54
Mixed
Italy
One of Leonardo Davinci's students painted a naked version of the Mona Lisa.
The claim that one of Leonardo da Vinci's students painted a naked version of the Mona Lisa has elements of plausibility, supported by historical-artistic discussions. The 'La Joconde nue' (Monna Vanna) is a charcoal drawing from Leonardo's school, dated 1514–1516, considered to bear similarities to the Mona Lisa. Although debated, there is no definitive proof that a student of Leonardo created this piece, but it is widely hypothesized. Various sources, including Wikipedia, discuss these debates, providing a reasonable basis for the claim's potential validity without conclusively confirming it. Thus, the claim is moderately supported but not conclusively proven.
Individual Claims
54
Mixed
Art
One of Leonardo Davinci's students painted a naked version of Mona Lisa.
There is historical art discourse around the 'La Joconde nue,' a piece attributed to Leonardo's school. This claim is partially supported by web sources that discuss such artworks, though they do not definitively attribute it to one of Leonardo's students.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
60
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
50
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
50
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
54
Evidence Summary
3 web sources discuss paintings attributed to Leonardo's school, including 'La Joconde nue.' No definitive artist attribution.