“Google’s AI Uncovers a Chilling Hidden Message in Da Vinci’s The Last Supper — And It Changes Everything We Thought We Knew”

In a groundbreaking fusion of technology and art history, Google’s most advanced artificial intelligence system has reportedly uncovered a series of hidden symbols and encrypted patterns in Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper — findings that could redefine how humanity understands one of the most studied masterpieces of all time.

The revelations, first shared in a closed academic session in Florence in early October 2025, have left historians and theologians stunned, with some calling the AI’s results “deeply unsettling.”

For centuries, The Last Supper — painted by Leonardo da Vinci between 1495 and 1498 in Milan’s Santa Maria delle Grazie — has fascinated scholars for its intricate symbolism, mathematical precision, and spiritual undertones.

 

AI Finally Decoded the Hidden Message in Da Vinci's The Last Supper — And  It's Unlike Anything... - YouTube

 

From Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code to modern-day conspiracy theories, countless interpretations have tried to decode the mysterious gestures, objects, and placements within the mural.

But never before has the painting been analyzed at such microscopic and data-driven levels.

The project, led by Google DeepMind’s art-interpretation division, began earlier this year as part of an initiative to test AI’s ability to recognize hidden layers of meaning in historical artworks.

Using a combination of hyperspectral imaging, machine learning pattern analysis, and neural narrative modeling, the AI processed over 11 terabytes of high-resolution data, detecting pigments, brushstroke angles, and geometric proportions invisible to the naked eye.

According to Dr.Elise Moretti, a senior data historian on the project, the AI began noticing anomalies that human experts had overlooked for centuries.

“At first, we thought it was a simple data glitch,” she explained.

“But as we cross-checked the results, the same message kept surfacing — a pattern embedded not just in the structure of the painting, but in its mathematical composition.”

What the AI decoded was chilling: hidden within the angles of the apostles’ hands and the placement of bread and wine on the table was a recurring Fibonacci sequence that, when digitally reconstructed, spelled out a Latin phrase: ‘Et mortuus Deus resurget’ — meaning, “And the dead God shall rise.”

When the algorithm expanded its scan to analyze the acoustics of the mural’s architecture (as Da Vinci designed the refectory space for visual and sonic symmetry), it uncovered another layer.

The spatial data, when converted into audio frequencies, produced an eerie melodic pattern resembling Gregorian chant — one that, astonishingly, matched a funeral hymn composed in 1481 for the Milanese court.

“It’s as if Leonardo coded sound and prophecy into paint,” said Dr.Moretti.

“We’re not talking about random artistic flourishes.

This looks intentional, mathematical, and profoundly symbolic.”

Adding to the mystery, the AI identified a faint, almost imperceptible outline beneath the tablecloth that appears to depict a chalice-shaped void — the same Holy Grail symbol that has fueled centuries of debate.

But even more startling, the system found another hidden form beneath the figure of Judas: a faint secondary hand clutching what seems to be a small dagger.

When layered with the painting’s original sketches, it appears that Da Vinci may have drawn — and then painted over — an extra figure.

Art historian and Da Vinci scholar Professor Lorenzo Bellini of the University of Milan expressed both awe and unease at the findings.

“If this data holds true,” he said, “we may have to re-evaluate everything we thought we knew about The Last Supper.

Leonardo may have embedded a message not to the Church, but to the future — a warning meant to be uncovered only when human technology caught up with his genius.”

While some experts praise the discovery as revolutionary, others remain cautious.

Critics argue that AI’s pattern recognition can produce “false positives” by overanalyzing visual noise.

Yet, what makes this case compelling is that the same patterns appeared consistently across independent AI systems in three separate labs — in Zurich, Boston, and Tokyo — all using different datasets.

As the findings spread, reactions have become increasingly divided between the scientific and spiritual communities.

 

Google AI Was Asked to Decode the Hidden Message in Da Vinci’s The Last  Supper…And It's Terrifying

 

The Vatican has declined to comment publicly, but one anonymous scholar close to the Holy See called the revelations “deeply troubling,” suggesting that Da Vinci may have encoded heretical messages questioning divine resurrection and the role of organized faith.

Meanwhile, the public’s fascination has exploded.

Online forums, academic conferences, and YouTube analysis channels have been flooded with debates and reconstructions.

Some digital artists have used the extracted patterns to recreate what they believe could be a hidden “second image” — showing a radiant figure rising from the center of the table, where Jesus sits.

Others insist it’s merely the AI’s symbolic projection of chaos and rebirth.

One of the most haunting moments came during a live demonstration of the AI model at Google’s Mountain View campus.

When the decoded sound frequencies were played aloud — the supposed “chant” derived from the mural’s proportions — the audio system reportedly glitched for several seconds, emitting what attendees described as “a deep, trembling hum that felt almost alive.”

Even those involved in the research admit that the implications are unnerving.

“We didn’t set out to find something mystical,” Dr.

Moretti said.

“We wanted to test whether AI could see what humans can’t.

But what it revealed raises more questions than answers — about art, faith, and whether some messages were meant to stay hidden.”

Experts are now calling for further investigation, with a joint task force of historians, theologians, and data scientists scheduled to meet in Florence in November 2025.

For now, The Last Supper — a painting already surrounded by centuries of mystery — has become even more enigmatic.

Whether Da Vinci’s true message was a prophecy, a puzzle, or a master’s joke, one thing is certain: the world’s most famous supper has just served humanity a mystery it may never fully digest.