Leonardo da Vinci is one of the greatest artists who has ever lived. He is also
among the greatest scientists. He experimented with unusual ways to mix paint
and use colours. He created new painting techniques and original ways to compose
pictures. He studied everything he saw—from living things to machines, using his
incredible drawing skills to record them in detail. Then he used his
observations to think up plans for inventions that were not built until hundreds
of years later, such as a telescope, a tank and a
helicopter!
LEONARDO’S CHILDHOOD
The first thing that comes to your mind when you hear the name “Leonardo da Vinci”
is Mona-Lisa. Well most of us remember him for his world-famous
paintings but what we are not aware about this multifarious man is his knack for
designing weapons which were far superior compared to the ones of his time.
Yes Da Vinci designed some of the most quirky yet effective weapons.
For those of you who play Assassin’s
Creed, please thank Da Vince for some of the most eccentric and
spectacular weapon designs. A true protean, Da Vince’s weapons were studied
closely by engineers and some of his weapons were even recreated successfully.
Here are a few drawings of Da Vince’s weapons.
Well known all over the world, Leonardo Da Vinci is one of the major examples of
Italian genius: polyvalent and enigmatic, his talents spanned
from painting ( everybody knows the Gioconda and the Last Supper), to beautiful
sculptures and ingenious war inventions.
In particular I’m writing this post just to talk about the relation between
Leonardo and the music.
In fact the artist really loved the music and he even composed some
aria. Besides, he was a passionate player of the, literally “ armlyre” (lira da braccio) and
he even draw a model of this instrument.
Actually the Organ Viola, the one that Leonardo draw has been built by the
“Association de Recherche Culturelle L. De Vinci” from Sion (CH)
It’s fascinating to learn, regarding Leonardo’s love for music, that
according to scholars Gian Mario Pala and Loredana Mazzarella, inside the
Leonardo’s Last Supper there is a hidden a musical composition which has been
synthesized digitally.
33 Barreled Organ
It’s not a musical
instrument‘s name if that is what you thought it was. Lets just say it was a
really huge machine gun. Probably 33 guns put together, this one provided the
basis for the design of modern-day machine guns.
It managed to overcome the “reload” problem considerably. Divided into three
sets of 3 each containing 11 guns, they would be fired one set at a time
causing mayhem. While the top row was being fired the next rack was loaded at
the same time, a third rack was cooling off. Another design had the guns in a
triangle spread for greater distribution of the projectiles. The basic concept
is that you spread the surface area and the range of damage you inflict
increases considerably. Again simple mathematics used cleverly.
Giant Crossbow
Triple Barrel Cannon
One cannon requires time to reload but replace that with three cannons and voilà
you have yourself one continuously firing cannon or rather three cannons
creating the effect of one continuously firing machine. You cannot help but
admire the sheer creativity of Da Vince using simple mathematics coupled with
his artistic abilities to design such an effective machine.
You might wanna have a look at these videos about Da Vince.
http://dsc.discovery.com/videos/doing-davinci-highlights/
The Pear Shape cut was born from that epic explosion of creativity and
artisanship known as the Renaissance. The same period that gave us the
Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel and Da Vinci’s Last Supper has given us the
lasting legacy of the Pear Shape cut diamond.
Leonardo Da Vinci Instrument Pictures &
Photos
This undated photo provided by Running Subway
Productions shows a functional model of a harpsichord-viola designed by
Leonard
...more »
This undated photo provided by Running Subway
Productions shows a functional model of a harpsichord-viola designed by Leonardo
da Vinci more than 500 years ago. The instrument, which combines a harpsichord
keyboard with the sound of a viola and is designed to let musicians play while
walking, will have its premiere in New York City on Thursday, Dec. 10, 2009, at
the "Leonardo da Vinci's Workshop" exhibit at Discovery Times Square Exposition.
(AP Photo/Running Subway Productions)
Within Leonardo’s own lifetime his fame was such that the King of France
carried him away like a trophy, and was claimed to have supported him in his old
age and held him in his arms as he died Vasari, in his Lives of the Artists
written about thirty years after Leonardo’s death, described him as having
talents that “transcended nature”.
Leonardo was
born on April 15, 1452, in the small town of Vinci, near Florence, in Italy.
(His name means in Italian, “Leonardo of Vinci”.) His father was a wealthy
Florentine official who did not marry his mother, a simple peasant
woman.
Leonardo was brought up by his mother’s family in the beautiful Tuscan
countryside. As a small boy, he spent hours exploring the woods, fields and
streams. He loved to watch insects, animals and birds, and to examine different
plants and flowers,
then make sketches of them. His restless curiosity, interest in nature and keen
eye for observation shaped the whole course of his life.
LEONARDO
BECOMES A CRAFTSMAN
At the age of about 12, Leonardo went to
live with his father in Florence. The great city was then a bustling centre for
training master artists and for brilliant students of literature and science.
Leonardo was sent to school to learn reading, writing and maths, and he became a
fine musician. However, he showed such a talent for drawing that he was taken on
as an apprentice by one of the leading artists in the city, Andrea del
Verrocchio.
In Verrocchio’s workshop, Leonardo began to learn how to mix
different types of paint, make brushes and prepare canvases for painting. He
studied the art of fresco (painting using watercolours on wet plaster) and
learnt how to sculpt. Artists in those days knew many other skills. Wealthy
people paid Verrocchio to create bronze church bells, musical instruments and
furniture, to make compasses for ships and to cast objects in gold and
silver.
Leonardo studied all the crafts in the workshop, and became
fascinated by the variety of tools and machines used there. He examined how each
of the pieces of technical equipment worked and made careful drawings of
them. Leonardo carried a sketchpad with him at all times, so he could make
accurate drawings of anything around Florence that interested him. He began to
think about how everyday machines worked, such as the waterwheels that turned
millstones to grind corn. And he studied the specialist machines being used on
an enormous construction site where the city cathedral was being
built.
AN ARTIST IN FLORENCE
By 1472, Leonardo
had finished his apprenticeship with Verrocchio. However, he stayed working in
the great craftsman’s workshop as his assistant. Verrocchio thought the
21-year-old was so skilled that he allowed Leonardo to help with a masterpiece
he was working on called The Baptism of Christ. Leonardo painted an angel
kneeling in the left of the picture, and some of the background. He used
delicate colours to show feelings on the angel’s face, and tried a new idea for
painting haziness in the landscape to try to show distance. In those days,
artists could only paint flat pictures; they did not know how to show
perspective.
By 1478, Leonardo had set up a workshop of his own. Two of his
first paintings were gentle, touching portraits of Mary with baby Jesus, called
Madonnas. Between 1480 and 1481 he also created a lovely, small painting called
the Annunciation, showing the Bible story of how Mary was once visited by an
angel. Leonardo brilliantly captured the meeting of the human and the spiritual
worlds by setting the figures in a deep, misty, magical landscape, with
exquisitely detailed, lifelike wildflowers and plants around the angel’s
feet.
Many wealthy people in Florence began to ask Leonardo to create
works of art for them—in particular the ruler of the city himself, the great
Lorenzo de’ Medici. Strangely, Leonardo never carried out work on one big order,
which was for a painting in the chapel of a palace, the Palazzo Vecchio. He also
left several other works unfinished. One of these was a portrait of St Jerome.
Another was an order from a monastery for his first large-scale painting, The
Adoration of the Magi, showing the visit of the Three Wise Men to baby Jesus.
Perhaps Leonardo did not finish the paintings because he was engrossed with
other work he was doing in private. Leonardo was not only still studying and
sketching machines, such as pumps and army equipment. He was also planning new
machines of his own.
WORK AT THE COURT OF MILAN
In
1482, Lorenzo de’ Medici sent Leonardo on an important mission. He asked him to
take a silver musical instrument called a lute as a peace offering to the
warlike ruler of Milan, Duke Lodovico Sforza. Leonardo wrote a daring personal
letter to deliver to the duke at the same time. In it, he described the amazing
ideas he had for incredible new machines, which would be perfect for the Duke’s
army. These included armoured vehicles, moveable bridges and original designs
for catapults, cannons and other weapons. At the end of the letter, Leonardo
added that he also happened to be a skilled painter, sculptor and musician. He
offered to create a bronze horse statue to honour the Duke’s father.
The
Duke was highly impressed and invited Leonardo to work for him as an engineer
and painter. Leonardo set up a studio with pupils and assistants helping him on
many different projects. From 1483 to 1485 he worked on two versions of a
wonderful picture called The Virgin of the Rocks. Then he was asked to paint a
massive fresco on the wall of a dining room in a monastery. For the next two
years, Leonardo created a masterpiece called The Last Supper, which showed the
final meal Jesus Christ shared with his close followers.
However, much of
Leonardo’s time was taken up with scientific studies. He was employed on the
duke’s many war campaigns, advising on new ideas for weapons and building
defences. He also produced models for the building of a magnificent dome for
Milan cathedral, drew up plans for other great buildings, and designed theatre
sets and costumes. He studied how humans and animals moved, explored
possibilities for inventing flying machines, and thought deeply about the moon,
stars and planets. He also became firm friends with a mathematician called Luca
Pacioli, who was working on the relationship between distances. Leonardo made a
series of drawings to illustrate Pacioli’s ideas, and studied how he could use
mathematical rules to create paintings that looked solid, deep and
lifelike.
FOUR YEARS IN FLORENCE
Leonardo stayed
in Milan for 18 years. Then at the end of 1499, French soldiers attacked the
city and conquered it. The 48-year-old artist returned to Florence once more.
Not long afterwards Florence was caught up in its own war against the city of
Pisa. In 1502, Duke Cesare Borgia asked Leonardo to become his chief architect
and engineer. He worked hard, designing and building forts. He also drew up
plans to cut off Pisa’s water supply and force the city to surrender. His
brilliant ideas involved changing the direction
of a river and also building canals, but these were not carried
out.
Leonardo saw horrors during the war, which inspired him to plan an
enormous painting called the Battle of Anghiari for the great hall of the
Palazzo Vecchio. However, he only got as far as making detailed sketches and a
full-size drawing. Instead, Leonardo turned to studying the flight of birds and
experimenting further with his designs for flying machines. He also painted
several famous portraits. The only one that still survives is a captivating
picture of a woman with a mysterious smile, called the Mona Lisa. It is probably
the most famous painting in all the world today.
LEONARDO’S LATER
YEARS
In 1506, Leonardo returned to Milan, at the request of the
French governor there. The King of France himself, Louis XII, was living in
Milan at the time, and just a year later he appointed Leonardo to be his court
painter. However, Leonardo continued to devote lots of time to engineering
projects and scientific investigations, such as examining fossils to work out
what they were.
After the governor of Milan died, Leonardo went to Rome
in 1514 to work for the brother of the pope. Although he completed one
magnificent painting, a portrait of St John the Baptist, he spent most of his
time studying and experimenting. By examining animal parts from a butcher’s
shop, he produced brilliant models of how the heart works. He tried making
giant, rounded mirrors because he wanted to see the moon and stars close-up. And
by studying he plants he discovered that the same patterns exist in many natural
things.
Shortly after the pope’s brother died, in 1516, Leonardo went to
live and work in France. He was 64 years old. King Francis I gave Leonardo the
title of “First painter, architect and mechanic of the king”, and set him up in
a house near his own palace in Amboise. He paid Leonardo well and left him to do
as he pleased, visiting him now and again to enjoy fascinating conversations.
Leonardo began the huge job of sorting out all the scientific papers he had
produced during his lifetime. He died before he was able to finish, on May 2,
1519.
Did you know ?
• Leonardo never finished
the horse statue he offered to make for the Duke of Milan. He got as far as
creating an enormous clay model, but when the French armies invaded the city,
they destroyed it by using it for archery practice!
• When Leonardo wrote in
his notebooks, he wrote backwards (from right to left) using 'mirror writing'.
No one is sure why. Some people think that he wanted to make it hard for others
to read his studies and steal his ideas. Other people think that it was just
easier for him, because he was left-handed. Whatever the reason, when Leonardo
wrote documents for other people to read, he wrote in the usual way.
• In
Leonardo's day, very few people grew up left-handed like him. Everyone was very
supersitious and many believed that the left side of the body was evil and
unlucky. Children who showed signs of being left-handed were usually forced to
using their right hand instead. Leonardo was also a vegetarian, which was
equally unusual in those times.
• Leonardo was buried in the palace church at
Amboise in France. However, the building was destroyed three hundred years
later, during the French Revolution, so his grave can no longer be found.