Showing posts with label Mona Lisa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mona Lisa. Show all posts

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Clos Luce- Home of the Genius Leonardo da Vinci

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The Residence Clos Luce, Loire Valley, France

The Residence Clos Luce is one of the most furnished in the Loire Valley. It carries the spirit of the Renaissance. From 1516 to 1519 Leonardo da Vinci lived here. This is the place where he completed his famous paintings Mona Lisa, St. Anne and St.John the Baptist. It was Francis I who ensconced Leonardo da Vinci in this mansion. 

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Clos Luce Residence, Loire Valley, France
The Clos Luce residence is connected through an underground tunnel with the Chateau of Amboise, where Francis I lived. This is the last place da Vinci inhabited till his death in 1519. In the Residence you can see some of the da Vinci's inventions who are recreated according to his drafts and manifested in the garden and basement.

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The Garden of Clos Luce, Loire Valley, France

What you have to see:
-the watchtower
-the insides of the mansion 
-the amazing landscapes which are not  hard to be noticed


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Gardens of Clos Luce, Loire Valley, France

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Residence Clos Luce, Loire Valley, France
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Leonardo da Vinci

Friday, November 11, 2011

Château de Chambord – the most impressive Château in the Loire Valley

Chateau De Chambord
Château de Chambord, Loire Valley, France


The royal Château de Chambord at Chambord, Loir-et-Cher, France is the largest and most popular of the Loire Châteaux. It’s also one of the most recognizable châteaux in the world because of its very distinct French Renaissance architecture which blends traditional French medieval forms with classical Renaissance structures. The design parallels are north Italian and Leonardesque.
Chambord  was built to serve as a hunting lodge for François I, who maintained his royal residences at Château de Blois and Château d’Amboise. Although the original design of the Château de Chambord is attributed, to Domenico da Cortona, some authors claim that the French Renaissance architect Philibert Delorme had a considerable role in the château's design, and others have suggested that Leonardo da Vinci may have designed it.

Château de Chambord, Loire Valley, France

Architecture

The castles distinct French Renaissance architecture combines traditional medieval defensive structures with classical Italian aspects. It dates from the time when chateaux in the Loire no longer needed to have medieval defenses, but elements such as towers and moats were retained for their aesthetic beauty.
The main body of the castle is roughly square in shape, with a large tower in each corner. there are also two (symmetrical) wings to the castle, each also ending with a substantial tower. Bases for a possible further two towers  found at the rear, these were never developed, and remain the same height as the wall. Superlatives abound in the immense building and it is said there are more than 400 rooms, and almost as many fireplaces, along with 84 staircases. Four rectangular vaulted hallways on each floor form a cross-shape.
Among all this grandeur, the central staircase still impresses and is perhaps the architectural highlight of a visit. The stone staircase rises the height of Chambord castle, and is of a 'double helix' form. This spectacular double-helix open staircase  is the centerpiece of the château. The two helixes ascend the three floors without ever meeting, illuminated from above by a sort of light house at the highest point of the château. There are suggestions that Leonardo da Vinci may have designed the staircase, but this has not been confirmed.
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Château de Chambord, famous double escalier, Loire Valley, France

The other architectural highlight must surely be the ornate roof, and the feature that makes Chateau de Chambord so instantly recognisable. The roof has often been compared with the skyline of a town.  At a glance the roof is symmetrical but look closer and you will see that is not the case - among the numerous towers, light wells and decorative features there are many variations from left to right.
The château also features 128 meters of facade, more than 800 sculpted columns and an elaborately decorated roof. When François I commissioned the construction of Chambord, he wanted it to look like the skyline of Constantinople.
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Château de Chambord, panoramic view, Loire Valley, France


The result of combining medieval French architecture with highlights from the Italian renaissance might be expected to create an alarming imbalance, but in reality the two combine to create a unified whole that is one of the most notable castles in France.
The design and architecture of the château inspired William Henry Crossland for his design of what is known as the Founder's building at Royal Holloway, University of London. The Founder's building features very similar towers and layout but was built using red bricks.
The Parc de Chambord around the Château is an enormous walled game reserve – the largest in Europe - 52.5‑km² wooded. Wild boars roam freely, though red deer are the beasts you're most likely to spot as they are maintained here. You can explore on foot or by bike or boat – both rentable from the jetty where the Cosson passes alongside the main facade of the Château – and even on horseback, with mounts rented from the Centre Equestre near the Château.


Château de Chambord, Loire Valley, France

 
History
Who exactly designed Château Chambord is a matter of controversy as we already mentioned. Yet there are proofs that during his stay at Clos Lucé near Amboise, as a guest of François, Leonardo da Vinci is responsible for the original design of the château.  
Regardless of who designed the château, in 1519 François Pombriant was ordered to begin construction of Château Chambord.The work was interrupted by The Italian War of 1521–1526 interrupted the work. In September 1526, at which point 1,800 workers were employed building the château. At the time of the death of François in 1547, the work had cost 444,070 livres. The château was built to act as a hunting lodge for Francis, however the king spent barely seven weeks there in total, comprising short hunting visits. The château wasn’t actually practical to live in, as it had been constructed with the purpose of short stays. The massive rooms, open windows and high ceilings meant heating was impractical. In this period the château was barely furnished. There had been used implements brought especially when there was a hunting event.
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Château de Chambord, Loire Valley, France

After the death of Francois I, the château was abandoned by the French Kings. Thus it was allowed to decay until King Louis XIII gave it to his brother, Gaston d'Orleans in 1639. He started restoration work. King Louis XIV furnished the royal apartments and restored the great keep. There was also added a stable of 1200 horses. That enabled the using of the château to be used as a hunting lodge. So the château was used a few weeks a year. Yet, it was abandoned in 1685.
Later, from 1725 – 1733 King Louis XV lived in Chambord. In 1745 the château was given to Maurice de Saxe as a reward to valour. He used it as a place to his military regiment. The château was abandoned again in 1750 after his death.
After that, during the Revolution, almost everything from the inside of the château – all the furnishings, the wall panellings, even floors was sold and the château stayed abandoned until Napoleon Bonaparte gave it to his subordinate, Louis Alexandre Berthier. Later Chambord was purchased for the Duke of Bordeaux who became Comte de Chambord. His grandfather tried to restore the château but both were exiled in 1830. In 1870 – 1871 Chambord was used as a field hospital during the  Franco - Prussian War.
Another attempt of restoration the château was made by the Compte de Chambord but he died in 1883. His sister’s heirs – the Ducal Family from Parma, Italy got Chambord. World War I ended any further attempts to restore it in 1914. The château got confiscated in 1915. In 1939 all the components of the art collections of the Louvre and Compiègne ( including the Mona Lisa and Venus de Milo) were moved here. In 1944 a bomber crashed into the lawn of the château.
Few years after the end of World War II  began restoration work. Nowadays château de Chambord is a major tourist attraction as it is the most impressive of all the Châteaux in the Loire Valley.


Château de Chambord, Loire Valley, France

Château de Chambord, inside, Loire Valley, France
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The gate on the entrance of Château de Chambord, Loire Valley, France





Monday, June 15, 2009

Nude Mona Lisa on show in Vinci: 5,000 Mona Lisa Works Displayed on Da Vinci muse

Mona Lisa has inspired fine artisits and pop artists to create their own Mona Lisa. Now, along with 5,000 works inspired by the original Mona Lisa, a 16th-century painting of a nude Mona Lisa once attributed to Leonardo Da Vinci went on show for the first time this past Saturday as part of a sweeping new exhibition that opened in Tuscany in Leonardo Da Vinci's home town of Vinci, near Florence in the region of Tuscany. The 5,000 works inspired by the original Mona Lisa including paintings, sculptures, etchings and new media images spanning five centuries, all on display at the Museo Ideale in Leonardo's hometown of Vinci in Tuscany for the show, the largest ever held on the mysterious muse.

Experts have succeeded in establishing that the nude Mona Lisa once belonged to Napoleon Bonaparte's uncle, Cardinal Joseph Fesch (1763-1839) - a major collector who also owned Leonardo's painting of St Jerome now in the Vatican Museums. Another nude will also go on show but investigations into its history are continuing.

Curated by Agnese Sabato and Alessandro Vezzosi under the supervision of the world's top Leonardo Da Vinci expert Carlo Pedretti, the exhibition will also reveal the latest spectacular scientific data from experts researching the original Mona Lisa housed in the Louvre in Paris.

The show is divided into two sections.

The first explores the history of the Mona Lisa, including dating problems and the identity of the smiling model, but also displays sculptures and etchings inspired by the painting from the 16th to the 20th centuries.

The second section is dedicated to so-called Leonardismo and highlights how the Mona Lisa became an icon in literature, graphic design and on the internet.

WHO IS MONA LISA?

Unlike most Renaissance portraits, Leonardo's original Mona Lisa (mona is the standard Italian contraction for madonna, or ''my lady,'') bears no date or signature, nor is the name of the sitter given. These omissions, coupled with the sitter's mysterious close-lipped smile, have helped spawn endless theories about the woman's identity. Various contemporary court beauties and noblewomen have been put forward, including Isabella d'Este and Isabella Gualanda, while some have concluded that she was Leonardo's mother. Other academics argue that the sitter was one of his favourite young lovers disguised as a woman. Such theorists note that da Vinci never relinquished the painting, keeping it with him up until his death in Amboise, France in 1519.

There is in fact no evidence that da Vinci was paid for the portrait or that it was ever delivered. The Mona Lisa's strange smile has also led to endless speculation and theories, some of the most curious provided by medical experts-cum-art lovers.

One group of medical researchers has maintained that the sitter's mouth is so firmly shut because she was undergoing mercury treatment for syphilis which turned her teeth black. An American dentist has claimed that the tight-lipped expression was typical of people who have lost their front teeth, while a Danish doctor was convinced she suffered from congenital palsy which affected the left side of her face and this is why her hands are overly large. A French surgeon has also put forth his view that she was semi-paralysed, perhaps as the result of a stroke, and that this explained why one hand looks relaxed and the other tense. An Italian doctor has pointed to an alleged puffy cheek and swollen hand to claim she was suffering from a 'fatty blood' disorder.

From "Mona Lisa to the nude Gioconda" runs at the Museo Ideale in Vinci from June 13 to September 30.

For more about the inventions of Leonardo Da Vinci and video of the Rome exhibit, The Genius of Leonardo Da Vinci, click WebVisionItaly.com Leonardo Da Vinci in Rome.