_The Christian Post_ (http://www.christianpost.com/)  > _World_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/world/) |Tue, Nov. 08 2011 
Da Vinci's Newly Discovered Christ Painting to Be Made Public (VIDEO)
By _Luiza Oleszczuk_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/luiza-oleszczuk/) 
 | Christian Post  Contributor

 
A recently discovered Jesus painting by Leonardo da Vinci is being revealed 
 to the public eye for the first time starting Nov. 9 in a London 
exhibition and  via a _television_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/television/)  
series.
 
The painting, titled "Salvator Mundi" (Savior of the World), depicts Christ 
 with his right hand raised in blessing and his left hand holding a 
transparent  globe. It is painted in oil on a wood panel and measures 26 by 
18.5 
inches in  size. 
It was discovered at an auction in the United States in 2005 and officially 
 identified as a da Vinci in July of this year. It is the most precious art 
 acquisition of the century, experts say. 
The now cleaned and restored 500-year-old work went missing for most of the 
 17th through the 19th centuries, only to be discovered, hundreds of years 
later,  in a private collection in the United States. It is now owned by a 
consortium of  art dealers, including Robert Simon, a _New  York_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/region/new-york/) -based specialist in Old 
Masters, 
according to _ArtNews_ 
(http://www.artnews.com/2011/08/15/updated-a-long-lost-leonardo-2/) . 
Only 15 paintings by Da Vinci still exist, including, "Mona Lisa," "The 
Last  Supper" and "Lady with an Ermine" as probably the most famous ones. 
"Salvator Mundi" might presently be worth $200 million, according to  
ArtNews.
 
London's National Gallery exhibition, "Leonardo da Vinci: Painter at the  
Court of Milan," is the most complete display of da Vinci's rare surviving  
paintings ever held, museum authorities claim. After opening on Nov. 9, the  
exhibition will run until Nov. 5, 2012. Da Vinci's works from multiple 
museums  across the world were brought to London for the purpose of the 
exhibition. 
The exhibition is inspired by the recently restored National Gallery  
painting, "The Virgin of the Rocks," museum authorities said. 
It is also the first exhibition to be dedicated to da Vinci's goals and  
techniques as a painter, the museum authorities said in a statement. It  
concentrates on the work he produced as court painter to Duke Lodovico Sforza 
in  
Milan in the late 1480s and 1490s. 
"As a painter, Leonardo aimed to convince viewers of the reality of what 
they  were seeing while still aspiring to create ideals of beauty – 
particularly in  his exquisite portraits – and, in his religious works, to 
convey a 
sense of  awe-inspiring mystery," the exhibition description states. 
Works on display will include "Portrait of a Young Man," "Lady with an  
Ermine," "La Belle Ferronière," "Madonna Litta and Saint Jerome," and the two  
versions of the "Virgin of the Rocks." The final part of the exhibition is 
to  feature a near-contemporary, full-scale copy of the "Last Supper." 
But those who cannot make it to the London exhibition will be able to 
admire  the painting in CNN's new series, "Leonardo – The Lost Painting." The  
five-episode documentary focuses on the discovery of "Salvator Mundi," how it  
was purchased by a serendipitous coincident after centuries in obscurity, 
and  how experts from _Europe_ (http://www.christianpost.com/region/europe/)  
and the Unites States spent months affirming its  originality. 
The TV series starts on Nov. 11 and runs through Nov. 15 on  CNN

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