This fascinating exploration of Leonardo da Vinci's life and work identifies what it was that made him so unique, and explains the phenomenon of the world's most celebrated artistic genius who, 500 years on, still grips and inspires us.
Martin Kemp offers us exceptional insights into what it was that made this Renaissance man so special, and the "real" meaning behind such masterpieces as the Mona Lisa and the Last Supper . Tracing Leonardo's career in all its variety, we learn of his unfulfilled dreams, relationships with powerful patrons, and the truth about his views on God, humanity, and nature. The famous notebooks are the key to understanding the secret of Leonardo's success and genius, Kemp shows, as they clearly reveal the workings of his mind and display the truly innovative and investigative nature of his creative vision. In these notebooks, over 20,000 pages of drawings and notes detail his incredible discoveries and inventions--from the workings of the human eye to designs for flying machines and giant crossbows. Bringing the story up to the present day, Martin Kemp considers what he means to us today, investigates the "Leonardo industry," and speculates about what he would be doing if he were alive today.
This updated edition of Martin Kemp's best-seller is the first book on Leonardo to include two newly discovered works, the most important such discoveries in over a hundred years.
Martin Kemp is professor of the History of Art at Oxford University, and the author of many books including The Science of Art, Visualizations and the recent Leonardo. He is also a frequent contributor to Nature, the international science journal, where he writes on science and art. Together with Antonio Criminisi, he wrote an article in NEW 1_2005: "Paolo Uccello's 'Battle of San Romano': Order from Chaos" is the most recent report on how they apply 3D graphic techniques to the process of art history investigation.
Librarian’s note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.
A dully-written disappointment. It gives a decent enough overview of the various aspects of Leonardo's life, but the author is too busy making scholarly points to remember that this is supposed to be a biography. The level of analytical distance often felt like Leonardo the concept was being discussed more than Leonardo the man, Leonardo the artist, or Leonardo the engineer. Not to mention the writing was stilted and pedantic. Give this one a miss.
Leonardo by Martin Kemp was a great dive into various aspects of Da Vinci's work - with less erudition than Leonardo Da Vinci and far more relevance than Leonardo’s Paradox: Word and Image in the Making of Renaissance Culture. It is highly readable and has many fascinating insights. I get the impression that the sole interesting observation in Isaacson's miserable Leonardo da Vinci biography - the piece about Leonard's visionary analysis of the valves in the heart - was lifted straight out of Kemp's book. It starts with a brief introduction into how he worked, who his patrons were, and his unique way of viewing the world then goes thematically into various aspects of his work: Body and Machine, The Living Earth, and Telling Tales. Each of these chapters is well-illustrated and provides insight into Leonardo's life and work.
The last chapter, "Lisa's Room: Leonardo's Afterlife" abruptly changes style to a first-person narrative and musing about La Joconde / Mona Lisa and the author's research into this work traveling in Italy and seeing its impact on culture up to the present day.
Unique among the 5 or 6 books I have read about Leonardo, this one includes a complete list of the extant works of Leonardo, a nice timeline of his life, and a complete bibliography.
Besides Leonardo: The Artist and the Man, which is my preferred book about Leonardo, I would recommend this one as a launching point for experts and newcomers alike to the life and art of one of the Renaissance's most critical contributors and one of humanity's most creative and enigmatic characters.
I didn't finish this book, only made it to 20% and gave up. This book was so dry that I didn't want to waste any more time trying to finish it. It read like a textbook.
“The is that Leonardo was converted to remake nature...” p. 148
“The space occupied by forms was, after all, a ‘continuous quantity’. The resulting graphite tangle of chalk and ink, in which even he might begin to lose orientation, could then be given done selective plastic definition by the addition of sepia wash... the most promising of the myriad alternatives could be pressed through to the other side...” p. 173
"St. James, full of youthful nervous sensibility, starts back, withdrawing his shoulder and neck at the same time as inclining his head forward to register that the shocking words have been said." p. 184
"'The good painter has to paint two principle things, that is to say man and the intention of his mind...the latter has to be represented through gestures and movements of the limbs-which can be learned from the dumb, who exhibit gestures better than any other kind of man...'" p. 186
"The result is a peculiar form of naturalism-a kind of 'hypernaturalism in which things look incredibly 'real' on their own terms without looking quite as they do in nature" p. 191
"As the light changes, even by a fraction otherwise imperceptible to our naked eyes, and as our viewing position changes a little, the image 'breathes'....Leonardo does it by filtering the white brilliance of the panel's priming through enticing layers of warm glaze, so thin as to tax even modern scientific analysis. He does it by pitching soft ed against a soft green of equal tonal value, opaque pale blue against translucent browns, definite line against elusive roundness, and by teasing us with things that invite us to see them as defined when they are veiled in ambiguity." p. 249
Hoş bir kitaptı ama daha kapsayıcı olabilirmiş, daha çok sanatçının profesyonel kariyerine değinilmiş, kişisel hayatı, kişilik özellikleri eksik bırakılmış. Gerçekten memnun kalmadığım tek kısım ise çevirisi oldu, bazı yerleri anlamak için defalarca kez okumam gerekti.
A great insight into a great man, his dreams, great works, genius (and avoiding patrons who wanted to know where the pictures were that they paid for 😀).