When I saw it I was a bit disappointed in it. Given its reputation I thought it was much larger then it was.
I don't see how the size of a painting has anything to do with its aesthetic value.
Then your tastes are unusual. For most people, size matters. That is to say: most people are impressed by large paintings the same way they're impressed by large buildings, or sweeping vistas.
The converse is true as well: most people are impressed by very fine detail, and by unusually small works, such as Indian micro-calligraphy and painting on rice grains.
But the Mona Lisa is just a regular-sized portrait, which makes me wonder: what
is it about this painting?
Carrie's video suggests that its value for most people is more than just aesthetic: the Mona Lisa is
famous; it's a celebrity.
I've been star-struck in the presence of a work of art myself. The first time I visited the British Museum, I saw the Rosetta Stone, and couldn't believe my eyes. Holy
shit, I thought: that's the
Rosetta Stone. The actual fucking Rosetta
Stone. It's not just a figure of speech. It's
real!
Obviously, most people don't react that way: in fact, most people were just glancing at it, and moving on to the mummies or something. It's not all that impressive to look at, in itself. I think you have to make your living by studying the past through documents, the way I do, to be blown away by the sight of the stone that allowed us to decipher Egyptian hieroglyphics.
Yet, in our culture, there are a handful of artworks that have somehow become iconic. They're the superstars of the art world, and instantly recognizable, and there aren't many of them. Besides the Mona Lisa, there's Munch's
The Scream, and the Creation of Adam from the Sistine Chapel, and maybe Michelangelo's
David.
To say that these works are 'overrated' or 'underrated' is really to miss the point. The really interesting question is,
how and
why did these works become superstars?
Celebrity, after all, is not dependent on quality. As Meryl Streep once remarked: "I am not a star. Morgan Fairchild is a star." And as
RJDiogenes remarked earlier, there are many paintings that are arguably as good as the Mona Lisa. Ronald Lauder paid $135 million for Gustav Klimt's
Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer in 2006--and most people have never heard of this painting.
So, WTF? Why the Mona Lisa, and not, say, Vermeer's
Girl With a Pearl Earring? Why Botticelli's
Birth of Venus, but not Bouguereau's
painting on the same subject?