Interesting Facts - As was common with other Renaissance works, the "Mona Lisa" didn't have a formal title
for many years, instead going by names like "A Certain Florentine Lady"
or "A Courtesan in a Gauze Veil." The identity of the subject also
became something of a mystery, as Leonardo failed to provide any confirmation
in his papers or in the painting itself. It was a later Renaissance
artist, Giorgio Vasari, who provided the first inkling that the sitter
was the wife of Francesco del Giocondo, in his 1550 book The Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors and Architects.
From there, the now-famous name took root: Mona, short for Madonna,
means "my lady," or something akin to "Mrs." in 16th-century Italian.
For a long time, the question persisted as to whether Vasari correctly
identified the woman who inspired the iconic painting’s name. However,
the 2005 discovery of the "Heidelberg document" (in which a secretary
noted that Leonardo was painting "the head of Lisa del Giocondo" in
1503) seemingly provided contemporary proof of the Leonardo-del Giocondo
partnership, confirming for many that the sitter was indeed Mona Lisa
and not Mona Somebody Else.
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