Full Description
According to Count Galeazzo Arconati, who gave other Leonardo manuscripts to the Ambrosiana Library in Milan, the drawings concerning nature, anatomy, and colour, have been "in the hands of the King of England before 1640." The collection has been recorded as being in the possession of Queen Mary II, in 1690, a year after she and her husband, William III, ascended the throne as joint monarchs. The collection comprises all the known anatomical drawings by Leonardo. Three hundred images of the human body by the great artist, made between about 1485 and 1510-15, are showcased in this magnificent volume. Based on the artist's own anatomical dissections, they show his evolving understanding of physiology. The drawings demonstrate, as well, Leonardo's progress from technical mastery of his subject to consummate draftsmanship.
The commentary on this astonishing body of work is by Professor Martin Kemp of Oxford University, a leading international authority of Leonardo da Vinci, who explains the uniqueness of the painter's stroke and the refined figurative transposition. One of the most renowned Italian Anatomists, Professor Mario Rende of the University of Perugia, analyses the significance of these works from a medical-scientific angle, revealing the insights, the research methodology, and the experimental and analytical approach of the Genius of da Vinci. Moving between art and anatomy, between unsurpassed illustrative display and avant-garde Renaissance scientific research, the work thus provides an in-depth and comprehensive look at an indispensable aspect of the Great Master's story.
Text in English and Italian.
Contents
Editor's note
Acknowledgements and Thanks
Preface with a Very Brief Outline
of the History of the Drawings
Introduction
Anatomy as Natural Philosophy
In his Own Words
Initial Ambitions
Body and Soul
Mapping the Surface
Early Investigations: Life and Death,
the Brain, Nerves, Necks and Muscles
The Foot of a Bear
Bones and Brains
The Music of Proportion
Musclemen
"Pen-men"
Muscles, Tendons, Ligaments, Bones(and Old Men): the Human Machine
Ramification and Irrigation
The Brain revised
Tongue, Lips and Sounds
Diaphragm and Respiration, with
Thoughts about the Nature of "Spirits"
Urinogenital Organs and
the "Mysteries of the Womb"
The Heart
Further investigations
Index of drawings



