Leonardo da Vinci
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519)
was one of the great Masters of the High
Renaissance, influencing Italian
art for a century after his death.
Leonardo was born on April
15, 1452, in the small town of Vinci, near
Florence. He was the son of a wealthy
Florentine notary and in the
mid-1460s the family resettled to Florence where he received the best education
available. About 1466, he was apprenticed to the studio of
Andrea del Verrocchio, the leading
Florentine painter and sculptor of the
day. In 1472 he was entered in
the painters' guild of Florence but in 1476
was still mentioned as Verrocchio's
assistant. The kneeling angel in the left
of Verrocchio's painting, Baptism
of Christ (circa 1470), was painted by
da Vinci.
In 1478 he became an independent
master. His early work paralleled
Verrocchio's tight, rigid treatment
of his figures. His first large painting, The
Adoration of the Magi, was left
unfinished but was started in 1481 for the
Monastery of San Donato a Scopeto,
Florence. It shows a departure from
the work of his teacher. Da Vinci
compositional approach moved the group
of figures to the foreground for
emphasis while the battle raged as a distant
view. Other early works include
Benois Madonna (c. 1478), Ginerva
de'Benci (c. 1474) and the unfinished
painting, Saint Jerome (c. 1481).
About 1482 da Vinci entered
the service of the duke of Milan, serving as
the principal engineer for the
duke's military enterprises. It is also probable
that during this time he had apprentices
and pupils for whom he wrote the
texts which would later be compiled
as Treatise on Painting. The
important paintings he produced
during this Milan period were two versions
of The Virgin of the Rocks (1483-85,
in the collection of the Louvre, and
1490s to 1506-08 which hangs in
the National Gallery, London).
His works:
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