Sunday, November 24, 2019
8 things you should know about Leonardo da Vinci
8 things you should know about Leonardo da Vinci8 things you should know about Leonardo da VinciThis year marks the 500th anniversary of Leonardo da Vincis death. Widely considered one of the greatest polymaths in menschenwrdig history, Leonardo welches an inventor, artist, musician, architect, engineer, anatomist, botanist, geologist, historian and cartographer.Though his artistic output welches small, Leonardos impact was great, reflecting his deep knowledge of the body, his extensive studies of light and the human face, and his sfumato (Italian for smoky) technique, which allowed for incredibly lifelike images. Leonardo regarded artists as divine apprentices, writing We, by our arts, may be called the grandsons of God.Follow Ladders on FlipboardFollow Ladders magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and moreTwenty-first-century scholars at MIT ranked him the sixth fruchtwein influential person who ever lived. Like Rembrandt and Miche langelo, he is so renowned that he is known by only his first name. Yet despite his fame, there are things about Leonardo that many people today find surprising.Shady parentageLeonardo was born out of wedlock on April 15, 1452. His father, Piero, was a wealthy notary, and his mother, Caterina, was a local peasant girl. Although the circumstances of his birth would place Leonardo at a disadvantage in terms of education and inheritance, biographer Walter Isaacson regards it as a terrific stroke of luck. Rather than being expected to become a notary like his father, Leonardo was instead free to develop the full range of his genius. People surmise that it also imbued him with a special sense of urgency to establish his own identity and prove himself.Physical beautyLeonardo created some of the worlds most beautiful works of art, including the Last Supper and the Mona Lisa. In his own day, he was known as an exceptionally attractive person. One of Leonardos biographers describes him as a person of outstanding physical beauty who displayed infinite grace in everything he did. A contemporary described him as a well proportioned, graceful, and good-looking man who wore a rose-pink tunic and had beautiful curling hair, carefully styled, which came down to the middle of his chest. Leonardo is thought to have entered into long-term and possibly sexual relationships with two of his pupils, both artists in their own right.From scraps to notebooksThe paintings generally attributed to Leonardo number fewer than 20, while his notebooks contain over 7,000 pages. Theyre the best source of knowledge about Leonardo, housed today in locations such as Windsor Castle, the Louvre and the Spanish National Library in Madrid. Their diverse content ranges across drawings most famously, Vitruvian Man notes of things he wanted to investigate, scientific and technical diagrams and shopping lists. They comprise perhaps the most remarkable monument to human curiosity and creativity ever prod uced by a single person. Yet when Leonardo penned them, they were just loose pieces of paper of different types and sizes. His friends bound them into notebooks only after his death.One of his best-known notebook drawings is the Vitruvian Man.Outsiders educationAs a result of his illegitimacy, Leonardo received a rather rudimentary formal education consisting primarily of business arithmetic. He never attended university and sometimes referred to himself as an unlettered man. Yet his lack of formal schooling also freed him from the constraints of tradition, helping to instill in him a determination to question authority and place greater reliance on his own experience than opinions expressed in books. As a result, he became a firsthand observer and experimenter, uninterested in serving as a mouthpiece for the classics.Prolific procrastinatorAlthough Leonardos mind was extraordinarily fertile, he was also an inveterate procrastinator and even quitter. He frequently took months or yea rs to begin work on commissions, sometimes keeping patrons at bay with lofty pronouncements regarding his creative process. A giant equestrian statue for the duke of Milan, requiring 70 tons of bronze to cast, might have been his grandest work if it had ever been completed. Yet a decade after the 1482 commission, Leonardo had produced only a clay model which was subsequently destroyed when invading French soldiers used it for target practice.Rivalrous motivationsLeonardos life overlapped those of two other Renaissance giants Michelangelo and Raphael but it was Michelangelo who stoked an intense rivalry. The contrast between the two men could hardly have been sharper. Leonardo was elegant and evinced little interest in matters religious, while Michelangelo was deeply pious yet neglectful of his appearance and hygiene. Michelangelo created some of the greatest paintings in history, including the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, and many considered his David the greatest sculpture eve r produced, a triumph he lorded over his older rival.Royal admirerSoon after King Francis I of France captured Milan in 1516, Leonardo entered his service, spending the last years of his life in a house near the royal residence. When death came to Leonardo on May 2, 1519 at the age of 67, it is said that the king, who loved to listen to Leonardo talk so much that he was hardly ever apart from him, cradled his head as he breathed his last. Years later, reflecting on his friendship with the great man, King Francis said, No man possessed such a knowledge of painting, sculpture, or architecture as Leonardo, but the same goes for philosophy. He was a great philosopher.Skyrocketing valueIn November 2017, one of the paintings attributed to Leonardo, Salvator Mundi (Savior of the World), set the record for the most expensive painting ever sold, fetching US$450 million. Painted in oil on walnut in about 1500, it depicts Jesus offering a benediction with his right hand while holding a crystal line orb that appears to represent the cosmos in his left. The painting had suffered from neglect and poor restorations and was long assumed to be thework of one of Leonardos students, selling as recently as 2005 as part of the estate of a Baton Rouge businessman for less than $10,000. Its currentwhereabouts are unknown.One of a kind, admired then and nowIn November 2017, one of the paintings attributed to Leonardo, Salvator Mundi (Savior of the World), set the record for the most expensive painting ever sold, fetching US $450 million. Painted in oil on walnut in about 1500, it depicts Jesus offering a benediction with his right hand while holding a crystalline orb that appears to represent the cosmos in his left. The painting had suffered from neglect and poor restorations and was long assumed to be the work of one of Leonardos students, selling as recently as 2005 as part of the estate of a Baton Rouge businessman for less than $10,000. Its current whereabouts are unknown.Just a h alf-century after Leonardos death, the biographer Vasari beautifully summed up his enduring significanceIn the normal course of events many men and women are born with remarkable talents but occasionally, in a way that transcends nature, a single person is marvelously endowed by heaven with beauty, grace, and talent in such abundance that he leaves other men far behind, all his actions seem inspired, and indeed everything he does clearly comes from God rather than from human skill.Five hundred years after Leonardos death, these words still ring true.This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. 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