ABC News December 8, 2015

Hidden Portrait Found Under 'Mona Lisa' Painting

WATCH: Hidden Portrait Found Under 'Mona Lisa' Painting

A hidden portrait underneath the "Mona Lisa" has been discovered by a French scientist, who said he uncovered the image using reflective light technology.

The digitally reconstructed image of the hidden portrait was presented at a press conference in Shanghai on Tuesday by scientist Pascal Cotte, who's been analyzing the Leonardo da Vinci masterpiece for over a decade, the BBC reported. Pascal said he uncovered the image using a multi-lens camera that took images of the painting under intense light.

The hidden portrait features a sitting subject who looks almost identical to the "Mona Lisa," minus small but significant differences.

The sitter in the image appears to be looking to the side rather than directly at the viewer, and the sitter does not seem to have the enigmatic smile that's intrigued "Mona Lisa" viewers for over 500 years.

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Cotte told the BBC that he believes his findings challenge the widely accepted theory that the "Mona Lisa" is a painting of real-life 16th century Italian woman Lisa Gheradini, who was the wife of a Florentine silk merchant.

BBC
Pascal Cotte, a French scientist, claims he has found a hidden portrait underneath the Mona Lisa.

"The results shatter many myths and alter our vision of Leonardo's masterpiece forever," he said. "When I finished the reconstruction of Lisa Gherardini, I was in front of the portrait, and she is totally different to Mona Lisa today. This is not the same woman."

In an upcoming documentary for the BBC, art historian, Andrew Graham-Dixon, said he studied historical documents linked to the "Mona Lisa" alongside Cotte's findings and came to the same conclusion as Cotte.

BBC
Reflective light technology used to analyze the Mona Lisa.

"I think the new discoveries are like a huge stone thrown into the still waters of art history," Graham-Dixon said. "They disturb everything that we thought we knew about the Mona Lisa ... [T]here may be some reluctance on the part of the authorities at the Louvre to think about changing the title of the painting because that’s what we’re talking about. It’s 'Goodbye, Mona Lisa.' She is somebody else."

The Louvre Museum declined to comment on the findings, saying it was not a part of the scientific team that studied the painting.

Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images
The Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci, exhibited at the Louvre in Paris in 2007.

Other art historians remain skeptical about the claims that Cotte's findings could prove the "Mona Lisa" was someone else other than Lisa Gheradini.

Oxford University Professor Martin Kemp, one of the world's leading experts on Leonardo da Vinci told the BBC that he believes Cotte and his team is "ingenious" but "the idea that there is that picture as if it were hiding underneath the surface is almost untenable."

He added, "I think there's no doubt it is Lisa."