remarkable about Leonardo is that more than anybody else at his time, and indeed more than anybody else for decades thereafter, he worked for himself, he did what interested him." "And it's not that he didn't need to make a living as an artist, he did, he needed that income, but he more than- he wanted to satisfy his patrons whoever they were, wanted to satisfy himself ." "his own intellectual curiosity, his own aesthetic needs." "The patrons for him were, shall we say enablers?" "And inconveniences, sometimes at worst." "From patrons you first get flattery, then hard work, then ingratitude and recriminations." "The most obvious thing patrons wanted from their portraits was to establish their identity, but in the case of the Mona Lisa," "Leonardo deliberately avoided even this basic requirement." "In his other portraits Leonardo usually left some clue or symbol, so that people could easily identify the sitter." "This is the earliest of them." "He places the subject in front of a juniper bush, because in Italian juniper, or Ginepro, is a play on her name," "Ginevra da Benci." "And in his exquisite portrait of Cecilia Gallarani, the ermine she's holding is a mascot of her lover, the Duke of Sforza." "But in the Mona Lisa, he left no clue in the picture at all, and there is no mention of her in any of his writings." "She is simply a mysterious woman, sitting in a landscape." "Leonardo may not have wanted to reveal her name, but his secret has inspired one of the greatest quests in the history of art, to discover the Mona Lisa's true identity." "One person who would have loved to have had her portrait painted in oil by Leonardo da Vinci, is Isabella d'Este." "The Marchioness of Manchua." "When he visited her in Manchua, he obviously did at least 2 charcoal sketches, brief, rapid, bravura performances there." "left one behind with her, and took the other on his travels down to Florence." "Now for the next 2 years she's in constant negotiation, pleading with him to finish the portrait or send the sketch back, or send her something from his hand." "She was so desperately keen, she even pleased with Cecilia Gallarani to borrow her portrait by Leonardo, so that she could work out her own instructions to the painter." "Isabella was a bit of pain, she would actually send artists lengths of string telling them how big the figures should be." "Now even for people who are being used to told what to paint, that's- this was going a bit far!" "But there's no shortage of other possibilities." "The visitors to Leonardo's house \in 151 7 thought the model was Isabella Gualanda the exotic mistress of his old patron Giuliani de Medici." "Another possibility is the warmongering Duchess," "Constanza D'Avalos" "There's an Italian poem naming her as the sitter, in a portrait by an artist called Vinci." "Finally there's the Florentine housewife," "Lisa Gheradini, named by Leonardo's biographer," "Georgio Vasari." "After centuries of uncertainty, a vitally important piece of evidence has only just come to light in the Milan State Archive." "It's an inventory." "detailing the estate of one Gian," "Giacomo Caprotti, who was murdered in 1525." "And we know Gian Giacomo as Salai, the Little Devil." "He was Leonardo's lifetime companion and assistant" "The inventory lists various paintings, but one La Jonda has been crossed out and replaced with another title, La Giaconda." "Now La Giaconda or the Smiling One, turns out to be the married name of Leonardo's sitter," "Lisa Gheradini." "So Salai's inventory reveals that" "Leonardo must have left the masterpiece to Salai, and that Lisa del Giaconda was indeed the Mona Lisa." "This is one of the most amazing discoveries." "I mean you sit in the Milan Archives, day after day after day, it's a freezing cold place, and you're reading all of this Latin, and then suddenly you've got it!" "You've got a document which tells you finally something you didn't know before." "Lisa lived here in the Via della Stufa, with her husband Francesco, a prosperous silk merchant." "She was the daughter of a middle class landowner, got married at 16, and was Francesco's 3rd wife." "What she meant to Leonardo we'll probably never know." "But if this was meant to be a portrait of a respectable, middle-class housewife, then it's a very odd one indeed." "Contemporary portraits usually reflected a man's world, in which women were expected to be modest, chaste and virtuous." "In 16th century Florence, expensive clothes and jewellery were flaunted, because everything was about keeping up" "But in the Mona Lisa," "Leonardo decides to throw away the rule book, far from being the height of fashion, her dress is utterly plain and timeless." "Lisa is a married woman, but she wears no wedding ring." "Indeed there's no jewellery, no adornment of any kind, apart from simple gold braid on her neckline." "Her loose hair would even have been seen at the time as implying loose morals, the curls falling sensually over her shoulders, and there's another radical innovation, her pose." "Traditionally Renaissance paintings would be in profile." "It would be like standing like this, and you'd only see the profile." "But what Leonardo does it is- is as if er- he's calling Lisa." "He calls Lisa, Lisa turns towards him, looks at him, looks at you, and has the upper part of her body looking somewhere else." "So it's a snapshot, it is in the middle of a movement, and he's been able to do that and thus introducing into portrait painting something which existed of course in sculpture, in a single portrait." "This was a- such an achievement, that Raphael and others started imitating it." "Indeed nowadays when a photographer takes a picture of you, he'll always say er please don't look at the camera, look slightly away and so on." "They will try to disturb the staticity of the- of the-of the pose, and in so doing, whether they know it or not, they are reproducing Leonardo's great discovery." "But is she looking directly at us or through us?" "is she even looking past us, over our shoulder at something we can't see?" "Leonardo teases us, he draws a veil of ambiguity across her features, and then of course, there's the riddle of that smile." "What is she smiling at?" "What does she have that we don't have?" "What does she know about our thoughts, that we don't know?" "Leonardo was a man listening to voices unheard by other people." "The smile to me is essentially saying I know things that you will never know." "I understand you and the world in ways that you will never conceive of." "It's his message to the world, it's essentially his message to himself at the same time." "That's why I think in this portrait, he's painting biography and autobiography at the same time." "Leonardo's mother was a peasant girl" "La Caterina, who had a brief liaison with his father Ser Piero." "She was later married off to a man in the next village, but she's said to have wet-nursed Leonardo for at least 18 months." "Then he was brought up by his step-mother Donna Albiera." "Both women are said to have been deeply affectionate and loving, but the separation from his birth mother suggested another interpretation of the Mona Lisa, to the founding father of psycho-analysis," "Siegmund Freud." "We begin to suspect the possibility that it was his mother who possessed the mysterious smile, the smile that he had lost and that fascinated him so much, he found it again in the Florentine lady." "In Leonardo's later painting," ""The Virgin and St Anne"" "Freud saw the same smile, the Mona Lisa smile, on both women, as he saw it, both mother figures." "Both of these women adored him, which becomes in the classical Freudian sense, the perfect situation in which a child, a male child, is likely to become homosexual." "Leonardo probably was in the sense of we talk about being gay, I think he was gay l think he probably slept with men, I think that all the evidence er in terms of what we know about his life, and also his art." "Most of the drawings are of men and it's centred really round the midriff." "You look at the care and the detail and the obsession with the ideal male form." "It is repeated and drawn over again and again and again, which doesn't compare to anything like the way in which the female form is represented." "Leonardo's faces often seem to have some kind of sexual ambiguity." "And here is that smile again on his most androgynous figure, the Portrait of St John." "He too seems to have some secret knowledge, some understanding of what lies hidden in the darkness." "What of Lisa del Giaconda herself?" "While she sat for Leonardo, did she too have a secret?" "One that might explain the mystery of her smile." "It's my personal thought that she is indeed pregnant." "In the first place if you look at her hands, here she is, she's supposed to be a relatively young woman in her early 20's, there's no question that she has swollen fingers as you look carefully at the picture." "There's no question that she's holding her hands in a particular attitude, that we're accustomed to seeing on the upper abdomens of women far advanced in pregnancy." "Lisa del Giacondo was expecting a child, 2nd child." "They're moving into a new house the next year, so it may well be quite prosaic that this was to celebrate her pregnancy." "While Leonardo painted the Mona Lisa by day, at night he was here at the Hospital of Santa Maria Nuova cutting up female corpses." "This led to his pioneering study of the female role in procreation." "While most men of the time believed they alone were responsible for the act of creation," "Leonardo concluded that the female role was of equal, if not of greater, importance." "This astonishing drawing is known as The Great Lady in the margins are some of" "Leonardo's characteristic notes to himself, ideas that will become the foundation for a new science, Embryology." "Begin with the formation of the infant, put in such parts as our successively composed according to the duration of the pregnancy and how it is nourished until birth." "Leonardo da Vinci makes the first ever drawings of the human foetus in the womb." "He was beginning to focus very intensively upon what is life, what creates life in the body, how does it come about" "And one of the things he's most interested in in his anatomy, is this cycle of life, death and maturity." "And think he's doing Leda at the same time, this painting about generat0ion." "Here is this wonderful image of a bird - we know Leonardo's obsession with flight - mating with a woman, and producing babies from eggs." "What a subject for Leonardo!" "You know this is absolutely perfect." "It's all the mysteries of generation, all in one package." "He thinks he's really getting to the mystery of life." "I think if you put this together and think that Leonardo in a sense saw this inside her body, you suddenly think, wow!" "that is how Leonardo looked at it." "Of course this then refracts back beautifully into the landscape and the notion of - of the cyclical change of things, and how landscape changes over vast periods of time." "When you see a scene of the primeval or primordial world behind the person being portrayed, it immediately puts you in mind of creation of early forms that will evolve into what we are today." "Now in the foreground, you are looking at a woman who represents exactly the same thing." "It strikes me as it's a very unstable picture." "You have these towering mountains behind, they're overhanging, they look like they might fall down, tumble down any time." "The lakes are very full, it looks like they might come tumbling over the dam and wash away the bridge." "And I do wonder whether what he's depicting here is how he imagined the Arno Valley would have looked, in previous times." "There is some very er clear evidence in the notebooks that he thought there used to be a lake where Florence stood, and there was a lake lower down the valley as well, and maybe this is what he's seeing" "with these 2 lakes." "He's imagining what the landscape used to look like." "So what's going on here?" "How does the Mona Lisa connect with the strange primeval landscape behind her?" "It's time to get out of the city, and go back to where it all began, the Tuscan landscape, where Leonardo spent his childhood and formative years." "The Valley of the River Arno wasn't just his playground, it was his laboratory." "Here he studied the principles of flight, the dynamics of water, light and perspective." "Most people assume the landscape behind the Mona Lisa is a fantasy." "But it may be more real than it seems." "30 miles from Florence the River Arno is crossed by the Bureano Bridge., which bears an uncanny resemblance to the bridge in the painting." "What we do know for sure is that Leonardo knew the bridge and the surrounding area intimately." "Just a year before beginning work on the Mona Lisa," "Leonardo was working here, as a Military Engineer, to the infamous warlord Cesare Borgia." "And only minutes away from the Bureano Bridge there is another astonishing connection with the Mona Lisa." "This epic landscape is know to locals as The Valley of Hell." "The rocks appear frequently in his notebooks, and there are similar forms in the backgrounds of other paintings." "The Virgin of the Rocks." "The Virgin and St Anne." "Little rivulet streams have carved their way down through these rock and formed the amazing shapes that you see today." "And that's I'm sure what Leonardo understood had happened." "The Mona Lisa gives a very clear sense of time passing, I think particularly in the landscape in the background." "There you have a-a clear depiction of the geological cycle." "You have the river starting up in the mountains, these very jagged, unstable mountains." "It wends its way down bringing the sediment with it, until it eventually gets to the sea and Leonardo had this idea that it then was taken back up to the mountains again, and would start again." "So you have this continuity, this continual cycle of geological time for- forever really." "In Leonardo's time, the natural world was regarded as a heathen wilderness, best avoided by God-fearing people." "But Leonardo, like his contemporary Christopher olumbus, had an insatiable curiosity to chart the unknown world." "I came one day to the mouth of a great cavern." "I had never been here before, never been aware of its existence." "I stood for a time peering in to see what forms had been created there by nature, but the darkness of the cave was deep." "I felt fear, and desire." "Fear of the mysterious cavern, desire to see whether there might be any marvellous thing within its walls." "Look!" "What is it?" "It's a whale!" "Think how many years this beast has ploughed its way through the oceans," "chasing the tuna fish, buffeting the ships, creating great storms in its wake." "Oh time swift destroyer of all things living, how many Kings, how many peoples have you brought low since this creature was flung here to die?" "Its bare bones become the columns to support a mountain." "He's at the mouth of the cave and he's afraid to go in, but his curiosity is pulling him in." "And ironically what does he find, when he gets in there?" "he finds the fossil of a great fish, very likely a whale, and the beginnings therefore, of the earth." "Everything is tied in, in his work." "The search for the maternal power of generation, and then the perpetuation of the species." "Here's another sea creature." "A thousand more." "These shellfish once lived underneath the ocean, so how do you think they got up here, on the top of a mountain?" "The Great Flood?" "Noah?" "According to the Bible, fossils were carried onto the top of mountains by Noah's Flood, but to Leonardo this was nonsense, because fossils were not just found in one, but many different layers of rock." "Did the Great Flood sweep them up in one mass and line them up in neat little rows?" "So what he realises is, that it actually it was just a coming and a going of the sea." "The sea would come and wash over the land at some point and deposit these fossils, and then it would wash away again, and the fossils wouldn't be deposited." "And therefore you would gradually build up these layers, and this was incredibly important because it was another 150 years, really, before this theory was- we call it the law of Su-Super-position before people realised that that's what actually happened." "Such heretical observations were unpublishable, but they provided Leonardo with a new theory of creation." "Only observation he said, is the key to understanding, and his observations told him that the earth could not have been created in 6 days, that it took thousands, if not millions of years, of geological changes" "of atmospheric changes, of biological changes." "So to him the evidence was everywhere." "There was no question about the way the earth had evolved evolved the same way a human being evolves." "Drawing together all these threads, lt become clear that the Mona Lisa was snapshot, of the mature Leonardo's mind, a distillation of all that he had discovered, through a lifetime's observation, into the secrets of nature." "All his life Leonardo had wanted to control nature." "He mapped town and countryside, planned to subdue and divert great rivers." "He cut through mountains, built bridges all to re-arrange and order God's creation." "But order had its flipside in disorder and chaos." "Leonardo know that nature could be both unpredictable and terrifying." "It strikes me is it's a very unstable picture, towering mountains and they look like they might fall down, tumble down in time." "Unease about the picture." "was undergoing the biggest cataclysmic changes imaginable" "The River Arno has always been unpredictable and subject to often devastating floods." "As recently as the 1960's, it caused terrible destruction to buildings and works of art in Florence." "Leonardo himself had witnessed as a child one of the worst of all deluges, one he recalls years later." "The air was darkened by the heavy rain driven aslant by the crosswinds." "The fire rent and tore the clouds asunder, what fearful noises were heard through the dark air as thunder violently shot through to strike anything that lay in its course." "What weeping and wailing as terrified beings flung themselves into the waters" "How many mothers wept for their dead children?" "their arms raised to heaven as the hills collapsed into the depths of the flooded valley." "Leonardo even produces a record of the aftermath, furniture, books, the detritus of everyday life, heaped up after the terrible flood subsided." "The deluge drawings are in a sense the ultimate reflection of this idea that there is a superior force, and these are vast forces and what happens in the human heart, what happens in the mind are all little microcosmic" "reflections of these vast forces, so it's a complete spectrum." "And towards the end of his life, there are these amazing visions where there is an insight that however much you understand the forces, there is an awesome dimension which is outside human ability to control." "The presence that rose thus so strangely beside the waters, is expressive of what in the ways of 1 ,000 years men have come to desire." "She is older than the rocks among which she sits, like the Vampire she's been dead many times, and learned the secrets of the grave." "What was the relationship of a living Florentine to this creature of his thought?" "By what strange affinities had the dream and the person grown up thus apart, and yet so closely together?" "Leonardo never delivered the portrait of Lisa del Giaconda, he carried it with him wherever he went for the last 16 years of his life even into exile." "At the age of 61 ," "Leonardo left Italy never to return." "Younger and more fashionable artists like Raphael and Michaelangelo, were now been the most glamorous commissions." "This is where his journey ended, at the French town of Amboise in the Loire Valley." "If he was under appreciated in his homeland, he was certainly welcomed by the French King." "Francis I was determined to import the glories of the Renaissance to France." "In recognition of Leonardo's unique status, he gave him a large manor house, right next door to the royal castle." "Leonardo's last years were not easy." "He suffered a stroke which meant he lost the use of his right hand." "But his increasing infirmity didn't seem to matter to the French King, who treasured very moment he could spend with such a unique and wise old man." "Probably one of the great tragedies of his life that, by that point, he's really too burnt out, to engage in any new projects, which I'm sure Francis I would clearly have supported." "There's a wonderful father son relationship going on there." "Francis sees him as this great artist, but also a great scholar, a-a great man of wisdom." "Leonardo tried to pull together thousands of pages of notes and drawings, into a grand encyclopaedia." "But compiling the observations of a lifetime, like so many of his ambitious schemes, remained unfinished." "While I thought I was learning how to live, I've really been learning how to die." "As a day well spent brings happy sleep, so a life well used brings contented death." "Leonardo died here in his room in Clos Luce on 2nd May, 1519." "He was 67 years old." "Leonardo said to have died in the arms of the French King." "This is how the painter Angre imagined the scene 300 years later." "The great architect Benvenuto Cellini, wrote this:" "I have to record the words the King spoke to me, that he believed there had never been another man born in the world, who knew as much as Leonardo." "Not so much about painting, sculpture, and architecture, as that he was a very great philosopher." "The Mona Lisa is Leonardo's great legacy to the world, bringing together all the passions and preoccupations of a lifetime." "In this one painting, he captures the essence of life itself, in an instant and for eternity." "Like a magician he's made the invisible, visible." "Don't pity the humble painter, he can be lord of all things, whatever exists in the universe, he has first in his mind, and then in his hand." "By his art he may be called the Grandchild of God."