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The Last Supper (Leonardo)

The Last Supper (Italian: Il Cenacolo [il tʃeˈnaːkolo] or L'Ultima Cena [ˈlultima ˈtʃeːna]) is a mural painting by the Italian High Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci, dated to c. 1495–1498, housed in the refectory of the Convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan, Italy. The painting represents the scene of the Last Supper of Jesus with the Twelve Apostles, as it is told in the Gospel of John – specifically the moment after Jesus announces that one of his apostles will betray him.[1] Its handling of space, mastery of perspective, treatment of motion and complex display of human emotion has made it one of the Western world's most recognizable paintings and among Leonardo's most celebrated works.[2] Some commentators consider it pivotal in inaugurating the transition into what is now termed the High Renaissance.[3][4]

The Last Supper
Italian: Il Cenacolo, L'Ultima Cena
ArtistLeonardo da Vinci
Yearc. 1495–1498
TypeTempera on gesso, pitch, and mastic
MovementHigh Renaissance
Dimensions460 cm × 880 cm (181 in × 346 in)
LocationSanta Maria delle Grazie, Milan, Italy
Coordinates45°28′00″N 9°10′15″E / 45.46667°N 9.17083°E / 45.46667; 9.17083
Websitecenacolovinciano.org/en/

The work was commissioned as part of a plan of renovations to the church and its convent buildings by Leonardo's patron Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan. In order to permit his inconsistent painting schedule and frequent revisions, it is painted with materials that allowed for regular alterations: tempera on gesso, pitch, and mastic. Due to the methods used, a variety of environmental factors, and intentional damage, little of the original painting remains today despite numerous restoration attempts, the last being completed in 1999. The Last Supper is Leonardo's largest work, aside from the Sala delle Asse.

Painting

Commission and creation

The Last Supper measures 460 cm × 880 cm (180 in × 350 in) and covers an end wall of the dining hall at the monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan, Italy. The theme was a traditional one for refectories, although the room was not a refectory at the time that Leonardo painted it. The main church building was still under construction while Leonardo was composing the painting. Leonardo's patron, Ludovico Sforza, planned that the church should be remodeled as a family mausoleum. To this end, changes were made, perhaps to plans by Donato Bramante. These plans were not fully carried out, and a smaller mortuary chapel was constructed, adjacent to the cloister.[5] The painting was commissioned by Sforza to decorate the wall of the mausoleum. The lunettes above the main painting, formed by the triple arched ceiling of the refectory, are painted with Sforza coats-of-arms. The opposite wall of the refectory is covered by the Crucifixion fresco by Giovanni Donato da Montorfano, to which Leonardo added figures of the Sforza family in tempera; these figures have deteriorated in much the same way as has The Last Supper.[6]

Leonardo worked on The Last Supper from about 1495 to 1498, but he did not work continuously. The beginning date is not certain, as the archives of the convent for the period have been destroyed. A document dated 1497 indicates that the painting was nearly completed at that date.[7] A prior from the monastery reportedly complained to Leonardo about its delay. Leonardo wrote to the head of the monastery, explaining he had been struggling to find the perfect villainous face for Judas, and that if he could not find a face corresponding with what he had in mind, he would use the features of the prior who had complained.[8][9]

In 1557, Gian Paolo Lomazzo wrote that Leonardo's friend Bernardo Zenale advised him to leave Christ's face unfinished, arguing that "it would be impossible to imagine faces lovelier or gentler than those of James the Greater or James the Less." Leonardo apparently took the advice.[10]

Medium

Leonardo, as a painter, favoured oil painting, a medium which allows the artist to work slowly and make changes with ease. Fresco painting does not facilitate either of these objectives. Leonardo also sought a greater luminosity and intensity of light and shade (chiaroscuro) than could be achieved with fresco,[11] in which the water-soluble colours are painted onto wet plaster, laid freshly each day in sections. Rather than using the proven method of painting on walls, Leonardo painted The Last Supper in tempera, the medium generally used for panel painting. The painting is on a stone wall sealed with a double layer of gesso, pitch, and mastic.[12] Then he added an undercoat of white lead to enhance the brightness of the tempera that was applied on top. This was a method that had been described previously by Cennino Cennini in the 14th century. However, Cennini described the technique as being more risky than fresco painting, and recommended the use of painting in a more superficial medium for the final touches only.[13]

Subject

 BartholomewJames the LessAndrewPeterJudasPeterJohnJesusThomasJames the GreatPhilipMatthewJudeSimon
The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci (Clickable image – use cursor to identify.)

The Last Supper portrays the reaction given by each apostle when Jesus said one of them would betray him. All twelve apostles have different reactions to the news, with various degrees of anger and shock. The apostles were identified by their names, using an unsigned, mid-sixteenth-century fresco copy of Leonardo's Cenacolo.[14] Before this, only Judas, Peter, John and Jesus had been positively identified. From left to right, according to the apostles' heads:

  • Bartholomew, James, son of Alphaeus, and Andrew form a group of three; all are surprised.
  • Judas Iscariot, Peter, and John form another group of three. Judas is wearing red, blue, and green and is in shadow, looking withdrawn and taken aback by the sudden revelation of his plan. He is clutching a small bag, perhaps signifying the silver given to him as payment to betray Jesus, or perhaps a reference to his role as a treasurer.[15] He is also tipping over the salt cellar, which may be related to the near-Eastern expression to "betray the salt" meaning to betray one's master. He is the only person to have his elbow on the table and his head is also vertically the lowest of anyone in the painting. Peter wears an expression of anger and appears to be holding a knife, foreshadowing his violent reaction in Gethsemane during the arrest of Jesus. Peter is leaning towards John and touching him on the shoulder, in reference to John's Gospel where he signals the "beloved disciple" to ask Jesus who is to betray him.[a] The youngest apostle, John, appears to swoon and lean towards Peter.
  • Jesus
  • Thomas, James the Greater, and Philip are the next group of three. Thomas is clearly upset; the raised index finger foreshadows his incredulity of the Resurrection. James the Greater looks stunned, with his arms in the air. Meanwhile, Philip appears to be requesting some explanation.
  • Matthew, Jude Thaddeus, and Simon the Zealot are the final group of three. Both Thaddeus and Matthew are turned toward Simon, perhaps to find out if he has any answer to their initial questions.
 
A study of the head of Christ by Leonardo
 
Silverpoint study of an apostle, most likely Saint Peter[16]

In common with other depictions of the Last Supper from this period, Leonardo seats the diners on one side of the table, so that none of them has his back to the viewer. The tablecloth is white with blue stripes, which are colours commonly associated with the Jewish people. This is the painting's only overt reference to the ethnicity of Jesus and his disciples. Most previous depictions excluded Judas by placing him alone on the opposite side of the table from the other eleven disciples and Jesus, or placing halos around all the disciples except Judas. Leonardo instead has Judas lean back into shadow. Jesus is predicting that his betrayer will take the bread at the same time he does to Thomas and James the Greater to his left, who react in horror as Jesus points with his left hand to a piece of bread before them. Distracted by the conversation between John and Peter, Judas reaches for a different piece of bread not noticing Jesus too stretching out with his right hand towards it (Matthew 26: 23). The angles and lighting draw attention to Jesus, whose turned right cheek is located at the vanishing point for all perspective lines.[17] In addition, the painting demonstrated Leonardo's masterful use of perspective as it "draws our attention to the face of Christ at the center of the composition, and Christ's face, through his down-turned gaze, directs our focus along the diagonal of his left arm to his hand and therefore, the bread."[18]

Leonardo reportedly used the likenesses of people in and around Milan as inspiration for the painting's figures. The convent's prior complained to Sforza of Leonardo's "laziness" as he wandered the streets to find a criminal to base Judas on. Leonardo responded that if he could find no one else, the prior would make a suitable model.[19] While the painting was being executed, Leonardo's friend, the mathematician Luca Pacioli, called it "a symbol of man's burning desire for salvation".[20]

History

Early copies

Two early copies of The Last Supper are known to exist, presumed to be work by Leonardo's assistants. The copies are almost the size of the original, and have survived with a wealth of original detail still intact.[21] One, by Giampietrino, is in the collection of the Royal Academy of Arts, London, and the other, by Cesare da Sesto, is installed at the Church of St. Ambrogio in Ponte Capriasca, Switzerland. A third copy (oil on canvas) is painted by Andrea Solari (c. 1520) and is on display in the Leonardo da Vinci Museum of the Tongerlo Abbey, Belgium.

Damage and restorations

Because Sforza had ordered the church to be rebuilt hastily, the masons filled the walls with moisture-retaining rubble.[12] The painting was done on a thin exterior wall, so the effects of humidity were felt keenly, and the paint failed to properly adhere to it. Because of the method used, soon after the painting was completed on 9 February 1498 it began to deteriorate.[11] In 1499, Louis XII contemplated removing the painting from the wall and taking it to France.[24] As early as 1517, the painting was starting to flake, and in 1532 Gerolamo Cardano described it as "blurred and colorless compared with what I remember of it when I saw it as a boy".[25] By 1556 – fewer than sixty years after it was finished – Giorgio Vasari described the painting as reduced to a "muddle of blots" so deteriorated that the figures were unrecognizable.[12] By the second half of the 16th century, Gian Paolo Lomazzo stated that "the painting is all ruined".[11] In 1652, a doorway was cut through the (then unrecognisable) painting, and later bricked up; this can still be seen as the irregular arch-shaped structure near the center base of the painting. It is believed, through early copies, that Jesus' feet were in a position symbolizing the forthcoming crucifixion. In 1768, a curtain was hung over the painting intended for its protection; the curtain instead trapped moisture on the surface, and whenever it was pulled back, it scratched the flaking paint.

A first restoration was attempted in 1726 by Michelangelo Bellotti, who filled in missing sections with oil paint then varnished the whole mural. This repair did not last well and another restoration was attempted in 1770 by an otherwise unknown artist named Giuseppe Mazza. Mazza stripped off Bellotti's work then largely repainted the painting; he had redone all but three faces when he was halted due to public outrage. In 1796, French revolutionary anti-clerical troops used the refectory as an armory and stable;[26] they threw stones at the painting and climbed ladders to scratch out the Apostles' eyes. Goethe wrote that in 1800, the room was flooded with two feet of water after a heavy rainstorm.[12] The refectory was used as a prison;[when?] it is not known if any of the prisoners may have damaged the painting. In 1821, Stefano Barezzi, an expert in removing whole frescoes from their walls intact, was called in to remove the painting to a safer location; he badly damaged the center section before realizing that Leonardo's work was not a fresco. Barezzi then attempted to reattach damaged sections with glue. From 1901 to 1908, Luigi Cavenaghi first completed a careful study of the structure of the painting, then began cleaning it. In 1924, Oreste Silvestri did further cleaning, and stabilised some parts with stucco.

 
A protective structure (right) was built in front of Leonardo's fresco. This photo shows the bombing damage in 1943.[27]

During World War II, on 15 August 1943, the refectory was struck by Allied bombing; protective sandbagging prevented the painting from being struck by bomb splinters,[28] but it may have been damaged by the vibration. Between 1946 and 1954, Mauro Pellicioli undertook a clean-and-stabilise restoration,[12] which Brera director Fernanda Wittgens [it] was involved in.[26] Pellicioli reattached paint to the wall using a clear shellac, making it relatively darker and more colorful, and removed some of the overpainting.[29] However, as of 1972, the repainting done in various restorations had made the heads of saints Peter, Andrew, and James differ significantly from the original design.[12]

Major restoration

 
The painting as it looked in the 1970s

The painting's appearance by the late 1970s had badly deteriorated. From 1978 to 1999, Pinin Brambilla Barcilon guided a major restoration project to stabilize the painting and reverse the damage caused by dirt and pollution. The eighteenth- and nineteenth-century restoration attempts were also reversed. Since it had proved impractical to move the painting to a more controlled environment, the refectory was instead converted to a sealed, climate-controlled environment, which meant bricking up the windows. Then, detailed study was undertaken to determine the painting's original form, using scientific tests (especially infrared reflectoscopy and microscopic core-samples), and original cartoons preserved in the Royal Library at Windsor Castle. Some areas were deemed unrestorable. These were re-painted using watercolor in subdued colors intended to indicate they were not original work, while not being too distracting.[30]

This restoration took 21 years and, on 28 May 1999, the painting was returned to display. Intending visitors were required to book ahead and could only stay for 15 minutes. When it was unveiled, considerable controversy was aroused by the dramatic changes in colors, tones, and even some facial shapes. James Beck, professor of art history at Columbia University and founder of ArtWatch International, had been a particularly strong critic.[31] Michael Daley, director of ArtWatch UK, has also complained about the restored version of the painting. He has been critical of Christ's right arm in the image which has been altered from a draped sleeve to what Daley calls "muff-like drapery".[32]

In culture

The Last Supper has frequently been referenced, reproduced, or parodied in Western culture. Some of the more notable examples are:

Non-modern painting, mosaic, and photography

 
The Last Supper made in salt in Wieliczka Salt Mine (Poland)
 
The Last Supper by Adi Nes (Israel) was sold for $264,000 in 2007.

A 16th-century oil on canvas copy is conserved in the abbey of Tongerlo, Antwerp, Belgium. It reveals many details that are no longer visible on the original.[33] The Roman mosaic artist Giacomo Raffaelli made another life-sized copy (1809–1814), commissioned by Napoleon Bonaparte, that resides in the Minoritenkirche in Vienna.[34]

Modern art

In 1955, Salvador Dalí painted The Sacrament of the Last Supper, with Jesus portrayed as blond and clean shaven, pointing upward to a spectral torso while the apostles are gathered around the table heads bowed so that none may be identified. It is reputed to be one of the most viewed paintings in the collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.

Mary Beth Edelson's Some Living American Women Artists / Last Supper (1972) appropriated The Last Supper, with the heads of notable women artists collaged over the heads of Christ and his apostles. The artists collaged over the heads of Christ and his apostles in Some Living American Women Artists / Last Supper include Lynda Benglis, Louise Bourgeois, Elaine de Kooning, Helen Frankenthaler, Nancy Graves, Lila Katzen, Lee Krasner, Georgia O'Keeffe, Louise Nevelson, Yoko Ono, M. C. Richards, Alma Thomas, and June Wayne.[35] As well, other women artists have their image shown in the border of the piece; in all eighty-two women artists are part of the whole image.[36][37] This image, addressing the role of religious and art historical iconography in the subordination of women, became "one of the most iconic images of the feminist art movement."[35][38]

Sculptor Marisol Escobar rendered The Last Supper as a life-sized, three-dimensional, sculptural assemblage using painted and drawn wood, plywood, brownstone, plaster, and aluminum. This work, Self-Portrait Looking at The Last Supper, (1982–84) is in New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art.[39]

Art dealer Alexander Iolas commissioned Andy Warhol to produce a series of paintings based on The Last Supper, first exhibited in Milan in January 1987. The series would be the artist's last before his death.[40]

Literature

In her 1834 ekphrasic poem,   The Last Supper., Lydia Sigourney focuses on Christ's betrayer, repeatedly asks "Is it I?" and closes with the prayer that our feet be so guided:

That our Last Supper in this world may lead to
That immortal banquet by thy side,
Where there is no betrayer.

Author Mary Shelley describes her impression of the painting in her travel narrative, Rambles in Germany and Italy, published 1844:

First we visited the fading inimitable fresco of Leonardo da Vinci. How vain are copies! not in one, nor in any print, did i ever see the slightest approach to the expression in our Savior's face, such as it is in the original. Majesty and love – these are the words that would describe it – joined to an absence of all guile that expresses the divine nature more visibly than I ever saw it in any other picture.[41]

— Mary Shelley, Travel Writing (1996), pp. 131–132

Film and television

The painting is closely resembled in the film Quo Vadis, where Peter preaches in front of a large Christian crowd. As he tells the story of the Last Supper, the film shifts into a brief scene where the background, clothing, and positions of Jesus and the 12 Disciples is alike to the painting itself. In Luis Buñuel's 1961 Spanish film Viridiana, a tableau vivant of Leonardo's painting is staged with beggars. Another beggar "photographs" the scene by flashing them. This scene contributed to its refusal by the Vatican who called it "blasphemous". The painting is parodied in the motion picture of M*A*S*H (1970), in the scene where Hawkeye Pierce stages a "last supper" for Walt (Painless) Waldowski before his planned suicide. The various doctors, all in surgical scrubs, pose in imitation of the painting. In Norman Jewison's film version of Jesus Christ Superstar (1973), in the Last Supper sequence, Jesus and the 12 apostles briefly mimic the posture of each character in Leonardo's painting. The painting is also parodied in Mel Brooks's movie History of the World, Part I (1981), making Leonardo a contemporary of Jesus.

Many parodies of the painting appear on the small screen, including That '70s Show's 1998 first-season episode "Streaking", with Eric flanked by his friends (and Jackie wondering why everyone is sitting on the same side of the table); The season seven finale of The X-Files, "Requiem" (and Mulder's last episode as a series regular) features a scene in Skinner's office with the characters lined up in homage to the painting; The Simpsons' 2005 Season 16 episode "Thank God, It's Doomsday", with Homer as Jesus and Moe and his other patrons as the disciples; and South Park's 2009 Season 13 episode "Margaritaville", with Kyle and his friends eating at a pizza parlor. In one 2015 episode of the CBC drama Murdoch Mysteries called Barenaked Ladies, the suspects recreate the poses of Peter, Judas, and Thomas in their victims.

The fifth episode of the 2021 TV series Leonardo depicts a fictional story of how the painting was created.

Other speculation

 
Detail of the "beloved disciple" to Jesus's right, identified by art historians as the apostle John,[18][42] but speculated in the 2003 book The Da Vinci Code and similar works to be Mary Magdalene[18][42]

The Last Supper has been the target of much speculation by writers and historical revisionists alike, usually centered on purported hidden messages or hints found within the painting, especially since the publication of Dan Brown's novel The Da Vinci Code (2003), in which one of the characters suggests that the person to Jesus' right (left of Jesus from the viewer's perspective) is actually Mary Magdalene.[18][42] It also states that there was a letter 'glaring in the center of the painting' (M) standing for Matrimonio or Mary Magdalene. This speculation originated in earlier books The Templar Revelation (1997) by Lynn Picknett and The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail by Michael Baigent, Henry Lincoln and Richard Leigh (1982).[42] Art historians hold that the figure is the Apostle John,[18][42] who appears feminine in line with Leonardo's characteristic fascination with blurring the lines between the sexes, a quality which is found in his other paintings, such as St. John the Baptist (painted c. 1513–1516).[18][42] Christopher L. Hodapp and Alice Von Kannon comment, "If he [John] looks effeminate and needs a haircut, so does James, the second figure on the left."[42] According to Ross King, an expert on Italian art, Mary Magdalene's appearance at the last supper would not have been controversial and Leonardo would have had no motive to disguise her as one of the other disciples,[18] since she was widely venerated in her role as the "Apostle to the Apostles" and was the patron of the Dominican Order, for whom The Last Supper was painted.[18] There would have even been precedent for it, since the earlier Italian Renaissance painter Fra Angelico had included her in his painting of the Last Supper.[18]

The painting contains several possible numerical references, including to the number three. The Apostles are seated in groups of three, there are three windows behind Jesus, and the shape of Jesus' figure resembles a triangle. His hands are located at the golden ratio of half the height of the composition.[17] The painting can also be interpreted using the Fibonacci series: one table, one central figure, two side walls, three windows and figures grouped in threes, five groups of figures, eight panels on the walls and eight table legs, and thirteen individual figures.[17] Debates among art historians still surround the use of the Fibonacci series as some argue that its purposeful use did not fully begin to be applied to architecture until the early 19th century.[18]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ John 13:23–24
  2. ^ The lower-right section continues the upper composition at left.[16]
  3. ^ The painting hung in the chapel of Magdalen College, Oxford, from 1992.[23]

References

  1. ^ Bianchini, Riccardo (24 March 2021). "The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci – Santa Maria delle Grazie – Milan". Inexhibit. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  2. ^ "Leonardo Da Vinci's 'The Last Supper' reveals more secrets". sciencedaily.com. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  3. ^ Frederick Hartt, A History of Art: Painting, Sculpture, Architecture; Harry N. Abrams Incorporated, New York, 1985, p. 601
  4. ^ Christoph Luitpold Frommel, "Bramante and the Origins of the High Renaissance" in Rethinking the High Renaissance: The Culture of the Visual Arts in Early Sixteenth-Century Rome, Jill Burke, ed. Ashgate Publishing, Oxan, UK, 2002, p. 172.
  5. ^ . Timeout.com. Archived from the original on 29 March 2013. Retrieved 7 March 2024.
  6. ^ King, Ross (2012). Leonardo and the Last Supper. New York: Bloomsbury. p. 271. ISBN 978-1620403082.
  7. ^ Kenneth Clark. Leonardo da Vinci, Penguin Books 1939, 1993, p. 144.
  8. ^ "The Last Supper". lairweb.org.nz. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  9. ^ . The Mark Steel Lectures. Series 2. Episode 2. The Open University. 7 October 2003. BBC. Archived from the original on 17 September 2018. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  10. ^ Durant, Will (2001). Heroes of History: A Brief History of Civilization from Ancient Times to the Dawn of the Modern Age. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 206. ISBN 978-0-7432-2612-7. OCLC 869434122.
  11. ^ a b c . Smart history presented by the Khan Academy. Archived from the original on 15 February 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Wallace 1972, p. 83.
  13. ^ "The Last Supper". The Last Supper. Retrieved 25 February 2014.
  14. ^ Steinberg, Leo (2001). Leonardo's Incessant 'Last Supper'. New York: Zone Books. p. 75. ISBN 978-1890951184.
  15. ^ Cfr. Matthew 26:15 and John 12:6; 13:29.
  16. ^ a b c Wallace 1972, p. 86.
  17. ^ a b c White, Susan D. (2006). Draw Like Da Vinci. London: Cassell Illustrated, p. 132. ISBN 978-1844034444.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j King, Ross (2012). Leonardo and the Last Supper. New York and London: Bloomsbury. pp. 187–189. ISBN 978-0-7475-9947-0.
  19. ^ Wallace 1972, p. 81.
  20. ^ Wallace 1972, p. 82.
  21. ^ "Last Supper (copy after Leonardo)". University of the Arts, London. Retrieved 11 August 2008.
  22. ^ The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci – Complete. Gutenberg.org. 1 January 2004. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  23. ^ "Chapel with return Renaissance painrefting". Oxford Times. 14 September 2017. p. 19.
  24. ^ Wallace 1972, p. 127.
  25. ^ Wykes, Alan (1969). Doctor Cardano, physician extraordinary. p. 26.
  26. ^ a b Da Vinci, Leonardo (1971). Taylor, Pamela (ed.). The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci. New American Library. p. xvii.
  27. ^ Wallace 1972, p. 74.
  28. ^ Traverso, V. M. (5 June 2019). "How 'The Last Supper' miraculously survived World War II bombs". Aleteia – Catholic Spirituality, Lifestyle, World News, and Culture. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  29. ^ Wallace 1972, p. 93.
  30. ^ King, Ross (2012). Leonardo and the Last Supper. New York: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-0802717054.
  31. ^ Phillip William (24 May 1999). "The Last Supper or a dog's dinner?". The Guardian. guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  32. ^ Alberge, Dayla (14 March 2012). "Have art restorers ruined Leonardo's masterpiece?". The Independent. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  33. ^ "Tongerlo Abbey Houses A Remarkable Treasure". Public Diplomacy Service of the Federal Public Service Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation. 10 May 2019. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  34. ^ "Where you can see Napoleon's copy of Da Vinci's 'Last Supper'". TripAdvisor LLC. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  35. ^ a b "Mary Beth Edelson". The Frost Art Museum Drawing Project. Retrieved 11 January 2014.
  36. ^ "Mary Beth Edelson. Some Living American Women Artists. 1972". MoMA. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
  37. ^ Gail Levin (2018). Becoming Judy Chicago: A Biography of the Artist. Univ of California Press. pp. 209–. ISBN 978-0-520-30006-4.
  38. ^ . Clara – Database of Women Artists. Washington, D.C.: National Museum of Women in the Arts. Archived from the original on 10 January 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  39. ^ "Self-Portrait Looking at The Last Supper". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 15 August 2019.
  40. ^ Haden-Guest, Anthony (3 August 1999). "Warhol's Last Supper". Artnet. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
  41. ^ Shelley, Mary (1996). Travel Writing. London: Pickering. pp. 131–132. ISBN 1-85196-084-8.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g Christopher Hodapp, Alice Von Kannon, The Templar Code For Dummies, p. 257 (Wiley Publishing, Inc., 2007. ISBN 978-0-470-12765-0).

Bibliography

  • Wallace, Robert (1972) [1966]. The World of Leonardo: 1452–1519. New York: Time-Life Books.[ISBN missing]

Further reading

  • Bertelli, Carlo (November 1983). "Restoration Reveals The Last Supper". National Geographic. Vol. 164, no. 5. pp. 664–684. ISSN 0027-9358. OCLC 643483454.

External links

  • Official website
  • Leonardo's Last Supper and the three layers
  • Leonardo da Vinci: anatomical drawings from the Royal Library, Windsor Castle, exhibition catalog fully online as PDF from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, which contains material on The Last Supper (see index)

last, supper, leonardo, last, supper, italian, cenacolo, tʃeˈnaːkolo, ultima, cena, ˈlultima, ˈtʃeːna, mural, painting, italian, high, renaissance, artist, leonardo, vinci, dated, 1495, 1498, housed, refectory, convent, santa, maria, delle, grazie, milan, ital. The Last Supper Italian Il Cenacolo il tʃeˈnaːkolo or L Ultima Cena ˈlultima ˈtʃeːna is a mural painting by the Italian High Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci dated to c 1495 1498 housed in the refectory of the Convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan Italy The painting represents the scene of the Last Supper of Jesus with the Twelve Apostles as it is told in the Gospel of John specifically the moment after Jesus announces that one of his apostles will betray him 1 Its handling of space mastery of perspective treatment of motion and complex display of human emotion has made it one of the Western world s most recognizable paintings and among Leonardo s most celebrated works 2 Some commentators consider it pivotal in inaugurating the transition into what is now termed the High Renaissance 3 4 The Last SupperItalian Il Cenacolo L Ultima CenaArtistLeonardo da VinciYearc 1495 1498TypeTempera on gesso pitch and masticMovementHigh RenaissanceDimensions460 cm 880 cm 181 in 346 in LocationSanta Maria delle Grazie Milan ItalyCoordinates45 28 00 N 9 10 15 E 45 46667 N 9 17083 E 45 46667 9 17083Websitecenacolovinciano wbr org wbr en wbr The work was commissioned as part of a plan of renovations to the church and its convent buildings by Leonardo s patron Ludovico Sforza Duke of Milan In order to permit his inconsistent painting schedule and frequent revisions it is painted with materials that allowed for regular alterations tempera on gesso pitch and mastic Due to the methods used a variety of environmental factors and intentional damage little of the original painting remains today despite numerous restoration attempts the last being completed in 1999 The Last Supper is Leonardo s largest work aside from the Sala delle Asse Contents 1 Painting 1 1 Commission and creation 1 2 Medium 1 3 Subject 2 History 2 1 Early copies 2 2 Damage and restorations 2 2 1 Major restoration 3 In culture 3 1 Non modern painting mosaic and photography 3 2 Modern art 3 3 Literature 3 4 Film and television 4 Other speculation 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksPaintingCommission and creation The Last Supper measures 460 cm 880 cm 180 in 350 in and covers an end wall of the dining hall at the monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan Italy The theme was a traditional one for refectories although the room was not a refectory at the time that Leonardo painted it The main church building was still under construction while Leonardo was composing the painting Leonardo s patron Ludovico Sforza planned that the church should be remodeled as a family mausoleum To this end changes were made perhaps to plans by Donato Bramante These plans were not fully carried out and a smaller mortuary chapel was constructed adjacent to the cloister 5 The painting was commissioned by Sforza to decorate the wall of the mausoleum The lunettes above the main painting formed by the triple arched ceiling of the refectory are painted with Sforza coats of arms The opposite wall of the refectory is covered by the Crucifixion fresco by Giovanni Donato da Montorfano to which Leonardo added figures of the Sforza family in tempera these figures have deteriorated in much the same way as has The Last Supper 6 Leonardo worked on The Last Supper from about 1495 to 1498 but he did not work continuously The beginning date is not certain as the archives of the convent for the period have been destroyed A document dated 1497 indicates that the painting was nearly completed at that date 7 A prior from the monastery reportedly complained to Leonardo about its delay Leonardo wrote to the head of the monastery explaining he had been struggling to find the perfect villainous face for Judas and that if he could not find a face corresponding with what he had in mind he would use the features of the prior who had complained 8 9 In 1557 Gian Paolo Lomazzo wrote that Leonardo s friend Bernardo Zenale advised him to leave Christ s face unfinished arguing that it would be impossible to imagine faces lovelier or gentler than those of James the Greater or James the Less Leonardo apparently took the advice 10 nbsp Crucifixion by Giovanni Donato da Montorfano 1495 opposite Leonardo s Last Supper nbsp The painting as it appears on the refectory wall nbsp The refectory Medium Leonardo as a painter favoured oil painting a medium which allows the artist to work slowly and make changes with ease Fresco painting does not facilitate either of these objectives Leonardo also sought a greater luminosity and intensity of light and shade chiaroscuro than could be achieved with fresco 11 in which the water soluble colours are painted onto wet plaster laid freshly each day in sections Rather than using the proven method of painting on walls Leonardo painted The Last Supper in tempera the medium generally used for panel painting The painting is on a stone wall sealed with a double layer of gesso pitch and mastic 12 Then he added an undercoat of white lead to enhance the brightness of the tempera that was applied on top This was a method that had been described previously by Cennino Cennini in the 14th century However Cennini described the technique as being more risky than fresco painting and recommended the use of painting in a more superficial medium for the final touches only 13 Subject nbsp The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci Clickable image use cursor to identify The Last Supper portrays the reaction given by each apostle when Jesus said one of them would betray him All twelve apostles have different reactions to the news with various degrees of anger and shock The apostles were identified by their names using an unsigned mid sixteenth century fresco copy of Leonardo s Cenacolo 14 Before this only Judas Peter John and Jesus had been positively identified From left to right according to the apostles heads Bartholomew James son of Alphaeus and Andrew form a group of three all are surprised Judas Iscariot Peter and John form another group of three Judas is wearing red blue and green and is in shadow looking withdrawn and taken aback by the sudden revelation of his plan He is clutching a small bag perhaps signifying the silver given to him as payment to betray Jesus or perhaps a reference to his role as a treasurer 15 He is also tipping over the salt cellar which may be related to the near Eastern expression to betray the salt meaning to betray one s master He is the only person to have his elbow on the table and his head is also vertically the lowest of anyone in the painting Peter wears an expression of anger and appears to be holding a knife foreshadowing his violent reaction in Gethsemane during the arrest of Jesus Peter is leaning towards John and touching him on the shoulder in reference to John s Gospel where he signals the beloved disciple to ask Jesus who is to betray him a The youngest apostle John appears to swoon and lean towards Peter Jesus Thomas James the Greater and Philip are the next group of three Thomas is clearly upset the raised index finger foreshadows his incredulity of the Resurrection James the Greater looks stunned with his arms in the air Meanwhile Philip appears to be requesting some explanation Matthew Jude Thaddeus and Simon the Zealot are the final group of three Both Thaddeus and Matthew are turned toward Simon perhaps to find out if he has any answer to their initial questions nbsp A study of the head of Christ by Leonardo nbsp Silverpoint study of an apostle most likely Saint Peter 16 In common with other depictions of the Last Supper from this period Leonardo seats the diners on one side of the table so that none of them has his back to the viewer The tablecloth is white with blue stripes which are colours commonly associated with the Jewish people This is the painting s only overt reference to the ethnicity of Jesus and his disciples Most previous depictions excluded Judas by placing him alone on the opposite side of the table from the other eleven disciples and Jesus or placing halos around all the disciples except Judas Leonardo instead has Judas lean back into shadow Jesus is predicting that his betrayer will take the bread at the same time he does to Thomas and James the Greater to his left who react in horror as Jesus points with his left hand to a piece of bread before them Distracted by the conversation between John and Peter Judas reaches for a different piece of bread not noticing Jesus too stretching out with his right hand towards it Matthew 26 23 The angles and lighting draw attention to Jesus whose turned right cheek is located at the vanishing point for all perspective lines 17 In addition the painting demonstrated Leonardo s masterful use of perspective as it draws our attention to the face of Christ at the center of the composition and Christ s face through his down turned gaze directs our focus along the diagonal of his left arm to his hand and therefore the bread 18 Leonardo reportedly used the likenesses of people in and around Milan as inspiration for the painting s figures The convent s prior complained to Sforza of Leonardo s laziness as he wandered the streets to find a criminal to base Judas on Leonardo responded that if he could find no one else the prior would make a suitable model 19 While the painting was being executed Leonardo s friend the mathematician Luca Pacioli called it a symbol of man s burning desire for salvation 20 HistoryEarly copies Two early copies of The Last Supper are known to exist presumed to be work by Leonardo s assistants The copies are almost the size of the original and have survived with a wealth of original detail still intact 21 One by Giampietrino is in the collection of the Royal Academy of Arts London and the other by Cesare da Sesto is installed at the Church of St Ambrogio in Ponte Capriasca Switzerland A third copy oil on canvas is painted by Andrea Solari c 1520 and is on display in the Leonardo da Vinci Museum of the Tongerlo Abbey Belgium nbsp A study for The Last Supper b from Leonardo s notebooks 22 shows twelve apostles nine of which are identified by names written above their heads Judas sits on the opposite side of the table as in earlier depictions of the scene 16 nbsp The Last Supper c 1520 by Giampietrino oil on canvas in the collection of the Royal Academy of Arts London c This full scale copy was the main source for the 1978 1998 restoration of the original It includes several lost details such as Christ s feet and the salt cellar spilled by Judas Giampietrino is thought to have worked closely with Leonardo when he was in Milan nbsp The Last Supper c 1520 Andrea Solari oil on canvas in the Leonardo da Vinci Museum Tongerlo Abbey Damage and restorations Main article Conservation restoration of Leonardo da Vinci s The Last Supper Because Sforza had ordered the church to be rebuilt hastily the masons filled the walls with moisture retaining rubble 12 The painting was done on a thin exterior wall so the effects of humidity were felt keenly and the paint failed to properly adhere to it Because of the method used soon after the painting was completed on 9 February 1498 it began to deteriorate 11 In 1499 Louis XII contemplated removing the painting from the wall and taking it to France 24 As early as 1517 the painting was starting to flake and in 1532 Gerolamo Cardano described it as blurred and colorless compared with what I remember of it when I saw it as a boy 25 By 1556 fewer than sixty years after it was finished Giorgio Vasari described the painting as reduced to a muddle of blots so deteriorated that the figures were unrecognizable 12 By the second half of the 16th century Gian Paolo Lomazzo stated that the painting is all ruined 11 In 1652 a doorway was cut through the then unrecognisable painting and later bricked up this can still be seen as the irregular arch shaped structure near the center base of the painting It is believed through early copies that Jesus feet were in a position symbolizing the forthcoming crucifixion In 1768 a curtain was hung over the painting intended for its protection the curtain instead trapped moisture on the surface and whenever it was pulled back it scratched the flaking paint A first restoration was attempted in 1726 by Michelangelo Bellotti who filled in missing sections with oil paint then varnished the whole mural This repair did not last well and another restoration was attempted in 1770 by an otherwise unknown artist named Giuseppe Mazza Mazza stripped off Bellotti s work then largely repainted the painting he had redone all but three faces when he was halted due to public outrage In 1796 French revolutionary anti clerical troops used the refectory as an armory and stable 26 they threw stones at the painting and climbed ladders to scratch out the Apostles eyes Goethe wrote that in 1800 the room was flooded with two feet of water after a heavy rainstorm 12 The refectory was used as a prison when it is not known if any of the prisoners may have damaged the painting In 1821 Stefano Barezzi an expert in removing whole frescoes from their walls intact was called in to remove the painting to a safer location he badly damaged the center section before realizing that Leonardo s work was not a fresco Barezzi then attempted to reattach damaged sections with glue From 1901 to 1908 Luigi Cavenaghi first completed a careful study of the structure of the painting then began cleaning it In 1924 Oreste Silvestri did further cleaning and stabilised some parts with stucco nbsp A protective structure right was built in front of Leonardo s fresco This photo shows the bombing damage in 1943 27 During World War II on 15 August 1943 the refectory was struck by Allied bombing protective sandbagging prevented the painting from being struck by bomb splinters 28 but it may have been damaged by the vibration Between 1946 and 1954 Mauro Pellicioli undertook a clean and stabilise restoration 12 which Brera director Fernanda Wittgens it was involved in 26 Pellicioli reattached paint to the wall using a clear shellac making it relatively darker and more colorful and removed some of the overpainting 29 However as of 1972 the repainting done in various restorations had made the heads of saints Peter Andrew and James differ significantly from the original design 12 Major restoration nbsp The painting as it looked in the 1970s The painting s appearance by the late 1970s had badly deteriorated From 1978 to 1999 Pinin Brambilla Barcilon guided a major restoration project to stabilize the painting and reverse the damage caused by dirt and pollution The eighteenth and nineteenth century restoration attempts were also reversed Since it had proved impractical to move the painting to a more controlled environment the refectory was instead converted to a sealed climate controlled environment which meant bricking up the windows Then detailed study was undertaken to determine the painting s original form using scientific tests especially infrared reflectoscopy and microscopic core samples and original cartoons preserved in the Royal Library at Windsor Castle Some areas were deemed unrestorable These were re painted using watercolor in subdued colors intended to indicate they were not original work while not being too distracting 30 This restoration took 21 years and on 28 May 1999 the painting was returned to display Intending visitors were required to book ahead and could only stay for 15 minutes When it was unveiled considerable controversy was aroused by the dramatic changes in colors tones and even some facial shapes James Beck professor of art history at Columbia University and founder of ArtWatch International had been a particularly strong critic 31 Michael Daley director of ArtWatch UK has also complained about the restored version of the painting He has been critical of Christ s right arm in the image which has been altered from a draped sleeve to what Daley calls muff like drapery 32 In cultureThe Last Supper has frequently been referenced reproduced or parodied in Western culture Some of the more notable examples are Non modern painting mosaic and photography nbsp The Last Supper made in salt in Wieliczka Salt Mine Poland nbsp The Last Supper by Adi Nes Israel was sold for 264 000 in 2007 A 16th century oil on canvas copy is conserved in the abbey of Tongerlo Antwerp Belgium It reveals many details that are no longer visible on the original 33 The Roman mosaic artist Giacomo Raffaelli made another life sized copy 1809 1814 commissioned by Napoleon Bonaparte that resides in the Minoritenkirche in Vienna 34 Modern art In 1955 Salvador Dali painted The Sacrament of the Last Supper with Jesus portrayed as blond and clean shaven pointing upward to a spectral torso while the apostles are gathered around the table heads bowed so that none may be identified It is reputed to be one of the most viewed paintings in the collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington D C Mary Beth Edelson s Some Living American Women Artists Last Supper 1972 appropriated The Last Supper with the heads of notable women artists collaged over the heads of Christ and his apostles The artists collaged over the heads of Christ and his apostles in Some Living American Women Artists Last Supper include Lynda Benglis Louise Bourgeois Elaine de Kooning Helen Frankenthaler Nancy Graves Lila Katzen Lee Krasner Georgia O Keeffe Louise Nevelson Yoko Ono M C Richards Alma Thomas and June Wayne 35 As well other women artists have their image shown in the border of the piece in all eighty two women artists are part of the whole image 36 37 This image addressing the role of religious and art historical iconography in the subordination of women became one of the most iconic images of the feminist art movement 35 38 Sculptor Marisol Escobar rendered The Last Supper as a life sized three dimensional sculptural assemblage using painted and drawn wood plywood brownstone plaster and aluminum This work Self Portrait Looking at The Last Supper 1982 84 is in New York s Metropolitan Museum of Art 39 Art dealer Alexander Iolas commissioned Andy Warhol to produce a series of paintings based on The Last Supper first exhibited in Milan in January 1987 The series would be the artist s last before his death 40 LiteratureIn her 1834 ekphrasic poem nbsp The Last Supper Lydia Sigourney focuses on Christ s betrayer repeatedly asks Is it I and closes with the prayer that our feet be so guided That our Last Supper in this world may lead toThat immortal banquet by thy side Where there is no betrayer Author Mary Shelley describes her impression of the painting in her travel narrative Rambles in Germany and Italy published 1844 First we visited the fading inimitable fresco of Leonardo da Vinci How vain are copies not in one nor in any print did i ever see the slightest approach to the expression in our Savior s face such as it is in the original Majesty and love these are the words that would describe it joined to an absence of all guile that expresses the divine nature more visibly than I ever saw it in any other picture 41 Mary Shelley Travel Writing 1996 pp 131 132 Film and television The painting is closely resembled in the film Quo Vadis where Peter preaches in front of a large Christian crowd As he tells the story of the Last Supper the film shifts into a brief scene where the background clothing and positions of Jesus and the 12 Disciples is alike to the painting itself In Luis Bunuel s 1961 Spanish film Viridiana a tableau vivant of Leonardo s painting is staged with beggars Another beggar photographs the scene by flashing them This scene contributed to its refusal by the Vatican who called it blasphemous The painting is parodied in the motion picture of M A S H 1970 in the scene where Hawkeye Pierce stages a last supper for Walt Painless Waldowski before his planned suicide The various doctors all in surgical scrubs pose in imitation of the painting In Norman Jewison s film version of Jesus Christ Superstar 1973 in the Last Supper sequence Jesus and the 12 apostles briefly mimic the posture of each character in Leonardo s painting The painting is also parodied in Mel Brooks s movie History of the World Part I 1981 making Leonardo a contemporary of Jesus Many parodies of the painting appear on the small screen including That 70s Show s 1998 first season episode Streaking with Eric flanked by his friends and Jackie wondering why everyone is sitting on the same side of the table The season seven finale of The X Files Requiem and Mulder s last episode as a series regular features a scene in Skinner s office with the characters lined up in homage to the painting The Simpsons 2005 Season 16 episode Thank God It s Doomsday with Homer as Jesus and Moe and his other patrons as the disciples and South Park s 2009 Season 13 episode Margaritaville with Kyle and his friends eating at a pizza parlor In one 2015 episode of the CBC drama Murdoch Mysteries called Barenaked Ladies the suspects recreate the poses of Peter Judas and Thomas in their victims The fifth episode of the 2021 TV series Leonardo depicts a fictional story of how the painting was created Other speculation nbsp Detail of the beloved disciple to Jesus s right identified by art historians as the apostle John 18 42 but speculated in the 2003 book The Da Vinci Code and similar works to be Mary Magdalene 18 42 The Last Supper has been the target of much speculation by writers and historical revisionists alike usually centered on purported hidden messages or hints found within the painting especially since the publication of Dan Brown s novel The Da Vinci Code 2003 in which one of the characters suggests that the person to Jesus right left of Jesus from the viewer s perspective is actually Mary Magdalene 18 42 It also states that there was a letter glaring in the center of the painting M standing for Matrimonio or Mary Magdalene This speculation originated in earlier books The Templar Revelation 1997 by Lynn Picknett and The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail by Michael Baigent Henry Lincoln and Richard Leigh 1982 42 Art historians hold that the figure is the Apostle John 18 42 who appears feminine in line with Leonardo s characteristic fascination with blurring the lines between the sexes a quality which is found in his other paintings such as St John the Baptist painted c 1513 1516 18 42 Christopher L Hodapp and Alice Von Kannon comment If he John looks effeminate and needs a haircut so does James the second figure on the left 42 According to Ross King an expert on Italian art Mary Magdalene s appearance at the last supper would not have been controversial and Leonardo would have had no motive to disguise her as one of the other disciples 18 since she was widely venerated in her role as the Apostle to the Apostles and was the patron of the Dominican Order for whom The Last Supper was painted 18 There would have even been precedent for it since the earlier Italian Renaissance painter Fra Angelico had included her in his painting of the Last Supper 18 The painting contains several possible numerical references including to the number three The Apostles are seated in groups of three there are three windows behind Jesus and the shape of Jesus figure resembles a triangle His hands are located at the golden ratio of half the height of the composition 17 The painting can also be interpreted using the Fibonacci series one table one central figure two side walls three windows and figures grouped in threes five groups of figures eight panels on the walls and eight table legs and thirteen individual figures 17 Debates among art historians still surround the use of the Fibonacci series as some argue that its purposeful use did not fully begin to be applied to architecture until the early 19th century 18 See alsoList of works by Leonardo da Vinci Twelve Apostles in artNotes John 13 23 24 The lower right section continues the upper composition at left 16 The painting hung in the chapel of Magdalen College Oxford from 1992 23 References Bianchini Riccardo 24 March 2021 The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci Santa Maria delle Grazie Milan Inexhibit Retrieved 19 October 2021 Leonardo Da Vinci s The Last Supper reveals more secrets sciencedaily com Retrieved 3 March 2014 Frederick Hartt A History of Art Painting Sculpture Architecture Harry N Abrams Incorporated New York 1985 p 601 Christoph Luitpold Frommel Bramante and the Origins of the High Renaissance in Rethinking the High Renaissance The Culture of the Visual Arts in Early Sixteenth Century Rome Jill Burke ed Ashgate Publishing Oxan UK 2002 p 172 Santa Maria delle Grazie amp The Last Supper Timeout com Archived from the original on 29 March 2013 Retrieved 7 March 2024 King Ross 2012 Leonardo and the Last Supper New York Bloomsbury p 271 ISBN 978 1620403082 Kenneth Clark Leonardo da Vinci Penguin Books 1939 1993 p 144 The Last Supper lairweb org nz Retrieved 21 December 2012 DaVinci The Mark Steel Lectures Series 2 Episode 2 The Open University 7 October 2003 BBC Archived from the original on 17 September 2018 Retrieved 21 December 2012 Durant Will 2001 Heroes of History A Brief History of Civilization from Ancient Times to the Dawn of the Modern Age New York Simon amp Schuster p 206 ISBN 978 0 7432 2612 7 OCLC 869434122 a b c Leonardo s Last Supper Smart history presented by the Khan Academy Archived from the original on 15 February 2014 Retrieved 25 February 2014 a b c d e f Wallace 1972 p 83 The Last Supper The Last Supper Retrieved 25 February 2014 Steinberg Leo 2001 Leonardo s Incessant Last Supper New York Zone Books p 75 ISBN 978 1890951184 Cfr Matthew 26 15 and John 12 6 13 29 a b c Wallace 1972 p 86 a b c White Susan D 2006 Draw Like Da Vinci London Cassell Illustrated p 132 ISBN 978 1844034444 a b c d e f g h i j King Ross 2012 Leonardo and the Last Supper New York and London Bloomsbury pp 187 189 ISBN 978 0 7475 9947 0 Wallace 1972 p 81 Wallace 1972 p 82 Last Supper copy after Leonardo University of the Arts London Retrieved 11 August 2008 The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete Gutenberg org 1 January 2004 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Chapel with return Renaissance painrefting Oxford Times 14 September 2017 p 19 Wallace 1972 p 127 Wykes Alan 1969 Doctor Cardano physician extraordinary p 26 a b Da Vinci Leonardo 1971 Taylor Pamela ed The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci New American Library p xvii Wallace 1972 p 74 Traverso V M 5 June 2019 How The Last Supper miraculously survived World War II bombs Aleteia Catholic Spirituality Lifestyle World News and Culture Retrieved 7 June 2019 Wallace 1972 p 93 King Ross 2012 Leonardo and the Last Supper New York Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0802717054 Phillip William 24 May 1999 The Last Supper or a dog s dinner The Guardian guardian co uk Retrieved 21 December 2012 Alberge Dayla 14 March 2012 Have art restorers ruined Leonardo s masterpiece The Independent Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 21 December 2012 Tongerlo Abbey Houses A Remarkable Treasure Public Diplomacy Service of the Federal Public Service Foreign Affairs Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation 10 May 2019 Retrieved 20 March 2020 Where you can see Napoleon s copy of Da Vinci s Last Supper TripAdvisor LLC Retrieved 20 March 2020 a b Mary Beth Edelson The Frost Art Museum Drawing Project Retrieved 11 January 2014 Mary Beth Edelson Some Living American Women Artists 1972 MoMA Retrieved 4 December 2019 Gail Levin 2018 Becoming Judy Chicago A Biography of the Artist Univ of California Press pp 209 ISBN 978 0 520 30006 4 Mary Beth Adelson Clara Database of Women Artists Washington D C National Museum of Women in the Arts Archived from the original on 10 January 2014 Retrieved 10 January 2014 Self Portrait Looking at The Last Supper Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 15 August 2019 Haden Guest Anthony 3 August 1999 Warhol s Last Supper Artnet Retrieved 12 March 2010 Shelley Mary 1996 Travel Writing London Pickering pp 131 132 ISBN 1 85196 084 8 a b c d e f g Christopher Hodapp Alice Von Kannon The Templar Code For Dummies p 257 Wiley Publishing Inc 2007 ISBN 978 0 470 12765 0 BibliographyWallace Robert 1972 1966 The World of Leonardo 1452 1519 New York Time Life Books ISBN missing Further readingDetailed review of Steinberg s Incessant Last Supper at 3 Pipe Problem Bertelli Carlo November 1983 Restoration Reveals The Last Supper National Geographic Vol 164 no 5 pp 664 684 ISSN 0027 9358 OCLC 643483454 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci Official website Leonardo s Last Supper and the three layers Leonardo da Vinci anatomical drawings from the Royal Library Windsor Castle exhibition catalog fully online as PDF from The Metropolitan Museum of Art which contains material on The Last Supper see index Portals nbsp Painting nbsp Visual arts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Last Supper Leonardo amp oldid 1219642570, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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