WHO IS LEONARDO DA VINCI?
Most people use #da_vinci as a tag but there is more to DA VINCI
Leonardo da Vinci excelled as a
painter, sculptor, architect, engineer, and scientist. He had endless curiosity.
Leonardo wanted to understand how things worked. He wanted to put down on paper
what he saw. He left thousands of pages of drawings and notes that recorded his
thoughts.
GOOD AT EVERYTHING
Leonardo was born in 1452 in the
small town of Vinci, near Florence, Italy. He had little schooling and was
largely self-taught.
Leonardo seemed to be good at
everything he tried. He was handsome, a good speaker, and a fine musician. He
trained as a painter with Andrea del Verrocchio, a leading artist in Florence.
Leonardo later worked for dukes and kings.
HIS MOST FAMOUS PAINTINGS
Leonardo produced a relatively
small number of paintings, and he left some of them unfinished. But he had
original ideas that influenced Italian artists long after his death. Leonardo
believed painting was a science. He applied scientific thinking in his art so
that his paintings looked more like the real world. One of his most important
painting techniques was sfumato, a blending of one area of color into
another so there are no sharp outlines.
Leonardo used sfumato in one of
his most famous paintings, the Mona Lisa. When you look at this portrait,
notice how colors shade into each other on her face and hands. See how Leonardo
has blurred the edges of her mouth to give her the hint of a smile. This
mysterious smile has fascinated people for centuries. It looks as if Mona Lisa’s
expression might change at any moment because of the way Leonardo has softened
the edges of the mouth, eyes, and cheeks. She seems almost alive.
Many people consider a mural by
Leonardo known as The Last Supper to be his masterpiece. Christ,
seated in the middle of The Last Supper, has just announced that one of
his 12 apostles will betray him. Leonardo places the figures in this painting in
a way that increases the drama of the announcement. Christ is the calm center.
His body, which is set slightly apart from the others, forms a stable triangle.
The apostles are arranged in four groups, some leaning toward Christ and some
leaning away. Their gestures and the expressions on their faces reveal their
reactions to Christ’s words.
HIS DRAWINGS AND NOTEBOOKS
Drawing was Leonardo’s favorite
tool. He said that drawing was a better way of communicating ideas than words
were. He drew catapults and war machines. He drew the muscles and skeletons of
human beings and other animals. He drew clouds, swirling water, and storms. He
designed churches that were never built.
Leonardo’s drawings and theories
are contained in numerous notebooks. His ideas were far in advance of what other
people were thinking at the time. But the notebooks were not published during
his lifetime. Had his notebooks been published, they might have revolutionized
scientific thinking in the 1500s. Leonardo’s deep love of research was the key
to both his artistic and scientific endeavors. Leonardo died in 1519.
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