这是他们的蒙娜丽莎。
It's Their Mona Lisa

原始链接: https://ironicsans.ghost.io/its-t-mona-lisa/

这期通讯探讨了每个机构的“蒙娜丽莎”——那一件吸引人群、代表其最佳水平的珍品。 起源于作者注意到美国唯一的列奥纳多·达·芬奇画作《吉内弗拉·德·本奇》,在国家美术馆(作者工作的地方)有时被称为“美国的蒙娜丽莎”。 这引发了一项搜索,揭示了17个不同的例子。 从MoMA的安迪·沃霍尔的《金色玛丽莲·梦露》,到黑帮博物馆上布满弹孔的墙壁,甚至蒂芙尼钻石,机构都将特定物品视为达·芬奇杰作的等价物。 其他例子包括死海古卷、哈里特·塔布曼的照片,以及一个昵称为“伊达”的4700万年前的灵长类化石。 作者还反思了他们自己的“蒙娜丽莎”——一期关于消除垃圾邮件的过往通讯,这期通讯受到了读者的特别欢迎。 最终,这篇文章强调了不同机构如何定义和庆祝他们最具标志性和价值的珍宝。

这个Hacker News讨论始于一篇帖子,将死亡谷中的阿玛戈萨歌剧院比作“蒙娜丽莎”,由此引发了一个关于在不同语境下什么构成“蒙娜丽莎”的讨论。 对话很快偏离了主题,纠正了一个关于玛丽·安托瓦内特私人剧院内一座名为米涅瓦神庙的场景被誉为宫殿“蒙娜丽莎”的错误事实。用户随后戏谑地寻找Hacker News本身的“蒙娜丽莎”,建议像一篇备受赞赏的网页设计文章和一条批评Dropbox的评论。 其他讨论包括对Restoration Hardware的批评、对可能艺术品目击的回忆,以及关于外来者如何常常将文化简化为笑话的更广泛的观察。这个帖子突出了艺术价值的主观性以及在线社区内独特的文化标志。
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Did you know that there is only one painting by Leonardo da Vinci on view in America? It’s a portrait of a teenage girl named Ginevra de’ Benci, a Florentine aristocrat, possibly commissioned for her wedding. And it’s one of only four portraits Leonardo painted of women. The most famous one, of course, is the Mona Lisa.

The portrait of Ginevra is on display at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, which acquired the painting in 1967. There’s an interesting story of how the painting was brought from Liechtenstein Castle to Washington in carry-on luggage.

[I haven’t told you this yet, but for the past year I’ve been working full-time as Senior Video Producer at the National Gallery of Art. I love it. Working in a museum surrounded by some of the world’s best art and telling stories about how art makes a difference in people’s lives, every day is a good day. Another time, I’ll share some of the work we’re doing. But for now, I just need to make clear that this newsletter is in no way formally connected to the museum or my work there.]

Here is Ginevra, painted by Leonardo around 30 years before Mona Lisa:

I once heard someone refer to Ginevra as “America’s Mona Lisa.” Obviously that’s in part because they’re both by the same artist. But sometimes people refer to something as their Mona Lisa to mean it’s their prize possession, or an incredible work, or the draw that people come to see.

And that got me wondering: What do other museums and institutions refer to as their Mona Lisa?

So I did some digging and I’ve gathered 17 works of art and other surprising things where someone from the institution has gone on record calling it their Mona Lisa.


The Mona Lisa of the Museum of Modern Art

Andy Warhol, Gold Marilyn Monroe (1962)

What is it? Gold Marilyn Monroe (1962), a silkscreen portrait by Andy Warhol.
Where is it? Museum of Modern Art, New York City.
Exact quote: “Many people call her our Mona Lisa.”
Who said it? Ann Temkin, Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture.
Source: MoMA Inside Out blog, July 22, 2015


The Mona Lisa of The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Duccio di Buoninsegna, Madonna and Child (c. 1300)

What is it? Madonna and Child (c. 1300) by Duccio di Buoninsegna
Where is it? The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City.
Exact quote: “...the first time I saw this work, I said, ‘this is our Mona Lisa.’”
Who said it? Wolfram Koeppe, Senior Curator of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts.
Source: Cabana Magazine interview, July 26, 2024


The Mona Lisa of Restoration Hardware

Restoration Hardware’s flagship store in Paris

What is it? Restoration Hardware’s Paris flagship luxury home furnishings showroom.
Where is it? Paris, France.
Exact quote: “Guests don’t enter this gallery through a typical storefront. Instead, golden gates open to a hedge-lined walkway, a rear garden and dramatic medallion-carved doors that lead into a space CEO Gary Friedman calls the company’s ‘Mona Lisa.’”
Who said it? Gary Friedman, CEO of Restoration Hardware.
Source: Jetset Magazine, September 15, 2025.


The Mona Lisa of the Smithsonian African Art Museum

Ousmane Sow, Toussaint Louverture (1989)

What is it? A 7-foot bronze sculpture by Ousmane Sow called Toussaint Louverture depicting a Black liberation leader and a formerly enslaved woman.
Where is it? Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, Washington D.C.
Exact quote: “The sculpture, which museum director Johnnetta Cole describes as ‘our Mona Lisa’...”
Who said it? Johnnetta Cole, museum director.
Source: Smithsonian Magazine, May 2011


The Mona Lisa of the St. Louis Art Museum

Henri Matisse, Bathers with a Turtle (1907)

What is it? Bathers with a Turtle (1907) by Henri Matisse.
Where is it? St. Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, MO.
Exact quote: “‘It’s one of the great Matisses,’ said Simon Kelly, the St. Louis Art Museum’s curator of modern art. ‘It’s kind of our Mona Lisa.’”
Who said it? Simon Kelly, Curator of Modern Art.
Source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch, February 22, 2014


The Mona Lisa of the National Museum of African American History & Culture

B.F. Powelson, Harriet Tubman (c. 1868)

What is it? An early portrait photograph of Harriet Tubman by B.F. Powelson.
Where is it? National Museum of African American History and Culture, Washington, D.C.
Exact quote: “I felt like this is the museum’s version of a Mona Lisa... This is our Mona Lisa. She would be the equivalent.”
Who said it? Rhea Combs, Curator of Photography.
Source: TheGrio, March 26, 2019


The Mona Lisa of the Lenbachhaus

Alexej von Jawlensky, Portrait of Alexander Sacharoff (1910)

What is it? Portrait of Alexander Sacharoff (1910) by Alexej von Jawlensky.
Where is it? Lenbachhaus, Munich, Germany.
Exact quote: “This is our ‘Mona Lisa’, almost every week we receive requests to lend the painting, which unfortunately is not possible because the painting is very fragile.”
Who said it? Matthias Mühling, Director.
Source: Simply Munich


The Mona Lisa of The Mob Museum

Bullet-riddled wall from 1929 St. Valentine’s Day Massacre

What is it? The bullet-riddled brick wall from the 1929 St. Valentine’s Day Massacre garage.
Where is it? The Mob Museum, Las Vegas, Nevada.
Exact quote: “The wall, reassembled brick by brick, is pock-marked with bullet holes. ‘It's like our Mona Lisa,’ Barrie says.”
Who said it? Dennis Barrie, Creative Director.
Source: Cleveland Magazine, February 20, 2012


The Mona Lisa of the Kunstgewerbemuseum

Dome Reliquary (Middle Ages)

What is it? The Dome Reliquary, “reputed to have contained the skull of Saint Gregory of Nazianzus”
Where is it? Kunstgewerbemuseum (Museum of Decorative Arts), Berlin, Germany.
Exact quote: “The dome reliquary is our Mona Lisa.”
Who said it? Lothar Lambacher, Deputy Director.
Source: The New Criterion, May 2022


The Mona Lisa of the Palace of Versailles

Temple of Minerva theater (c. 1754)

What is it? The Temple of Minerva theater set (c.1754) from Marie-Antoinette’s private theater.
Where is it? Château de Versailles, Versailles, France.
Exact quote: “a miracle of conservation ... our own Mona Lisa”
Who said it? Raphaël Masson, Chief Curator of Heritage.
Source: Tatler, March 15, 2021


The Mona Lisa of the Worcester Art Museum

Paul Gauguin, The Brooding Woman (1896)

What is it? The Brooding Woman (1896) by Paul Gauguin.
Where is it? Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, Massachusetts.
Exact quote: “My absolute favorite in this museum is Paul Gauguin’s ‘The Brooding Woman.’ It’s our Mona Lisa.”
Who said it? Matthias Waschek, Director.
Source: The Boston Globe, October 20, 2012


The Mona Lisa of the Israel Museum

What is it? The Dead Sea Scrolls collection
Where is it? Israel Museum (Shrine of the Book), Jerusalem.
Exact quote: “Placing the Dead Sea Scrolls—‘our Mona Lisa,’ Roitman called them—in a museum...”
Who said it? Adolfo Roitman, Curator of the Shrine of the Book at the Israel Museum
Source: The Atlantic, November 26, 2017


Alexander Gardner, Abraham Lincoln (1865)

What is it? An 1865 photograph of Abraham Lincoln (1865) by Alexander Gardner with a crack through it.
Where is it? Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.
Exact quote: “Our photograph of Lincoln by [Gardner], known as the ‘cracked-plate,’ is the museum’s ‘Mona Lisa.’”
Who said it? Kim Sajet, Director.
Source: Smithsonian Press Release, August 24, 2015


John Taylor, Chandos Portrait of William Shakespeare (c. 1610)

What is it? The Chandos Portrait of William Shakespeare, attributed to John Taylor, c. 1610.
Where is it? National Portrait Gallery, London.
Exact quote: “She labels as ‘pretty high’ the odds that a living, breathing William Shakespeare posed for the National Portrait Gallery’s own Chandos portrait, which she calls ‘our Mona Lisa.’”
Who said it? Tarnya Cooper, Curator.
Source: Smithsonian Magazine, September 2006


The Mona Lisa of the University of Maryland School of Medicine

Unknown Artist, Dr. John Beale Davidge (1844)

What is it? An 1844 portrait of Dr. John Beale Davidge, founder and first dean of the medical school.
Where is it? University of Maryland Medical Alumni Association, Baltimore.
Exact quote: “This is the only portrait of Davidge that we’re aware of that exists. It is certainly the oldest. Until another one shows up, this is our Mona Lisa.
Who said it? Larry Pitrof, executive director of the Medical Alumni Association
Source: Baltimore Sun via ArtNet, July 24, 2025


The Mona Lisa of Tiffany & Co.

What is it? The Tiffany Diamond, a 128.54-carat yellow diamond.
Where is it? Tiffany & Co. flagship store, New York City.
Exact quote: “People can line up to view it. ‘Yes, it is our Mona Lisa.’”
Who said it? Victoria Wirth Reynolds, Chief Gemologist.
Source: CBS News, May 21, 2023


The Mona Lisa of the Oslo Natural History Museum

Ida, a primate fossil

What is it? Darwinius masillae, a 47-million-year-old fossil of a human ancestor, seen as a “missing link” in the evolutionary tree. Its nickname is Ida.
Where is it? Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, Norway.
Exact quote: “You need an icon or two in a museum to drag people in... This is our Mona Lisa and it will be our Mona Lisa for the next 100 years.”
Who said it? Jørn Hurum, Paleontologist.
Source: The Guardian, May 19, 2009

If I had to choose which issue of this newsletter is my Mona Lisa, not based on my favorite but strictly based on which one brought the most new readers, that honor probably goes to I Get No Mail And It’s Glorious, about how I eliminated all paper mail to the point where most days I literally get no mail, causing confusion for my mailman.

I don’t have the raw numbers, but I’m pretty sure that was the most widely shared and read edition since I started this newsletter in 2020. In this newsletter’s earlier iteration as a blog, I’m sure I had posts that were more popular than that, but strictly among newsletter issues, that one definitely ranks high up there.

Thanks as usual for reading. See you next time!

David

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