Artist, theorist, scientist and inventor--these words cannot capture the genius that is Leonardo DaVinci. However, curator and editor Carmen C Bambach brings us a little closer to unlocking his mystery in Leonardo DaVinci: Mater Draftsman. The book comprises a collection of 11 essays by world-renowned Leonardo connoisseurs, along with 515 exquisite illustrations, to create a perfect balance between scholarship and aesthetics. Serving as the catalogue for the exhibition of the same name at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, the book focuses on Leonardo's drawings: his studies for some of his unfinished, lost, or unrealised paintings and projects, stunning anatomical and engineering studies, eight pages from the Codex Leicester (Leonardo's draft for a treatise on the dynamics of water), and his studies of grotesque physiognomies, which taken together, reveal the master's notion that beauty and ugliness are reciprocally enhanced by their juxtaposition. The result also sheds light on his extraordinary contribution as a draftsman "to the design process of narrative composition".
Monday, March 19, 2012
Leonardo Da Vinci, Master Draftsman
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment