Leonardo Da Vinci 🎨

in #invention7 years ago (edited)

Leonardo Da Vinci

Hi friends, in preparing this article, I realized that I did not really realize the great work of Leonardo da Vinci, indeed, in addition to being an extraordinary painter he was also a super creative inventor but also a scientist, engineer, anatomist, sculptor, architect, urban planner, botanist, musician, poet, philosopher and writer! It's a lot for one man, do not you think?

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Leonardo da Vinci was born on April 15, 1452 of a notary and peasant woman to Vinci in the Florence region of Italy.

He received his education in the studio of the famous Florentine Verrocchio. Verrocchio was an Italian sculptor, painter and silversmith of the second half of Quattrocento.

He received a large number of orders from Laurent de Medici. His studio was then the largest in Florence. His pupils were Francesco Botticini, Perugino, Leonardo da Vinci, and Lorenzo di Credi.

In his youth, much of his active life was devoted to the service of Ludovico il Moro in Milan. This was the second son of Duke Francesco Sforza who ruled over Milan from 1450 to 1466. He was first half-condottiere (mercenary army leader), half-looter.

Then for years, he invests in patronage by inviting to the ducal court many famous artists such as, for example, Leonardo da Vinci to whom he asks him to paint the Last Supper for the Dominican convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie.

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Leonardo da Vinci then worked in Rome, Bologna and Venice. He spent his last years in the service of Francis I in France in the house that he had offered him.

We discovered all his talents by his various creations but also by studying his notebooks after his death. These notebooks contain about 13,000 pages of writing and drawings that combine art and natural philosophy, that is, the natural sciences.

Indeed, his brain produced a thousand ideas per minute and he wrote them down in his notebooks with a tight writing or in the form of minute drawings.

His drawings struck men of the twentieth century, not only by their aesthetic beauty, but especially because they give the impression that Leonardo da Vinci was a forerunner of modern times with his inventions: flying machines, diving suits or still machines prefiguring the industrial revolution.

Many of his inventions appeared long before technology actually created them.
Many of his inventions never reached the end of their creation, during his lifetime. If they had been built in their day they could have revolutionized the history of technology, but the world at the time was not ready for Vinci. If he had lived in our time, God knows what he could have invented extraordinary with the help of our new technologies!

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Some of his inventions

The ancestor of the diving suit

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Leonardo da Vinci has always wanted to explore horizons beyond the limits of men. This is how he had the urge to explore the deep seabed and therefore, he designed the diving suit, still used today to dive to the bottom of the oceans.

The crazy helicopter

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The modern helicopter was born in the 20th century. But Leonardo da Vinci had already glimpsed the full potential of this technology. He left us a drawing of a strange machine overhung by an aerial screw ruled by human strength. This machine inspired the creation of our modern helicopters.

A pyramidal parachute

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It is he who invented the first parachute of history in case his invention of flying machine would have technical problems, he thought to invent a security system.

Its pyramidal shape was nevertheless not retained for the realization of the modern parachutes since there was too much catch in the wind.

A tank bristling with guns

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The idea of protecting himself from enemy shots and blows such as the turtle training of Roman legionaries inspired Leonardo da Vinci to draw a tank bristling with cannons.

The submachine gun

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Leonardo da Vinci drew the sketch of a machine-gun ancestor who never knew the light of day. His unusual invention rested on a lookout on which were laid several guns firing in bursts.

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Paintings

Leonardo da Vinci was, in his lifetime, a renowned painter. Among his works, the Mona Lisa is his most famous portrait and his mural of The Last Supper is the most reproduced religious painting of all time.

These paintings are famous for many reasons that have been much imitated by students and discussed at great length by connoisseurs and critics. Among the qualities that make Leonardo's works, unique pieces are often cited, the innovative techniques he used in the application of painting, his extensive knowledge of human and animal anatomy, botany and geology but also his use of light, his interest in physiognomy and the way humans use the register of emotions and gestural expressions, his sense of composition and the subtle, color gradients.

Leonard is famous for his drawings and paintings in which he introduces an innovative conception of perspective.

The Mona Lisa

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Also called Portrait of Mona Lisa or Mona Lisa, is a painting done with oil painting that represents a half-body portrait, probably that of the Florentine Lisa Gherardini, wife of Francesco del Giocondo.

This painting measures 77 × 53 cm and is exhibited at the Louvre Museum in Paris. The Mona Lisa is one of the few paintings attributed to Leonardo da Vinci.

The Mona Lisa has become a very famous painting because many artists have taken it as a reference. They were fascinated by this painting and helped to develop the myth that surrounds it, making this painting one of the most famous works of art in the world.
It has become the most visited art object in the world with 20,000 visitors who come to admire and photograph it daily.

The Last Supper

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The Last Supper is a mural of 460 × 880 cm, made for the refectory of the Dominican Convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan.

The Last Supper is the name given by Christians to the last meal that Jesus of Nazareth took with the Twelve Apostles on the evening of Holy Thursday, before Passover, shortly before his arrest, the day before his Crucifixion and three days before his resurrection.

Here are the characters from left to right: Bartholomew, James the Minor, Andrew, Judas, Peter, John, Jesus, Thomas, James the Major, Philip, Matthew, Thaddeus and Simon.

The fresco is surmounted by three blazons of the Sforza dynasty from Milan.

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I hope this article has allowed you to know a little better Leonardo da Vinci who was for me an extraordinary man as there are few.

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An excellent post that reminds us of many things we learned at school !! :) And we learn more thanks to you, thank you!

Leonardo most talented personnality humanity even seen

Amazing and beautiful story, Well written. You are doing a great job. Thanks for sharing @lndesta120282

Leonardo is the best

Da Vinci is a name that would echo in history forever and not just in the art world, his extraordinary foresight and talent stays relivant till this very day, his kind of imagination is what the world seems to be lacking today, out of the box and raw. a great man indeed. great post man, im a fan.

I have always felt like Da Vinci was connected to something that was incomprehensible for most people. Of course he was a genius but that’s not what I mean...
He had a connected to something existential- something indescrible..much like Tesla.

They both had a way with seeing through the fog of reality and using it to bend and shape the world around them. This was a nice piece to read this morning- especially the bits about his early ideas/inventions.

I have to agree with you @theessential. Although I must admit that I do not know a lot about Tesla, the little I do know is summarized in your reply. Sometimes I think that there isn't really any "new" or "novel" ideas. Everything that will still be "discovered" as already existed in some way or form. Da Vinci (and Tesla) were somehow connected to this "finite, universal intelligence" which isn't limited by time.

You state it really well when you say that "They both had a way with seeing through the fog of reality and using it to bend and shape the world around them".

Hope I'm making sense!

@rionpistorius

Yeah it absolutely makes sense. We’re dealing with topics that are a little hard to put into words. They are more than a feeling- Descartes was another person who could truly “See”. He was a philosopher- check out his Discourse on method for conducting reasoning well- or something like that. Super good read!!

Leonardo da Vinci was indeed what people commounly call "a genius". He developed a certain kind of natural philosophy that allowed him to achieve a degree of knowledge that was corroborated centuries later.

Leonardo Da Vinci was a genius, a sage. a true artist I have had the opportunity to see his paintings and sculptures seem so real.

Great article..! Da vinci has a lot of knowledge and information about secrecy that is why I read all of his books keep it up brother :)

Leonardo da Vinci, an inventor and an artist has been a very beautiful article. Thank you again for your complete description of Leonardo da Vinci's well-known life. I have a series of Leonardo da Vinci's life telling a part of Da Vinci's Demons that I would definitely recommend watching those who do not watch. As you watch Da Vinci's Demons you are admired and even in love with Leonardo da Vinci. @Indesta120282

Leonardo da Vinci thought sight was humankind’s most important sense and eyes the most important organ, and he stressed the importance of saper vedere, or “knowing how to see.” He believed in the accumulation of direct knowledge and facts through observation.“A good painter has two chief objects to paint — man and the intention of his soul,” da Vinci wrote. “The former is easy, the latter hard, for it must be expressed by gestures and the movement of the limbs.” @lndesta120282