Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Leonardo Da Vinci :: essays research papers
 1452-1519, Italian painter, sculptor, architect, musician, engineer, and  scientist, probably the supreme example of Renaissance genius. Born in Vinci,  Tuscany, he was the illegitimate son of a Florentine notary and a peasant girl.  His precocious artistic talent brought him to Verrocchio's workshop in 1466,  where he met Botticelli and Ghirlandaio. The cul mination of his art in this  first period in Florence is seen in the magnificent, unfinished Adoration of the  Magi (Uffizi), with its characteristic dramatic movement and chiaroscuro. In  c.1482 Leonardo went to the court of Ludovico Sforza in Milan and there composed  most of his Trattato della pittura and the notebooks that demonstrate his versa  tile genius. The severe plagues in 1484 and 1485 drew his attention to town  planning, and his drawings and plans for domed churches reflect his concern with  architectural problems. In 1483, Leonardo and his pupil Ambrogio de Predis were  commissioned to execute the famous Madonna of the Rocks (two versions:  1483-c.1486, Louvre; 1483-1508, National Gall., London). The now badly damaged  Last Supper (c.1495-1498; Milan) was executed during the period when he was  experimenting with the Fresco medium, and this partly accounts for its damage.  Despite this, a sublime spiritual content and power of invention mark it as one  of the world's masterpieces. Leonardo's model for an equestrian monument to  Francesco Sforza was never cast, and in 1500 he returned to Florence, where he  did much theoretical work in mathematics and      pursued his anatomical studies in the hospital of Santa Maria Nuova. As a  military engineer for Cesare Borgia he studied swamp reclamation and met NiccolĂ ²  Machiavelli. In c.1503 he executed the celebrated Mona Lisa (Louvre). Then, as  architect and engineer in Milan to the French king Louis Xii, he continued his  scientific investigations into geology, botany, hydraulics, and mechanics. In  1510-11 he painted St. Anne, Mary, and the Child (Louvre), a work that  exemplifies his handling of sfumato-misty, subtle transitions in tone.  					    
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