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Topline The “Mona Lisa,” a 16th-century portrait by Leonardo da Vinci—and arguably the most famous painting on earth—was the target of a pastry attack Sunday in a stunt by a climate change ...
But the Mona Lisa is, in fact, not gone—the Leonardo da Vinci remains at the Louvre, where she has long been exhibited. There have been no reports of the Mona Lisa being stolen.
An art critic for The New York Times argued on Wednesday that "it's time to take down" the iconic Mona Lisa portrait from the Louvre Museum in Paris, which sparked quite the reaction on social media.
Awash in the bright neon lights of New Orleans’ gritty nightlife, “Mona Lisa and the Blood Moon” looks to be one part thriller, one part psychological horror and one part sci-fi fantasy. The ...
A man reportedly threw cake at the glass around the Mona Lisa at the Louvre on Sunday, May 29. He also told people to think of the Earth. The Paris prosecutor’s office said he was sent to a ...
MONA Lisa’s world-famous smile “wasn’t genuine” when Leonardo da Vinci painted her, new research says.Her lop-sided grin shows it was forced i ...
But when the viewer's eyes go directly to Mona Lisa's mouth, his central vision does not see the shadows, she said. "You'll never be able to catch her smile by looking at her mouth," Livingstone said.
A Second Mona Lisa? Science Offers Few Clues Backers Say Painting on Display in Singapore Is Genuine Leonardo da Vinci Work By Tom Wright Updated Jan. 14, 2015 4:33 pm ET ...