An Incredible Talent by Margot Justes
The impact on art was profound, a new realistic approach to
painting where perspective became important-more specifically something called
linear perspective-where parallel lines converge so as to give the painting an
illusion of depth and distance. That is the accepted definition.
When we look at a painting, we don't say 'ah, I see the
linear perspective', we just see a painting and recognize distances and depth
and sometimes an added dimension.
There is a recent BBC article written by Robin Banerji about
the quintessential Renaissance man, Leonardo da Vinci, despite being dead for
centuries.
The latest article states that his anatomy drawings were quite
accurate and better than the 19th Century Gray's Anatomy, and according to the
article his anatomy studies were "hundreds of years ahead of its
time." A series of drawings of the skull were anatomically correct
and perfect. The article goes on to say
that the drawings were as good as what can be drawn today. Leonardo died in 1519, that puts things in
perspective.
Among his many talents, Leonardo da Vinci could paint what
he saw perfectly. That is not as easy as
it sounds. I imagine it as he photographed it in his head and later developed
it on paper. A perfect visual image
rendered in pigment.
Till next time,
Margot Justes
Hearts & Daggers
A Hotel in Paris
www.mjustes.com
1 comment:
Leonardo really was a brilliant man.
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