Leonardo da Vinci’s masterwork The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, restored with the aid of the C2RMF (Center for Research and Restoration of the Museums of France), is the centerpiece of an exhibition at the Louvre Museum (Paris, France) that reunites all surviving related works for the first time.
The beginning of the slow and complex genesis of the painting dates back to 1501, when it was first mentioned in Isabella d’Este’s correspondence. Leonardo da Vinci continuously worked to perfect this ambitious composition, left unfinished upon his death in 1519.
Compositional sketches, preparatory drawings, landscape studies and the National Gallery of London’s magnificent cartoon are brought together for the first time since the artist’s death to illustrate his lengthy meditation and expose the succession of solutions he had envisioned.
Other painted artworks by Leonardo are also used to show how the Saint Anne is the true culmination of the artist’s numerous and varied explorations on nature and art.
To reveal the full scale of the artwork’s innovative nature, the exposition also strives to reposition the Saint Anne in the iconographic tradition of its subject (the Virgin and Child with Saint Anne) and demonstrate its considerable influence on Italian art in the early 16th century.
The exhibition will be also the meeting place of the two Mona Lisas: the Leonardo's original one and the copy by one of his disciples restored by the Museo del Prado.
Date: until June 25.
Location: Musée du Louvre, 75058 Paris. France.
Opening hours: Monday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday from 9am to 6pm. Wednesday and Friday from 9am to 9.45pm.