The
first object of the painter is to make a flat plane appear as a body in relief
and projecting from that plane.
--
Leonardo da Vinci
Leonardo DA VINCI (b. 1452, Vinci, Republic of Florence
[now in Italy]--d. May 2, 1519, Cloux, Fr.), Italian painter, draftsman,
sculptor, architect, and engineer whose genius, perhaps more than that of any
other figure, epitomized the Renaissance humanist ideal. His Last Supper
(1495-97) and Mona Lisa (1503-06) are among the most widely
popular and influential paintings of the Renaissance. His notebooks reveal a
spirit of scientific inquiry and a mechanical inventiveness that were centuries
ahead of his time.
From Sketches to Paintings
By
a happy chance, a common theme links the lives of four of the famous masters of
the High Renaissance -- Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael and Titian. Each began
his artistic career with an apprenticeship to a painter who was already of good
standing, and each took the same path of first accepting, then transcending,
the influence of his first master. The first of these, Leonardo da Vinci
(1452-1519), was the elder of the two Florentine masters. He was taught by
Andrea del Verrocchio (1435-88), an engaging painter whose great achievement
was his sculpture. Verrochio also had considerable influence on the early work
of Michelangelo. Verrocchio's best-known painting is the famous Baptism
of Christ, famous because the youthful Leonardo is said to have painted
the dreamy and romantic angel on the far left, who compares more than favorably
with the stubby lack of distinction in the master's owm angel immediately
beside him.
Leonardo: Renaissance polymath
There
has never been an artist who was more fittingly, and without qualification,
described as a genius. Like Shakespeare, Leonardo came from an insignificant
background and rose to universal acclaim. Leonardo was the illegitimate son of
a local lawyer in the small town of Vinci in the Tuscan region. His father
acknowledged him and paid for his training, but we may wonder whether the
strangely self-sufficient tone of Leonardo's mind was not perhaps affected by
his early ambiguity of status. The definitive polymath, he had almost too many
gifts, including superlative male beauty, a splendid singing voice, magnificent
physique, mathematical excellence, scientific daring... the list is endless.
This overabundance of talents caused him to treat his artistry lightly, seldom
finishing a picture, and sometimes making rash technical experiments. The
Last Supper, in the church of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan, for
example, has almost vanished, so inadequate were his innovations in fresco
preparation.
Da
vinci made numerous experiments using different colours and when painting this
particular church he failed.
Yet
the works what we have salvaged remain the most dazzingly poetic pictures ever
created. The Mona Lisa has the innocent disavantage of being too
famous. It can only be seen behind thick glass in a heaving crowd of awe-stuck
sightseers. It has been reproduced in every conceivable medium: it remains
intact in its magic, for ever defying the human insistence on comprehending. It
is a work that we can only gaze at in silence.
Leonardo's
three great portraits of women all have a secret wistfulness. This quality is
at its most appealing in Cecilia Gallarani, at its most enigmatic
in the Mona Lisa, and at is most confrontational in Ginevra
de' Benci. It is hard to gaze at the Mona Lisa, because we
have so many expectations of it. Perhaps we can look more truly at a less
famous portrait, Ginevra de' Benci. It has that haunting, almost
unearthly beauty peculiar to Leonardo.
A withheld identity
The
subject of Ginevra de' Benci has nothing of the Mona Lisa's inward
amusement, and also nothing of Cecilia's gentle submissiveness. The young woman
looks past us with a wonderful luminous sulkiness. Her mouth is set in an
unforgiving line of sensitive disgruntlement, her proud and perfect head is
taut above the unyielding column of her neck, and her eyes seem to narrow as
she endures the painter and his art. Her ringlets, infinitely subtle, cascade
down from the breadth of her gleaming forehead (the forehead, incidentally, of
one of the most gifted intellectuals of her time). These delicate ripples are
repeated in the spikes of the juniper bush.
The
desolate waters, the mists, the dark treess, the reflected gleams of still
waves, all these surround and illuminate the sitter. She is totally fleshly and
totally impermeable to the artist. He observes, rapt by her perfection of form,
and shows us the thin veil of her upper bodice and the delicate flushing of her
throat. What she is truly like she conceals; what Leonardo reveals to us is
precisely this concealment, a self-absorption that spares no outward glance.
Interior depth
We
can always tell a Leonardo work by his treatment of hair, angelic in its
fineness, and by the lack of any rigidity of contour. One form glides
imperceptibly into another (the Italian term is sfumato), a wonder
of glazes creating the most subtle of transitions between tones and shapes. The
angel's face in the painting known as the Virgin of the Rocks in
the National Gallery, London, or the Virgin's face in the Paris version of the
same picture, have an interior wisdom, an artistic wisdom that has no pictorial
rival.
This
unrivalled quality meant that few artists actually show Leonardo's influence:
it is as if he seemed to be in a world apart from them. Indeed he did move
apart, accepting the French King Franзois I's summons to live in France. Those
who did imitate him, like Bernardini Luini of Milan (c.1485-1532) caught only
the outer manner, the half-smile, the mistiness.
The
shadow of a great genius is a peculiar thing. Under Rembrandt's shadow, painters
flourished to the extent that we can no longer distinguish their work from his
own. But Leonardo's was a chilling shadow, too deep, too dark, too
overpowering.
Список
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