by anthea maria camilleri. leonardo didn’t produce a lot of his paintings, but his influence is...
TRANSCRIPT
LEONARDO DA VINCI
ByAnthea Maria Camilleri
• Leonardo da Vinci was a painter, sculptor, architect, inventor, engineer, scientist, mathematician and more. He was born in 1452 in a town called Vinci, near Florence in Italy. He doesn’t actually have a last name; “da Vinci” really just means “from Vinci.”
VINCI IN ITALY
• Although he’s best remembered today as a painter, he is well-known as a military engineer during his life, and he designed military technology for a number of leaders.
Leonardo da Vinci.
• As a teenager, Leonardo was apprenti ced to a famous sculptor and painter named Verrocchio. In Verrocchio’s painti ng “The Bapti sm of Christ” ,the kneeling angel at the left of the painti ng was painted by a 22-year-old Leonardo. The angel shows Leonardo’s incredible promise as a painter.
The Baptism of Christ
• Leonardo didn’t produce a lot of his paintings, but his influence is still huge. Even if you don’t know all that much about art, you’re probably familiar with Leonardo’s “The Last Supper”, depicting (showing) Jesus’ final meal. And everyone knows the “Mona Lisa”, Now hanging in the Louvre museum in Paris, France.
The museum Louvre in Paris, France
• The Mona Lisa show Leonardo’s mastery of two techniques: sfumato, in which colours are blended together skillfully to create a smoky effect and chiaroscuro, which uses contrasts of light and dark to create a three-dimensional effect.
The Mona Lisa
• Leonardo’s career as an artist led him to show interest in human anatomy. His drawings of muscles, organs and bones have advanced our understanding of human physiology (the way the body works).
Leonardo’s human anatomy.
• A lot of what we know about Leonardo comes from his notes and drawings, thousands of pages which still exist. Museums will often display a notebook, or codex, made up of these collected pages. They show Leonardo’s fascination not only in anatomy, but with stars and planets, animals, architecture, geography and fossils. They also show how deeply Leonardo observed the natural world to design mechanical wonders. To protect his work, Leonardo wrote in mirror script which was written upside down and backwards.
Leonardo’s codex