Leonardo Da Vinci, a noted Italian artist,
painted
the Last Supper; and the time engaged for it's
completion was seven years. The figures representing
the twelve Apostles and Christ himself were painted
from living persons. The life-model for the painting
of the figure of Jesus was chosen first. When it
was decided that Da Vinci would paint this great
picture, hundreds and hundreds of young men were
carefully viewed in an endeavor to find a face and
personality exhibiting innocence and beauty, free
from the scars and signs of dissipation caused by
sin. Finally, after weeks of laborious search, a
young man nineteen years of age, was selected as a
model for the portrayal of Christ. For six months DaVinci
worked on the production of this leading character of
his famous painting. During the next six years
DaVinci continued his labors
on this sublime work of art. One by one fitting
persons were chosen to represent each of the eleven
Apostles; space being left for the painting of the
figure representing Judas Iscariot as the final task
of this masterpiece. This was the Apostle, you
remember, who betrayed his Lord for thirty pieces of
silver, worth in our present day currency $16.96.
For weeks Da Vinci
searched for a man with a hard, callous face, with a
countenance marked by scars of avarice, deceit,
hypocrisy, and crime; a face that would delineate a
character who would betray his best friend. After
many discouraging experiences in searching for the
type of person required to represent Judas, word came
to Da Vinci that a man whose appearance fully met his
requirements had been found in a dungeon in Rome,
sentenced to die for a life of crime and murder.
Da Vinci made the
trip to Rome at once, and this man was brought out
from his imprisonment in the dungeon and led out into
the light of the sun. There DaVinci saw before him a
dark, swarthy man; his long shaggy and unkempt hair
sprawled over his face, which betrayed a character of
viciousness and complete ruin. At last the famous
painter had found the person he wanted to represent
the character of Judas in his painting. By special
permission from the king, this prisoner was carried
to Milan where the picture was being painted. For months he sat before
DaVinci at appointed hours each day as the gifted
artist diligently continued his task of transmitting,
to his painting, this base character representing the
traitor and betrayer of our Savior. As he finished
his last stroke, he turned to the guards
and said, "I have finished. You may take the prisoner
away." As the guards were leading their prisoner
away, he suddenly broke loose from their control and
rushed up to Da Vinci, crying as he did so, "O,
DaVinci, look at me! Do you not know who I am?"
Da Vinci, with the trained eyes of a great character
student, carefully scrutinized the man upon whose
face he had constantly gazed for six months and
replied, "No, I have never seen you in my life until
you were brought before me out of the dungeon in
Rome."
Then, lifting his eyes toward heaven, the prisoner
said, "Oh, God, have I fallen
so low?" Then turning his face to the painter he
cried, "Leonardo DaVinci! Look at me again for I am
the same man you painted just seven years ago as the
figure of Christ."
This is the true story of the painting of The Last
Supper. It teaches so strongly the lesson of the
effects of right or wrong thinking on the life of an
individual. Here was a young man whose character was
so pure, unspoiled by the sins of the world, that he
represented a countenance of innocence and beauty fit
to be used for the painting of a representation of
Christ.
But within seven years, following the thoughts of sin
and a life of crime, he was changed into a perfect
picture of the most traitorous character ever known
in the history of the world.