They are among the most scrutinised artworks in the world, but for centuries some remarkable hidden secrets hidden in the canvas have been missed.
For 40 years, curators at the Art Gallery of New South Wales have known there was something hiding underneath this Renaissance painting.
But it took the collaboration of the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation to finally solve the mystery.
X-rays taken in the early 1980s showed there was an underpainting beneath Cosimo I de' Medici in armour by Agnolo di Cosimo.
But an advanced imaging technique at the Australian Synchrotron has finally revealed it.
The technique can reveal specific metals which were commonly used in Renaissance paints, including mercury, copper, tin, iron and manganese.
Curators believe the underpainting may have been a draft for another painting, Portrait of a young man.
Side by side, the shapes of the underpainting resemble the outline of the latter painting.
Click through to see more hidden paintings within paintings.
For centuries, Johannes Vermeer's Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window has been regarded as a masterpiece of the Golden Age of Dutch art.
But it has only been in recent years that experts have noticed the painting within a painting.
At some point in between 1659 and now, a painting on the wall in the portrait had been covered over.
Now, after two-and-a-half years of meticulous scraping with a scalpel, the true image has finally been unveiled.
The artwork as Vermeer painted it shows a picture of a naked Cupid on the wall, behind the girl reading a letter.
It is now on display at the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister in Dresden, Germany.
This 1434 oil painting by Dutchman Jan van Eyck may seem like a pretty conventional portrait of a merchant, his pregnant wife and their dog.
But look closer. Not only has van Eyck written his name at the centre of the piece, he's painted himself into it.
"Johannes de eyck fuit hic 1434," the words at the centre of the painting read, translated to Jan van Eyck was here, 1434".
But underneath the message is a small circular mirror. In it, you can see the backs of the subjects, and in the middle, the painter himself.
Pablo Picasso's 1901 piece The Blue Room was considered one of the most important pieces for the young artist.
But after decades on display in Washington DC, x-ray and infrared scans revealed there was a hidden painting underneath.
The original painting shows a bow-tied man glaring at the painter.
As a 19-year-old struggling painter, Picasso was often unable to sell his paintings, so to save the canvas, he would often paint over old portraits.
There's also hidden faces in Picasso's famed work The Old Guitarist.
Look at the centre of this image, and you'll see a woman's face under the top layer of paint.
The face has a ghostly presence in the artwork, but is likely just the result of a recycled canvas.
Hans Holbein the Younger's painting The Ambassadors seems like a conventional Tudor period portrait.
In the painting are French diplomats Jean de Dinteville and Georges de Selve, a globe, a carpet, and on the ground, an anamorphic skull.
Viewed from the front on, the skull may not stand out. But it is hypothesised the painting was meant to hang in a stairwell, so a person walking up the stairs would be startled by the macabre Easter egg.
For centuries, Dutch painter Hendrick van Anthonissen's View of Scheveningen Sands was simply a painting on the beach.
But in recent years, experts started to speculate: what are all these people on the beach looking at.
Then in 2014, the painting came to Hamilton Kerr Institute for cleaning. There they started to strip off the thick layers of varnish and overpainting, and discovered a shocking edit.
The painting originally featured a beached whale lying on the sand. But at some point years after it was finished, another artist painted over it.
After cleaning, the seascape was restored to its original form, and it currently sits at The Fitzwilliam Museum.
It might not seem like it at first glance, but this painting is a self-portrait.
The title Still Life with Cheeses, Almonds and Pretzels tells most of the story of this influential painting from 1615, but it's not the whole story.
If you look very closely, you can see painter Clare Peeters' self-portrait.
Peeters painted her own reflection in the rim of the jug of the painting.
If you look closely, you can see her peering closely.
Pieter Bruegel the Elder's paintings may seem like the Where's Wally of Renaissance Netherlands.
But every moment in masterpiece Netherlandish Proverbs features a famous turn-of-phrase.
Among them are:
-To bang one's head against a brick wall
-Let the cards fall as they may
- Move like your behind is on fire