The Project Gutenberg EBook of Leonardo da Vinci, by Maurice W. Brockwell

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Title: Leonardo da Vinci

Author: Maurice W. Brockwell

Release Date: March, 2005 [EBook #7785]
Last Updated: February 1, 2013

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

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[Plate 1MONA LISA. In the Louvre. No. 1601. 2 ft 6 ½ ins.  By 1 ft. 9 ins.(0.77 x 0.53)]  

LEONARDO DA VINCI  

By MAURICE W. BROCKWELL  

Illustrated With Eight Reproductions in Colour  


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"Leonardo," wrote an English critic as far back as 1721, "was a Man so  happy in his genius, so consummate in his Profession, so accomplished in  the Arts, so knowing in the Sciences, and withal, so much esteemed by the  Age wherein he lived, his Works so highly applauded by the Ages which have  succeeded, and his Name and Memory still preserved with so much Veneration  by the present Agethat, if anything could equal the Merit of the  Man, it must be the Success he met with. Moreover, 'tis not in Painting  alone, but in Philosophy, too, that Leonardo surpassed all his Brethren of  the 'Pencil.'"  

This admirable summary of the great Florentine painter's life's work still  holds good to-day.  








CONTENTS  


His Birth
 His Early Training
 His Early Works
 First Visit to Milan
 In the East
 Back  in Milan
 The Virgin of the  Rocks
 The Last Supper
 The Court of Milan
 Leonardo Leaves Milan
 Mona Lisa
 Battle  of Anghiari
 Again in Milan
 In Rome
 In France
 His Death
 His Art
 His Mind
 His Maxims
 His Spell
 His  Descendants 





ILLUSTRATIONS  


Plate
 I. Mona Lisa
   In the  Louvre
 II. Annunciation
   In the  Uffizi Gallery, Florence
 III. Virgin  of the Rocks
   In the National Gallery, London
 IV. The Last Supper
   In the Refectory of  Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan
 V. Copy of the Last Supper
   In  the Diploma Gallery, Burlington House
 VI. Head  of Christ
   In the Brera Gallery, Milan
 VII. Portrait (presumed) of Lucrezia Crivelli
   In  the Louvre
 VIII. Madonna, Infant Christ, and St  Anne.
   In the Louvre  








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HIS BIRTH  


Leonardo Da Vinci, the many-sided genius of the Italian Renaissance, was  born, as his name implies, at the little town of Vinci, which is about six  miles from Empoli and twenty miles west of Florence. Vinci is still very  inaccessible, and the only means of conveyance is the cart of a general  carrier and postman, who sets out on his journey from Empoli at sunrise  and sunset. Outside a house in the middle of the main street of Vinci  to-day a modern and white-washed bust of the great artist is pointed to  with much pride by the inhabitants. Leonardo's traditional birthplace on  the outskirts of the town still exists, and serves now as the headquarters  of a farmer and small wine exporter.  

Leonardo di Ser Piero d'Antonio di Ser Piero di Ser Guido da Vincifor  that was his full legal namewas the natural and first-born son of  Ser Piero, a country notary, who, like his father, grandfather, and  great-grandfather, followed that honourable vocation with distinction and  success, and who subsequentlywhen Leonardo was a youthwas  appointed notary to the Signoria of Florence. Leonardo's mother was one  Caterina, who afterwards married Accabriga di Piero del Vaccha of Vinci.  





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Plate II.Annunciation In the Uffizi Gallery, Florence. No. 1288.  3 ft 3 ins. By 6 ft 11 ins. (0.99 x 2.18)] Although this panel is included  in the Uffizi Catalogue as being by Leonardo, it is in all probability by  his master, Verrocchio.]  





The date of Leonardo's birth is not known with any certainty. His age is  given as five in a taxation return made in 1457 by his grandfather  Antonio, in whose house he was educated; it is therefore concluded that he  was born in 1452. Leonardo's father Ser Piero, who afterwards married four  times, had eleven children by his third and fourth wives. Is it  unreasonable to suggest that Leonardo may have had these numbers in mind  in 1496-1498 when he was painting in his famous "Last Supper" the figures  of eleven Apostles and one outcast?  

However, Ser Piero seems to have legitimised his "love child" who very  early showed promise of extraordinary talent and untiring energy.  

HIS EARLY TRAINING  


Practically nothing is known about Leonardo's boyhood, but Vasari informs  us that Ser Piero, impressed with the remarkable character of his son's  genius, took some of his drawings to Andrea del Verrocchio, an intimate  friend, and begged him earnestly to express an opinion on them. Verrocchio  was so astonished at the power they revealed that he advised Ser Piero to  send Leonardo to study under him. Leonardo thus entered the studio of  Andrea del Verrocchio about 1469-1470. In the workshop of that great  Florentine sculptor, goldsmith, and artist he met other craftsmen, metal  workers, and youthful painters, among whom was Botticelli, at that moment  of his development a jovial _habitué_ of the Poetical Supper Club,  who had not yet given any premonitions of becoming the poet, mystic, and  visionary of later times. There also Leonardo came into contact with that  unoriginal painter Lorenzo di Credi, his junior by seven years. He also,  no doubt, met Perugino, whom Michelangelo called "that blockhead in art."  The genius and versatility of the Vincian painter was, however, in no way  dulled by intercourse with lesser artists than himself; on the contrary he  vied with each in turn, and readily outstripped his fellow pupils. In  1472, at the age of twenty, he was admitted into the Guild of Florentine  Painters.  

Unfortunately very few of Leonardo's paintings have come down to us.  Indeed there do not exist a sufficient number of finished and absolutely  authentic oil pictures from his own hand to afford illustrations for this  short chronological sketch of his life's work. The few that do remain,  however, are of so exquisite a qualityor were until they were  "comforted" by the uninspired restorerthat we can unreservedly  accept the enthusiastic records of tradition in respect of all his works.  To rightly understand the essential characteristics of Leonardo's  achievements it is necessary to regard him as a scientist quite as much as  an artist, as a philosopher no less than a painter, and as a draughtsman  rather than a colourist. There is hardly a branch of human learning to  which he did not at one time or another give his eager attention, and he  was engrossed in turn by the study of architecturethe  foundation-stone of all true artsculpture, mathematics, engineering  and music. His versatility was unbounded, and we are apt to regret that  this many-sided genius did not realise that it is by developing his power  within certain limits that the great master is revealed. Leonardo may be  described as the most Universal Genius of Christian times-perhaps of all  time.  






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[PLATE III. THE VIRGIN OF THE ROCKS In the National Gallery. No. 1093.  6 ft. ½ in. h. by 3 ft 9 ½ in. w. (1.83 x 1.15)] This  picture was painted in Milan about 1495 by Ambrogio da Predis under the  supervision and guidance of Leonardo da Vinci, the essential features of  the composition being borrowed from the earlier "Vierge aux Rochers," now  in the Louvre.]  

HIS EARLY WORKS  





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[Plate II.Annunciation In the Uffizi Gallery, Florence. No.  1288. 3 ft 3 ins. By 6 ft 11 ins. (0.99 x 2.18)]  

To about the year 1472 belongs the small picture of the "Annunciation,"  now in the Louvre, which after being the subject of much contention among  European critics has gradually won its way to general recognition as an  early work by Leonardo himself. That it was painted in the studio of  Verrocchio was always admitted, but it was long catalogued by the Louvre  authorities under the name of Lorenzo di Credi. It is now, however,  attributed to Leonardo (No. 1602 A). Such uncertainties as to attribution  were common half a century ago when scientific art criticism was in its  infancy.  

Another painting of the "Annunciation," which is now in the Uffizi Gallery  (No. 1288) is still officially attributed to Leonardo. This small picture,  which has been considerably repainted, and is perhaps by Andrea del  Verrocchio, Leonardo's master, is the subject of Plate II.  

To January 1473 belongs Leonardo's earliest dated work, a pen-and-ink  drawing"A Wide View over a Plain," now in the Uffizi. The  inscription together with the date in the top left-hand corner is  reversed, and proves a remarkable characteristic of Leonardo's handwritingviz.,  that he wrote from right to left; indeed, it has been suggested that he  did this in order to make it difficult for any one else to read the words,  which were frequently committed to paper by the aid of peculiar  abbreviations.  

Leonardo continued to work in his master's studio till about 1477. On  January 1st of the following year, 1478, he was commissioned to paint an  altar-piece for the Chapel of St. Bernardo in the Palazzo Vecchio, and he  was paid twenty-five florins on account. He, however, never carried out  the work, and after waiting five years the Signoria transferred the  commission to Domenico Ghirlandajo, who also failed to accomplish the  task, which was ultimately, some seven years later, completed by Filippino  Lippi. This panel of theMadonna Enthroned, St. Victor, St. John Baptist,  St. Bernard, and St. Zenobius,which is dated February 20, 1485, is now  in the Uffizi.  

That Leonardo was by this time a facile draughtsman is evidenced by his  vigorous pen-and-ink sketchnow in a private collection in Parisof  Bernardo Bandini, who in the Pazzi Conspiracy of April 1478 stabbed  Giuliano de' Medici to death in the Cathedral at Florence during High  Mass. The drawing is dated December 29, 1479, the date of Bandini's public  execution in Florence.  

In that year also, no doubt, was painted the early and, as might be  expected, unfinished "St. Jerome in the Desert," now in the Vatican, the  under-painting being in umber and _terraverte_. Its authenticity is  vouched for not only by the internal evidence of the picture itself, but  also by the similarity of treatment seen in a drawing in the Royal Library  at Windsor. Cardinal Fesch, a princely collector in Rome in the early part  of the nineteenth century, found part of the picturethe torsobeing  used as a box-cover in a shop in Rome. He long afterwards discovered in a  shoemaker's shop a panel of the head which belonged to the torso. The  jointed panel was eventually purchased by Pope Pius IX., and added to the  Vatican Collection.  

In March 1480 Leonardo was commissioned to paint an altar-piece for the  monks of St. Donato at Scopeto, for which payment in advance was made to  him. That he intended to carry out this contract seems most probable. He,  however, never completed the picture, although it gave rise to the  supremely beautiful cartoon of the "Adoration of the Magi," now in the  Uffizi (No. 1252). As a matter of course it is unfinished, only the  under-painting and the colouring of the figures in green on a brown ground  having been executed. The rhythm of line, the variety of attitude, the  profound feeling for landscape and an early application of chiaroscuro  effect combine to render this one of his most characteristic productions.  

Vasari tells us that while Verrocchio was painting the "Baptism of Christ"  he allowed Leonardo to paint in one of the attendant angels holding some  vestments. This the pupil did so admirably that his remarkable genius  clearly revealed itself, the angel which Leonardo painted being much  better than the portion executed by his master. This "Baptism of Christ,"  which is now in the Accademia in Florence and is in a bad state of  preservation, appears to have been a comparatively early work by  Verrocchio, and to have been painted in 1480-1482, when Leonardo would be  about thirty years of age.  

To about this period belongs the superb drawing of the "Warrior," now in  the Malcolm Collection in the British Museum. This drawing may have been  made while Leonardo still frequented the studio of Andrea del Verrocchio,  who in 1479 was commissioned to execute the equestrian statue of  Bartolommeo Colleoni, which was completed twenty years later and still  adorns the Campo di San Giovanni e Paolo in Venice.  

FIRST VISIT TO  MILAN  


About 1482 Leonardo entered the service of Ludovico Sforza, having first  written to his future patron a full statement of his various abilities in  the following terms:  

"Having, most illustrious lord, seen and pondered over the experiments  made by those who pass as masters in the art of inventing instruments of  war, and having satisfied myself that they in no way differ from those in  general use, I make so bold as to solicit, without prejudice to any one,  an opportunity of informing your excellency of some of my own secrets."  






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[PLATE IV.-THE LAST SUPPER Refectory of St. Maria delle Grazie, Milan.  About 13 feet 8 ins. h. by 26 ft. 7 ins. w. (4.16 x 8.09)]  





He goes on to say that he can construct light bridges which can be  transported, that he can make pontoons and scaling ladders, that he can  construct cannon and mortars unlike those commonly used, as well as  catapults and other engines of war; or if the fight should take place at  sea that he can build engines which shall be suitable alike for defence as  for attack, while in time of peace he can erect public and private  buildings. Moreover, he urges that he can also execute sculpture in  marble, bronze, or clay, and, with regard to painting,can do as well as  any one else, no matter who he may be.In conclusion, he offers to  execute the proposed bronze equestrian statue of Francesco Sforza "which  shall bring glory and never-ending honour to that illustrious house."  

It was about 1482, the probable date of Leonardo's migration from Florence  to Milan, that he painted the "Vierge aux Rochers," now in the Louvre (No.  1599). It is an essentially Florentine picture, and although it has no  pedigree earlier than 1625, when it was in the Royal Collection at  Fontainebleau, it is undoubtedly much earlier and considerably more  authentic than the "Virgin of the Rocks," now in the National Gallery  (Plate III.).  

He certainly set to work about this time on the projected statue of  Francesco Sforza, but probably then made very little progress with it. He  may also in that year or the next have painted the lost portrait of  Cecilia Gallerani, one of the mistresses of Ludovico Sforza. It has,  however, been surmised that that lady's features are preserved to us in  the "Lady with a Weasel," by Leonardo's pupil Boltraffio, which is now in  the Czartoryski Collection at Cracow.  

IN THE EAST  


The absence of any record of Leonardo in Milan, or elsewhere in Italy,  between 1483 and 1487 has led critics to the conclusion, based on  documentary evidence of a somewhat complicated nature, that he spent those  years in the service of the Sultan of Egypt, travelling in Armenia and the  East as his engineer.  

BACK IN MILAN  


In 1487 he was again resident in Milan as general artificerusing  that term in its widest senseto Ludovico. Among his various  activities at this period must be mentioned the designs he made for the  cupola of the cathedral at Milan, and the scenery he constructed forIl  Paradiso,which was written by Bernardo Bellincioni on the occasion of  the marriage of Gian Galeazzo with Isabella of Aragon. About 1489-1490 he  began his celebrated "Treatise on Painting" and recommenced work on the  colossal equestrian statue of Francesco Sforza, which was doubtless the  greatest of all his achievements as a sculptor. It was, however, never  cast in bronze, and was ruthlessly destroyed by the French bowmen in April  1500, on their occupation of Milan after the defeat of Ludovico at the  battle of Novara. This is all the more regrettable as no single authentic  piece of sculpture has come down to us from Leonardo's hand, and we can  only judge of his power in this direction from his drawings, and the  enthusiastic praise of his contemporaries.  

This copy is usually ascribed to Marco d'Oggiono, but some critics claim  that it is by Gianpetrino. It is the same size as the original.]  

THE VIRGIN  OF THE ROCKS  






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The "Virgin of the Rocks" (Plate III.), now in the National Gallery,  corresponds exactly with a painting by Leonardo which was described by  Lomazzo about 1584 as being in the Chapel of the Conception in the Church  of St. Francesco at Milan. This picture, the only _oeuvre_ in this gallery  with which Leonardo's name can be connected, was brought to England in  1777 by Gavin Hamilton, and sold by him to the Marquess of Lansdowne, who  subsequently exchanged it for another picture in the Collection of the  Earl of Suffolk at Charlton Park, Wiltshire, from whom it was eventually  purchased by the National Gallery for £9000. Signor Emilio Motta,  some fifteen years ago, unearthed in the State Archives of Milan a letter  or memorial from Giovanni Ambrogio da Predis and Leonardo da Vinci to the  Duke of Milan, praying him to intervene in a dispute, which had arisen  between the petitioners and the Brotherhood of the Conception, with regard  to the valuation of certain works of art furnished for the chapel of the  Brotherhood in the church of St. Francesco. The only logical deduction  which can be drawn from documentary evidence is that theVierge aux  Rochersin the Louvre is the picture, painted about 1482, which between  1491 and 1494 gave rise to the dispute, and that, when it was ultimately  sold by the artists for the full price asked to some unknown buyer, the  National Gallery version was executed for a smaller price mainly by  Ambrogio da Predisunder the supervision, and with the help, of Leonardo to  be placed in the Chapel of the Conception.  

The differences between the earlier, the more authentic, and the more  characteristically Florentine "Vierge aux Rochers," in the Louvre, and the  "Virgin of the Rocks," in the National Gallery, are that in the latter  picture the hand of the angel, seated by the side of the Infant Christ, is  raised and pointed in the direction of the little St. John the Baptist;  that the St John has a reed cross and the three principal figures have  gilt nimbi, which were, however, evidently added much later. In the  National Gallery version the left hand of the Madonna, the Christ's right  hand and arm, and the forehead of St. John the Baptist are freely  restored, while a strip of the foreground right across the whole picture  is ill painted and lacks accent. The head of the angel is, however,  magnificently painted, and by Leonardo; the panel, taken as a whole, is  exceedingly beautiful and full of charm and tenderness.  

THE LAST SUPPER  






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Between 1496 and 1498 Leonardo painted his _chef d'oeuvre_, theLast  Supper,(Plate IV.) for the end wall of the Refectory of the Dominican  Convent of S. Maria delle Grazie at Milan. It was originally executed in  tempera on a badly prepared stucco ground and began to deteriorate a very  few years after its completion. As early as 1556 it was half ruined. In  1652 the monks cut away a part of the fresco including the feet of the  Christ to make a doorway. In 1726 one Michelangelo Belotti, an obscure  Milanese painter, received £300 for the worthless labour he bestowed  on restoring it. He seems to have employed some astringent restorative  which revived the colours temporarily, and then left them in deeper  eclipse than before. In 1770 the fresco was again restored by Mazza. In  1796 Napoleon's cavalry, contrary to his express orders, turned the  refectory into a stable, and pelted the heads of the figures with dirt.  Subsequently the refectory was used to store hay, and at one time or  another it has been flooded. In 1820 the fresco was again restored, and in  1854 this restoration was effaced. In October 1908 Professor Cavenaghi  completed the delicate task of again restoring it, and has, in the opinion  of experts, now preserved it from further injury. In addition, the devices  of Ludovico and his Duchess and a considerable amount of floral decoration  by Leonardo himself have been brought to light.  

Leonardo has succeeded in producing the effect of the _coup de théâtre_  at the moment when Jesus said "One of you shall betray me." Instantly the  various apostles realise that there is a traitor among their number, and  show by their different gestures their different passions, and reveal  their different temperaments. On the left of Christ is St. John who is  overcome with grief and is interrogated by the impetuous Peter, near whom  is seated Judas Iscariot who, while affecting the calm of innocence, is  quite unable to conceal his inner feelings; he instinctively clasps the  money-bag and in so doing upsets the salt-cellar.  

It will be remembered that the Prior of the Convent complained to Ludovico  Sforza, Duke of Milan, that Leonardo was taking too long to paint the  fresco and was causing the Convent considerable inconvenience. Leonardo  had his revenge by threatening to paint the features of the impatient  Prior into the face of  Judas Iscariot. The incident has been quaintly  told in the following lines:  

  "Padre Bandelli, then, complains of me   Because, forsooth, I have not  drawn a line   Upon the Saviour's head; perhaps, then, he   Could without  trouble paint that head divine.   But think, oh Signor Duca, what should  be   The pure perfection of Our Saviour's face   What sorrowing  majesty, what noble grace,   At that dread moment when He brake the bread,    And those submissive words of pathos said:  

  "'By one among you I shall be betrayed,'   And say if 'tis an  easy task to find   Even among the best that walk this Earth,   The  fitting type of that divinest worth,   That has its image solely in the  mind.   Vainly my pencil struggles to express   The sorrowing grandeur of  such holiness.   In patient thought, in ever-seeking prayer,   I strive to  shape that glorious face within,   But the soul's mirror, dulled and  dimmed by sin,   Reflects not yet the perfect image there.   Can the hand  do before the soul has wrought;   Is not our art the servant of our  thought?  

  "And Judas too, the basest face I see,   Will not contain his utter  infamy;   Among the dregs and offal of mankind   Vainly I seek an utter  wretch to find.   He who for thirty silver coins could sell   His Lord,  must be the Devil's miracle.   Padre Bandelli thinks it easy is   To find  the type of him who with a kiss   Betrayed his Lord. Well, what I can I'll  do;   And if it please his reverence and you,   For Judas' face I'm  willing to paint his."  

       *       *       *       *       *  

  "... I dare not paint   Till all is ordered and matured within,    Hand-work and head-work have an earthly taint,   But when the soul  commands I shall begin;   On themes like these I should not dare to dwell    With our good Priorthey to him would be   Mere nonsense; he must  touch and taste and see,   And facts, he says, are never mystical."  






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[PLATE VI.THE HEAD OF CHRIST In the Brera Gallery, Milan. No.  280. 1 ft. 0-1/2 ins. by 1 ft. 4 ins. (0.32 x 0.40)]  






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The copy of the "Last Supper" (Plate V.) by Marco d'Oggiono, now in the  Diploma Gallery at Burlington House, was made shortly after the original  painting was completed. It gives but a faint echo of that sublime workin  which the ideal and the real were blended in perfect unity.This copy was  long in the possession of the Carthusians in their Convent at Pavia, and,  on the suppression of that Order and the sale of their effects in 1793,  passed into the possession of a grocer at Milan. It was subsequently  purchased for £600 by the Royal Academy on the advice of Sir Thomas  Lawrence, who left no stone unturned to acquire also the original studies  for the heads of the Apostles. Some of these in red and black chalk are  now preserved in the Royal Library at Windsor, where there are in all 145  drawings by Leonardo.  

Several other old copies of the fresco exist, notably the one in the  Louvre. Francis I. wished to remove the whole wall of the Refectory to  Paris, but he was persuaded that that would be impossible; the Constable  de Montmorency then had a copy made for the Chapel of the Château  d'Ecouen, whence it ultimately passed to the Louvre.  

The singularly beautiful "Head of Christ" (Plate VI.), now in the Brera  Gallery at Milan, is the original study for the head of the principal  figure in the fresco painting of the "Last Supper." In spite of decay and  restoration it expresses "the most elevated seriousness together with  Divine Gentleness, pain on account of the faithlessness of His disciples,  a full presentiment of His own death, and resignation to the will of His  Father."  

THE COURT OF MILAN  


Ludovico, to whom Leonardo was now court-painter, had married Beatrice  d'Este, in 1491, when she was only fifteen years of age. The young  Duchess, who at one time owned as many as eighty-four splendid gowns,  refused to wear a certain dress of woven gold, which her husband had given  her, if Cecilia Gallerani, the Sappho of her day, continued to wear a very  similar one, which presumably had been given to her by Ludovico. Having  discarded Cecilia, who, as her tastes did not lie in the direction of the  Convent, was married in 1491 to Count Ludovico Bergamini, the Duke in 1496  became enamoured of Lucrezia Crivelli, a lady-in-waiting to the Duchess  Beatrice.  

Leonardo, as court painter, perhaps painted a portrait, now lost, of  Lucrezia, whose features are more likely to be preserved to us in the  portrait by Ambrogio da Predis, now in the Collection of the Earl of  Roden, than in the quite unauthenticated portrait (Plate VII.), now in the  Louvre (No. 1600).  

On January 2, 1497, Beatrice spent three hours in prayer in the church of  St. Maria delle Grazie, and the same night gave birth to a stillborn  child. In a few hours she passed away, and from that moment Ludovico was a  changed man. He went daily to see her tomb, and was quite overcome with  grief.  

In April 1498, Isabella d'Este, Beatrice's elder, more beautiful, and more  graceful sister,at the sound of whose name all the muses rise and do  reverencewrote to Cecilia Gallerani, or Bergamini, asking her to lend  her the portrait which Leonardo had painted of her some fifteen years  earlier, as she wished to compare it with a picture by Giovanni Bellini.  Cecilia graciously lent the picturenow presumably lostadding  her regret that it no longer resembled her.  

LEONARDO LEAVES  MILAN  


Among the last of Leonardo da Vinci's works in Milan towards the end of  1499 was, probably, the superb cartoon ofThe Virgin and Child with St.  Anne and St. John,now at Burlington House. Though little known to the  general public, this large drawing on _carton_, or stiff paper, is one of  the greatest of London's treasures, as it reveals the sweeping line of  Leonardo's powerful draughtsmanship. It was in the Pompeo Leoni, Arconati,  Casnedi, and Udney Collections before passing to the Royal Academy.  

In 1499 the stormy times in Milan foreboded the end of Ludovico's reign.  In April of that year we read of his giving a vineyard to Leonardo; in  September Ludovico had to leave Milan for the Tyrol to raise an army, and  on the 14th of the same month the city was sold by Bernardino di Corte to  the French, who occupied it from 1500 to 1512. Ludovico may well have had  in mind the figure of the traitor in the "Last Supper" when he declared  thatSince the days of Judas Iscariot there has never been so black a  traitor as Bernardino di Corte.On October 6th Louis XII. entered the  city. Before the end of the year Leonardo, realising the necessity for his  speedy departure, sent six hundred gold florins by letter of exchange to  Florence to be placed to his credit with the hospital of S. Maria Nuova.  

In the following year, Ludovico having been defeated at Novara, Leonardo  was a homeless wanderer. He left Milan for Mantua, where he drew a  portrait in chalk of Isabella d'Este, which is now in the Louvre. Leonardo  eventually arrived in Florence about Easter 1500. After apparently working  there in 1501 on a second Cartoon, similar in most respects to the one he  had executed in Milan two years earlier, he travelled in Umbria, visiting  Orvieto, Pesaro, Rimini, and other towns, acting as engineer and architect  to Cesare Borgia, for whom he planned a navigable canal between Cesena and  Porto Cese-natico.  






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[PLATE VII.-PORTRAIT (PRESUMED) OF LUCREZIA CRIVELLI In the Louvre. No.  1600 [483]. 2 ft by I ft 5 ins. (0.62 x 0.44) This picture, although  officially attributed to Leonardo, is probably not by him, and almost  certainly does not represent Lucrezia Crivelli. It was once known as a  "Portrait of a Lady" and is still occasionally miscalled "La Belle Féronnière."]  

MONA LISA  






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Early in 1503 he was back again in Florence, and set to work in earnest on  the "Portrait of Mona Lisa" (Plate I.), now in the Louvre (No. 1601). Lisa  di Anton Maria di Noldo Gherardini was the daughter of Antonio Gherardini.  In 1495 she married Francesco di Bartolommeo de Zenobi del Giocondo. It is  from the surname of her husband that she derives the name of "La Joconde,"  by which her portrait is officially known in the Louvre. Vasari is  probably inaccurate in saying that Leonardoloitered over it for four  years, and finally left it unfinished.He may have begun it in the spring  of 1501 and, probably owing to having taken service under Cesare Borgia in  the following year, put it on one side, ultimately completing it after  working on the "Battle of Anghiari" in 1504. Vasari's eulogy of this  portrait may with advantage be quoted: "Whoever shall desire to see how  far art can imitate nature may do so to perfection in this head, wherein  every peculiarity that could be depicted by the utmost subtlety of the  pencil has been faithfully reproduced. The eyes have the lustrous  brightness and moisture which is seen in life, and around them are those  pale, red, and slightly livid circles, also proper to nature. The nose,  with its beautiful and delicately roseate nostrils, might be easily  believed to be alive; the mouth, admirable in its outline, has the lips  uniting the rose-tints of their colour with those of the face, in the  utmost perfection, and the carnation of the cheek does not appear to be  painted, but truly flesh and blood. He who looks earnestly at the pit of  the throat cannot but believe that he sees the beating of the pulses. Mona  Lisa was exceedingly beautiful, and while Leonardo was painting her  portrait, he took the precaution of keeping some one constantly near her  to sing or play on instruments, or to jest and otherwise amuse her."  

Leonardo painted this picture in the full maturity of his talent, and,  although it is now little more than a monochrome owing to the free and  merciless restoration to which it has been at times subjected, it must  have created a wonderful impression on those who saw it in the early years  of the sixteenth century. It is difficult for the unpractised eye to-day  to form any idea of its original beauty. Leonardo has here painted this  worldly-minded womanher portrait is much more famous than she  herself ever waswith a marvellous charm and suavity, a finesse of  expression never reached before and hardly ever equalled since. Contrast  the head of the Christ at Milan, Leonardo's conception of divinity  expressed in perfect humanity, with the subtle and sphinx-like smile of  this languorous creature.  

The landscape background, against which Mona Lisa is posed, recalls the  severe, rather than exuberant, landscape and the dim vistas of mountain  ranges seen in the neighbourhood of his own birthplace. The portrait was  bought during the reign of Francis I. for a sum which is to-day equal to  about £1800. Leonardo, by the way, does not seem to have been really  affected by any individual affection for any woman, and, like Michelangelo  and Raphael, never married.  

In January 4, 1504, Leonardo was one of the members of the Committee of  Artists summoned to advise the Signoria as to the most suitable site for  the erection of Michelangelo's statue of "David," which had recently been  completed.  

BATTLE OF ANGHIARI  


In the following May he was commissioned by the Signoria to decorate one  of the walls of the Council Hall of the Palazzo Vecchio. The subject he  selected was the "Battle of Anghiari." Although he completed the cartoon,  the only part of the composition which he eventually executed in colour  was an incident in the foreground which dealt with theBattle of the  Standard.One of the many supposed copies of a study of this mural  painting now hangs on the south-east staircase in the Victoria and Albert  Museum. It depicts the Florentines under Cardinal Ludovico Mezzarota  Scarampo fighting against the Milanese under Niccolò Piccinino, the  General of Filippo Maria Visconti, on June 29, 1440.  

AGAIN IN MILAN  


Leonardo was back in Milan in May 1506 in the service of the French King,  for whom he executed, apparently with the help of assistants,the  Madonna, the Infant Christ, and Saint Anne(Plate VIII.). The composition  of this oil-painting seems to have been built up on the second cartoon,  which he had made some eight years earlier, and which was apparently taken  to France in 1516 and ultimately lost.  

IN ROME  


From 1513-1515 he was in Rome, where Giovanni de' Medici had been elected  Pope under the title of Leo X. He did not, however, work for the Pope,  although he resided in the Vatican, his time being occupied in studying  acoustics, anatomy, optics, geology, minerals, engineering, and geometry!  

IN FRANCE  


At last in 1516, three years before his death, Leonardo left his native  land for France, where he received from Francis I. a princely income. His  powers, however, had already begun to fail, and he produced very little in  the country of his adoption. It is, nevertheless, only in the Louvre that  his achievements as a painter can to-day be adequately studied.  






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[PLATE VIII.-MADONNA, INFANT CHRIST, AND ST. ANNE In the Louvre. No.  1508. 5 ft. 7 in. h. by 4 ft. 3 in. w. (1.70 x 1.29) Painted between 1509  and 1516 with the help of assistants.]  







On October 10, 1516, when he was resident at the Manor House of Cloux near  Amboise in Touraine with Francesco Melzi, his friend and assistant, he  showed three of his pictures to the Cardinal of Aragon, but his right hand  was now paralysed, and he could "no longer colour with that sweetness with  which he was wont, although still able to make drawings and to teach  others."  

It was no doubt in these closing years of his life that he drew the  "Portrait of Himself" in red chalk, now at Turin, which is probably the  only authentic portrait of him in existence.  

HIS DEATH  


On April 23, 1519Easter Eveexactly forty-five years before  the birth of Shakespeare, Leonardo da Vinci made his will, and on May 2 of  the same year he passed away.  

Vasari informs us that Leonardo,having become old, lay sick for many  months, and finding himself near death and being sustained in the arms of  his servants and friends, devoutly received the Holy Sacrament. He was  then seized with a paroxysm, the forerunner of death, when King Francis  I., who was accustomed frequently and affectionately to visit him, rose  and supported his head to give him such assistance and to do him such  favour as he could in the hope of alleviating his sufferings. The spirit  of Leonardo, which was most divine, conscious that he could attain to no  greater honour, departed in the arms of the monarch, being at that time in  the seventy-fifth year of his age.The not over-veracious chronicler,  however, is here drawing largely upon his imagination. Leonardo was only  sixty-seven years of age, and the King was in all probability on that date  at St. Germain-en Laye!  

Thus diedMr. Lionard de Vincy, the noble Milanese, painter, engineer,  and architect to the King, State Mechanicianand "former Professor of  Painting to the Duke of Milan."  

"May God Almighty grant him His eternal peace," wrote his friend and  assistant Francesco Melzi. "Every one laments the loss of a man whose like  Nature cannot produce a second time."  

HIS ART  


Leonardo, whose birth antedates that of Michelangelo and Raphael by twenty  three and thirty-one years respectively, was thus in the forefront of the  Florentine Renaissance, his life coinciding almost exactly with the best  period of Tuscan painting.  

Leonardo was the first to investigate scientifically and to apply to art  the laws of light and shade, though the preliminary investigations of  Piero della Francesca deserve to be recorded.  

He observed with strict accuracy the subtleties of chiaroscurolight  and shade apart from colour; but, as one critic has pointed out, his gift  of chiaroscuro cost the colour-life of many a noble picture. Leonardo was  "a tonist, not a colourist," before whom the whole book of nature lay  open.  

It was not instability of character but versatility of mind which caused  him to undertake many things that having commenced he afterwards  abandoned, and the probability is that as soon as he saw exactly how he  could solve any difficulty which presented itself, he put on one side the  merely perfunctory execution of such a task.  

In the Forster collection in the Victoria and Albert museum three of  Leonardo's note-books with sketches are preserved, and it is stated that  it was his practice to carry about with him, attached to his girdle, a  little book for making sketches. They prove that he was left-handed and  wrote from right to left.  

HIS MIND  


We can readily believe the statements of Benvenuto Cellini, the  sixteenth-century Goldsmith, that Francis I.did not believe that any  other man had come into the world who had attained so great a knowledge as  Leonardo, and that not only as sculptor, painter, and architect, for  beyond that he was a profound philosopher.It was Cellini also who  contended that "Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Raphael are the Book  of the World."  

Leonardo anticipated many eminent scientists and inventors in the methods  of investigation which they adopted to solve the many problems with which  their names are coupled. Among these may be cited Copernicus' theory of  the earth's movement, Lamarck's classification of vertebrate and  invertebrate animals, the laws of friction, the laws of combustion and  respiration, the elevation of the continents, the laws of gravitation, the  undulatory theory of light and heat, steam as a motive power in  navigation, flying machines, the invention of the camera obscura, magnetic  attraction, the use of the stone saw, the system of canalisation, breech  loading cannon, the construction of fortifications, the circulation of the  blood, the swimming belt, the wheelbarrow, the composition of explosives,  the invention of paddle wheels, the smoke stack, the mincing machine! It  is, therefore, easy to see why he called "Mechanics the Paradise of the  Sciences."  

Leonardo was a SUPERMAN.  

HIS MAXIMS  


    The eye is the window of the soul.  

    Tears come from the heart and not from the brain.  

    The natural desire of good men is knowledge.  

    A beautiful body perishes, but a work of art dies not.  

    Every difficulty can be overcome by effort.  

    Time abides long enough for those who make use of it.  

    Miserable men, how often do you enslave yourselves     to gain money!  

HIS SPELL  


The influence of Leonardo was strongly felt in Milan, where he spent so  many of the best years of his life and founded a School of painting. He  was a close observer of the gradation and reflex of light, and was capable  of giving to his discoveries a practical and aesthetic form. His strong  personal character and the fascination of his genius enthralled his  followers, who were satisfied to repeat his types, to perpetuate the  "grey-hound eye," and to make use of his little devices. Among this group  of painters may be mentioned Boltraffio, who perhaps painted thePresumed  Portrait of Lucrezia Crivelli(Plate VII.), which is officially  attributed in the Louvre to the great master himself.  

HIS DESCENDANTS  


Signor Uzielli has shown that one Tommaso da Vinci, a descendant of  Domenico (one of Leonardo's brothers), was a few years ago a peasant at  Bottinacio near Montespertoli, and had then in his possession the family  papers, which now form part of the archives of the Accademia dei Lincei at  Rome. It was proved also that Tommaso had given his eldest son "the  glorious name of Leonardo."  





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