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April 15, 1452 - May 2, 1519
Leonardo da Vinci
was a celebrated Italian Renaissance architect, inventor, engineer,
sculptor and painter. He has been described as the archetype of the "Renaissance
man" and as a universal genius. Leonardo is well known for his masterly
paintings, such as The Last Supper and Mona Lisa. Da Vinci is also known
for his many inventions that were made well before their time but were
never published in his lifetime. In addition, he helped advance the study
of anatomy, astronomy, and civil engineering.
Leonardo was born in Vinci, Italy. His father Ser Piero da Vinci was
a well-off landowner or craftsman and his mother, Caterina, a peasant
girl. It has been suggested that Caterina was a slave of middle eastern
origin owned by Piero, but the evidence is scant.
This was before modern naming conventions developed in Europe. Therefore,
his full name was "Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci", which means
"Leonardo, son of Piero, from Vinci". Leonardo himself simply
signed his works "Leonardo" or "Io, Leonardo" ("I,
Leonardo"). Most authorities therefore refer to his works as "Leonardos,"
not "da Vincis." Presumably he did not use his father's name
because he was an illegitimate child.
Leonardo grew up with his father in Florence. He was a vegetarian throughout
his life. He became an apprentice to painter Andrea del Verrocchio about
1466. Later, he became an independent painter in Florence.
From 1482 to 1499 he worked for Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan and maintained
his own workshop with apprentices there. Seventy tons of bronze that had
been set aside for Leonardo's "Gran Cavallo" horse statue was
cast into weapons for the Duke to save Milan from the French under Charles
VIII in 1495 - see also Italian Wars.
When the French returned under Louis XIII in 1498, Milan fell without
a fight, overthrowing Sforza. Leonardo stayed in Milan for a time, until
one morning he found French archers using his life-size clay model for
the "Gran Cavallo" for target practice. He left with Salai and
his friend (and inventor of double-entry bookkeeping) Luca Pacioli for
Mantua, moving on after 2 months for Venice, then moving again to Florence
at the end of April 1500.
In Florence he entered the services of Cesare Borgia (also called "Duca
Valentino" and son of Pope Alexander VI) as military architect and
engineer. In 1506 he returned to Milan, now in the hands of Maximilian
Sforza after Swiss mercenaries drove out the French. There he met Francesco
Melzi, who would become a close friend and companion until Leonardo's
death, and later his heir.
From 1513 to 1516 he lived in Rome, where painters like Raphael and Michelangelo
were active at the time; he did not have much contact with these artists,
however.
In 1515 Francis I of France retook Milan, and Leonardo was commissioned
to make a centrepiece (of a mechanical lion) for the peace talks in Bologna
between the French king and Pope Leo X, where he must have first met the
king. In 1516, he entered Francis' service, being given the use of the
manor house Clos Lucé next to the king's residence at the Royal
Chateau at Amboise, and receiving a generous pension. The king became
a close friend.
He died in Cloux, France in 1519. According to his wish, 60 beggars followed
his casket. He was buried in the Chapel of Saint-Hubert in the castle
of Amboise.
Leonardo appears to never have had intimate relations with women. In
1476 he was anonymously accused of homosexual contact with a 17-year-old
model, Jacopo Saltarelli, a notorious prostitute. He was, together with
three other young men, charged with homosexual conduct and acquitted because
of lack of evidence. For a time Leonardo and the others were under the
watchful eye of Florence's "Officers of the Night" - a kind
of Renaissance vice squad.
Robert Payne, a biographer of Leonardo, believes that he loved women
and men equally. Most modern scholars believe that one of Leonardo's lovers
was Salai, A.K.A., Gian Giacomo Caprotti. Salai was Leonardo's servant
and assistant.
Leonardo is well known for his masterful paintings, such as Last Supper
(Ultima Cena or Cenacolo, in Milan), painted in 1498, and Mona Lisa (also
known as La Gioconda, now at the Louvre in Paris), painted in 1503-1506.
Only seventeen of his paintings, and none of his statues survive. Of these
paintings, only Ginevra de' Benci--is in the Western Hemisphere.
Leonardo often planned grandiose paintings with many drawings and sketches,
only to leave the projects unfinished.
In 1481 he was commissioned to paint the altarpiece "The Adoration
of the Magi". After extensive, ambitious plans and many drawings,
the painting was left unfinished and Leonardo left for Milan.
He there spent many years making plans and models for a monumental seven-metre
(24-foot) high horse statue in bronze ("Gran Cavallo"), to be
erected in Milan. Because of war with France, the project was never finished.
Based on private initiative, a similar statue was completed according
to some of his plans in 1999 in New York, given to Milan and erected there.
The Hunt Museum in Limerick, Ireland has a small bronze horse, thought
to be the work of an apprentice from Da Vinci's original design.
Back in Florence, he was commissioned for a large public mural, the "Battle
of Anghiari"; his rival Michelangelo was to paint the opposite wall.
After producing a fantastic variety of studies in preparation for the
work, he left the city, with the mural unfinished due to technical difficulties.
Science and engineering
Perhaps even more impressive than his artistic work are his studies in
science and engineering, recorded in notebooks comprising some 13,000
pages of notes and drawings, which fuse art and science. He was left-handed
and used mirror writing throughout his life (this is explainable by fact
that it is easier to pull a quill pen than to push it; by using mirror-writing,
the left-handed writer is able to pull the pen from right to left).
His approach to science was an observatory one: he tried to understand
a phenomenon by describing and depicting it in utmost detail, and did
not emphasize experiments or theoretical explanations. Throughout his
life, he planned a grand encyclopedia based on detailed drawings of everything.
Since he lacked formal education in Latin and mathematics, Leonardo the
scientist was mostly ignored by contemporary scholars.
He participated in autopsies and produced many extremely detailed anatomical
drawings, planning a comprehensive work of human and comparative anatomy.
Around the year 1490, he produced a study in his sketchbook of the Canon
of Proportions as described in recently rediscovered writings of the Roman
architect Vitruvius. The study, called the Vitruvian Man, is one of his
most well-known works.
Vitruvian man
Leonardo da Vinci draws the human body. His study of human anatomy led
eventually to the design of the first known robot in recorded history.
The design, which has come to be called Leonardo's robot, was probably
made around the year 1495 but was rediscovered only in the 1950s. It is
not known if an attempt was made to build the device.
Being fascinated by the phenomenon of flight, he produced detailed studies
of the flight of birds, and plans for several flying machines, including
a helicopter powered by four men (which would not have worked since it
would have rotated) and a light hang-glider which could have flown. On
January 3, 1496 he unsuccessfully tested a flying machine he had constructed.
In 1502 Leonardo da Vinci produced a drawing of a single span 720-foot
(240 m) bridge as part of a civil engineering project for Sultan Beyazid
II of Constantinople. The bridge was intended to span an inlet at the
mouth of the Bosphorus known as the Golden Horn. It was never built, but
Da Vinci's vision was resurrected in 2001 when a smaller bridge based
on his design was constructed in Norway.
His notebook also contain several inventions in the military field: machine
guns, an armored tank powered by humans or horses, cluster bombs, etc.
even though he later held war to be the worst of human activities. Other
inventions include a submarine, a cog-wheeled device that has been interpreted
as the first mechanical calculator, and a car powered by a spring mechanism.
In his years in the Vatican, he planned an industrial use of solar power,
by employing concave mirrors to heat water.
In astronomy, Leonardo believed that the Sun and Moon revolve around
the Earth, and that the Moon reflects the sun's light due to its being
covered by water.
Leonardo did not publish or otherwise distribute the contents of his
notebooks. Most scholars believe that Leonardo wanted to publish his notebooks
and make his observations public knowledge. They remained obscure until
the 19th century, and were not directly of value to the development of
science and technology until that time. On this basis, L. Sprague de Camp,
in his book, The Ancient Engineers, considered Leonardo not the first
modern engineer, but "the last of the ancient ones", pointing
out that after Leonardo's time the practice of disseminating and publishing
scientific discoveries began in earnest.
The Codex Leicester, one of da Vinci's notebooks, was purchased by American
entrepreneur Bill Gates for US$30.8 million in 1994. Many of his drawings
are held in the British Royal Collection.
Now that's what I call a renaissance man
A finger in every artistic/creative pie, sculpture, painting, diverting
the Florentine river to better defend the city, designing helicopters.
leonardo was the artistic man par excellence, a man who made artistic
endeavours seem easy.
Desperately jealous of Michelangelo and worthy of his competition Leonardo
was a man of intellect and free thought living in a time of superstition
and danger of being pronounced a heretic. Designer of his own codes, writer
of invisble backwards scripts to protect himself if his ideas and musings
werediscovered, here we have the greatest artist ever to have lived.
This article is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia
article "da Vinci".
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