THE NOTEBOOKS of LEONARDO DA VINCI, COMPLETE *** This
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Vezzosi A. Sabato A. the New Genealogical Tree of the Da Vinci
HUMAN EVOLUTION Vol. 36 - n. 1-2 (1-90) - 2021 Vezzosi A. The New Genealogical Tree of the Da Vinci Leonardo scholar, art historian Family for Leonardo’s DNA. Founder of Museo Ideale Leonardo Da Vinci Ancestors and descendants in direct male Via IV Novembre 2 line down to the present XXI generation* 50059 Vinci (FI), Italy This research demonstrates in a documented manner the con- E-mail: [email protected] tinuity in the direct male line, from father to son, of the Da Vinci family starting with Michele (XIV century) to fourteen Sabato A. living descendants through twenty-one generations and four Historian, writer different branches, which from the XV generation (Tommaso), President of Associazione in turn generate other line branches. Such results are eagerly Leonardo Da Vinci Heritage awaited from an historical viewpoint, with the correction of the E-mail: leonardodavinciheritage@ previous Da Vinci trees (especially Uzielli, 1872, and Smiraglia gmail.com Scognamiglio, 1900) which reached down to and hinted at the XVI generation (with several errors and omissions), and an up- DOI: 10.14673/HE2021121077 date on the living. Like the surname, male heredity connects the history of regis- try records with biological history along separate lineages. Be- KEY WORDS: Leonardo Da Vinci, cause of this, the present genealogy, which spans almost seven Da Vinci new genealogy, ancestors, hundred years, can be used to verify, by means of the most living descendants, XXI generations, innovative technologies of molecular biology, the unbroken Domenico di ser Piero, Y chromosome, transmission of the Y chromosome (through the living descend- Florence, Bottinaccio (Montespertoli), ants and ancient tombs, even if with some small variations due burials, Da Vinci family tomb in Vinci, to time) with a view to confirming the recovery of Leonardo’s Santa Croce church in Vinci, Ground Y marker. -
Newsletter Nov 2015
Leonardo da Vinci Society Newsletter Editor: Matthew Landrus Issue 42, November 2015 Recent and forthcoming events did this affect the science of anatomy? This talk discusses the work of Leonardo da Vinci, The Annual General Meeting and Annual Vesalius and Fabricius and looks at how the Lecture 2016 nature of the new art inspired and shaped a new wave of research into the structure of the Professor Andrew Gregory (University College, human body and how such knowledge was London), will offer the Annual Lecture on Friday, transmitted in visual form. This ultimately 13 May at 6 pm. The lecture, entitled, ‘Art and led to a revolution in our under-standing of Anatomy in the 15th & 16th Centuries’ will be anatomy in the late 16th and early 17th centu- at the Kenneth Clark Lecture Theatre of the ries. Courtauld Institute of Art (Somerset House, The Strand). Before the lecture, at 5:30 pm, the annual Lectures and Conference Proceedings general meeting will address matters arising with the Society. Leonardo in Britain: Collections and Reception Venue: Birkbeck College, The National Gallery, The Warburg Institute, London Date: 25-27 May 2016 Organisers: Juliana Barone (Birkbeck, London) and Susanna Avery-Quash (National Gallery) Tickets: Available via the National Gallery’s website: http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/whats- on/calendar/leonardo-in-britain-collections-and- reception With a focus on the reception of Leonardo in Britain, this conference will explore the important role and impact of Leonardo’s paintings and drawings in key British private and public collec- tions; and also look at the broader British context of the reception of his art and science by address- ing selected manuscripts and the first English editions of his Treatise on Painting, as well as historiographical approaches to Leonardo. -
Illustrated Biographies Of
RAPHI ES OF T HE GREAT ART IST Illustrations (in all over ONE T HOUS nd x r bou e t a, red bop. ml La ! J a mi, 46 . (k m am: 38. 6d . ) ea at in Wm“ alu m . 23 . a nd 28. E m . w m . Sr M A T o m B . Two Vols. in m o. B E. Mu m] . one. « o S ABLE. 8 ’ s BROCK M M ' ‘ in T w ' am . c . Rr r r 34 A . M A . QJfi By . P m P m . R URNER m M SL v m find s. T . By Cos o ONKBOO By Hm ”BA ! m u r m u m By A usrm Doosou . Two Vols. in m mum) w m W . m . B J one. 0 m y . B M Roam M , om , B- A Co mm, B SA . “ rm om ° B T wo V ls ia W o r d BOLLAND: BUI S Y o e 1 n . 4 mm m m G. m . 8m m“ , mm “ m m“ m m . B”“ A e " F. m am . By ' Sw a n s. W ou r n BA . m an na B . - J M cox vm “ a rmm m; m at wa g?15 W 3“ and orks. By mon o. By m Two Vols. in m m . n m . on . one 3 Gd By ! , 3 D on na. m um and m oan . By Two Vols. in one 3. 64 . W , 3 . ou nt" BA . M , w u ss Du w n n. -
Bodies of Knowledge: the Presentation of Personified Figures in Engraved Allegorical Series Produced in the Netherlands, 1548-1600
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2015 Bodies of Knowledge: The Presentation of Personified Figures in Engraved Allegorical Series Produced in the Netherlands, 1548-1600 Geoffrey Shamos University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Recommended Citation Shamos, Geoffrey, "Bodies of Knowledge: The Presentation of Personified Figures in Engraved Allegorical Series Produced in the Netherlands, 1548-1600" (2015). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 1128. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/1128 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/1128 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Bodies of Knowledge: The Presentation of Personified Figures in Engraved Allegorical Series Produced in the Netherlands, 1548-1600 Abstract During the second half of the sixteenth century, engraved series of allegorical subjects featuring personified figures flourished for several decades in the Low Countries before falling into disfavor. Designed by the Netherlandsâ?? leading artists and cut by professional engravers, such series were collected primarily by the urban intelligentsia, who appreciated the use of personification for the representation of immaterial concepts and for the transmission of knowledge, both in prints and in public spectacles. The pairing of embodied forms and serial format was particularly well suited to the portrayal of abstract themes with multiple components, such as the Four Elements, Four Seasons, Seven Planets, Five Senses, or Seven Virtues and Seven Vices. While many of the themes had existed prior to their adoption in Netherlandish graphics, their pictorial rendering had rarely been so pervasive or systematic. -
Nawang Khechog the Great Arya Tara Tibetan Meditation Music 5:11
Playlists by David Ruekberg Dance to Awaken the Heart, Rochester, NY #27: January 28, 2017 Artist Song Title Album Length Nawang Khechog The Great Arya Tara Tibetan Meditation Music 5:11 Maneesh de Moor Morning Praise Om Deeksha 8:54 Ernst Reijseger Homo Spiritualis Cave Of Forgotten Dreams (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) 2:21 Hukwe Zawose Nhongolo The Essential Guide To Africa 8:54 Dead Can Dance Nierika Memento 5:46 Deva Premal Guru Rinpoche Mantra Deva Lounge 7:23 Balligomingo Purify Absolute More Relaxed [Disc 2] 4:13 Manu Dibango Bessoka (Version Courte) The Essential Guide To Africa 3:28 Miriam Makeba Pata Pata 2000 Homeland 3:49 Thievery Corporation The Lagos Communique African Groove 3:55 Christina Aguilera featuring Steve Winwood Makes Me Wanna Pray Back To Basics 4:11 The Beatles Tomorrow Never Knows (Remastered) Revolver (Remastered) 2:59 Brian Eno & Rick Holland Glitch Drums Between The Bells 2:58 Sean Dinsmore Mangalam (Chillums at Dawn Remix) Dakini Lounge: Prem Joshua Remixed 6:00 India.Arie Slow Down Voyage To India 3:53 Jai Uttal Guru Bramha Shiva Station (Bonus Edition) 4:24 Bon Iver Lisbon, OH Bon Iver 1:34 Ulrich Schnauss Amaris Passage 5:20 David Ruekberg Silence_5s.mp3 Silence 0:05 Itzhak Perlman Bach: Violin Partita #2 In D Minor, BWV 1004 - 3. Sarabanda Bach: Sonatas & Partitas For Solo Violin [Disc 2] 3:52 Anoushka Shankar Ancient Love Rise 11:08 Ray Lynch Her Knees Deep In Your Mind Conversations With God 6:19 Soloists of the Ensemble Nipponia [Shakuhachi, Shamisen, Biwa, EsashiKoto] Oiwake ("Esashi Pack-horseman's -
SBS Chill 12:00 AM Monday, 23 March 2020 Start Title Artist 00:07 Sealed Air Ghosts of Paraguay
SBS Chill 12:00 AM Monday, 23 March 2020 Start Title Artist 00:07 Sealed Air Ghosts of Paraguay 03:00 Tíbrá Samaris 06:23 Fanfare Of Life Leftfield 12:35 Halving the Compass (Rhian Sheehan Remix) Helios 19:08 Plastic Heart Jens Buchert 24:49 Run Air 28:48 Swiss (Orginal Mix) Deeb 33:04 Soul Bird (Tin Tin Deo) Cal Tjader 35:46 The Garden A.J. Heath 40:32 Sundown Living Room 45:27 When're You Gonna Break My Heart Silver Ray 58:18 Song 1 DJ Krush 63:42 Endless Summer Flanger Powergold Music Scheduling Licensed to SBS SBS Chill 1:00 AM Monday, 23 March 2020 Start Title Artist 00:08 Babies Colleen 03:34 Traces Of You Anoushka Shankar & Nora... 07:20 They have escaped the weight of darkness Olafur Arnalds 11:28 Telco Daniel Lanois 15:02 Grey Skies Ben Westbeech 16:52 Hold On Gary B 23:36 (Exchange) Massive Attack 27:47 Interview With The Angel Ghostland 32:14 Finally Moving Pretty Lights 36:44 Agua José Padilla 43:53 Tomorrow Island (yesterday mix) Frank Borell 49:04 Leaves Winterbourne 54:39 Already Replaced Steve Hauschildt 58:43 Jets Bonobo Powergold Music Scheduling Licensed to SBS SBS Chill 2:00 AM Monday, 23 March 2020 Start Title Artist 00:05 Riverside Agnes Obel 03:53 Desert (Version Française) Emile Simon 06:51 Ghost Song Spacecadet Lullabies 14:54 War Song Phamie Gow 18:01 Natural Cause Emancipator 23:06 Siren Of The Sun Urban Myth Club 28:33 Sand Max Melvin 34:37 Mamma Africa Babylon Syndicate 39:29 The Dust of Months Bill Wells 43:38 Memory (Red Scarf) V.K 46:35 The Dove Caspian 49:40 1+1 La Chambre 56:36 Mir Murcof 63:11 Metro Francois -
The Lost Manuscripts of Leonardo Da Vinci
THE LOST MANUSCRIPTS OF LEONARDO DA VINCI A history of Leonardo da Vinci’s manuscripts and a calculation of how many remain lost by RICHARD SHAW POOLER Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF LITERATURE AND PHILOSOPHY in the subject of ART HISTORY at the UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH AFRICA Promoter: Prof Bernadette Van Haute -------------------------------------- OCTOBER 2014 DECLARATION I declare that THE LOST MANUSCRIPTS OF LEONARDO DA VINCI is my own work and that all the sources that I have used or quoted have been indicated or acknowledged by means of complete references. ……………………………. Richard Shaw Pooler Date ………………………….. Title: THE LOST MANUSCRIPTS OF LEONARDO DA VINCI A history of Leonardo da Vinci’s manuscripts and a calculation of how many remain lost Summary: This thesis investigates the history of Leonardo da Vinci’s manuscripts, explains the recovery of some of those that were lost, and calculates what proportion of his work remains lost. It does this by researching the following four main topics: the compilation of his manuscripts; the dispersal and loss of his manuscripts; the recovery and reconstruction of some manuscripts; and an estimate of what remains lost. Most of Leonardo’s manuscripts were written in the last thirty years of his life. The first part of this thesis traces which manuscripts were written and when. After his death, his manuscripts dispersed and it is not known how many were lost. The next section details the dispersal. Recovery of some manuscripts took place followed by further dispersal and loss. Part of the recovery was due to key collectors such as Pompeo Leoni. -
A Multidisciplinary Study of the Tongerlo Last Supper 0722
A Multidisciplinary Study of the Tongerlo Last Supper and its attribution to Leonardo da Vinci’s Second Milanese studio Jean-Pierre Isbouts, Fielding Graduate University, Santa Barbara, CA, and Christopher Brown, Brown Discoveries, LLC, North Carolina This article presents the findings from a two-year study of the Last Supper canvas in the Abbey of Tongerlo, Belgium, including a detailed review of its provenance as well as a digital analysis and multispectral study conducted by the Belgian company IMEC in the Spring of 2019. The design of the study is a composite multidisciplinary approach, with traditional connoisseurship and literary research being augmented by scientific examination, using new digital processing and multispectral imaging techniques. The article argues that based on the available evidence, the Tongerlo Last Supper was produced in Leonardo’s Milanese workshop between 1507 and 1509, as a collaborative project involving the Leonardeschi Giampietrino, Andrea Solario and Marco d’Oggiono under Leonardo’s supervision. Furthermore, the infrared spectography scans suggest that the face of John in the painting may have been painted by Leonardo himself. The study was funded by IMEC Belgium; Fielding Graduate University of Santa Barbara, CA; Brown Discoveries, LLC of North Carolina, and conducted with the gracious permission of the Premonstratensian Abbey of Tongerlo, Belgium. Key words: Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519); Last Supper; Technical Art History; Multispectral Imaging; the art of the Leonardeschi. Fig. 1. Studio of Leonardo da Vinci, Last Supper (after Leonardo), known as the Tongerlo copy, 1507-1509. Introduction For the last 450 years, the Tongerlo canvas of the Last Supper has been quietly occupying a wall in a chapel on the grounds of the Premonstratensian Abbey of Tongerlo near Westerlo, about an hour’s drive from the Belgian city of Antwerp. -
NY Unofficial Archive V5.2 22062018 TW.Pdf
........................................................................................................................................................................................... THE UNOFFICIAL ARCHIVE: NEIL YOUNG’S “UNRELEASED” SONGS ©Robert Broadfoot 2018 • [email protected] Version 5.2 -YT: 22 June 2018 Page 1 of 98 CONTENTS CONTENTS ............................................................................................................................. 2 FOREWORD .......................................................................................................................... 3 A NOTE ON SOURCES ......................................................................................................... 5 KEY .......................................................................................................................................... 6 I. NEIL YOUNG SONGS NOT RELEASED ON OFFICIAL MEDIA PART ONE THE CANADIAN YEARS .............................................................................. 7 PART TWO THE AMERICAN YEARS ........................................................................... 16 PART THREE EARLY COVERS AND INFLUENCES ........................................................ 51 II. NEIL YOUNG PERFORMING ON THE RELEASED MEDIA AND AT CONCERT APPEARANCES, OF OTHER ARTISTS ..................................................... 63 III. UNRELEASED NEIL YOUNG ALBUM PROJECTS PART ONE DOCUMENTED ALBUM PROJECTS ....................................................... 83 PART TWO SPECULATION -
5. the Death of Henri—La Gilde
John Charlot: Chapter 5: Henri—La Gilde draft 7/10/17 !1 5. THE DEATH OF HENRI—LA GILDE 5.1. THE ILLNESS AND DEATH OF HENRI CHARLOT July 1914 marks the first major division in Charlot’s life with the breakdown and subsequent lingering illness and death of his father Henri. Charlot’s life, art, and thinking were transformed. Already unusually earnest for a person of his age, Charlot intensified his pursuits in art, literature, and scholarship. Charlot recognized this clearly. He divided his first two collections of poems between those up to July and those “à partir d’Août 1914 (retour d’Allemagne)” ‘from August 1914 (return from Germany).’ The poems of the first collection I have described in chapter 3 “Childhood and Adolescence”; the next poems have a new seriousness and are more directly personal expressions, becoming a prime biographical source. A similar change can be seen in much of Charlot’s artwork. Up to July, the drawings and watercolors continue the earlier trends. For instance, he paints Forest Scene at his uncle Caplain’s summer place at Chaumontel. His happy mood is expressed in two pencil and watercolor self-portraits and one portrait of an adolescent of the same age, probably a school friend, that he made certainly before July.1 The three are done in his mature pencil and wash style of the time, and all are sunny. The friend is portrayed affectionately as lively and at ease with his tousled hair and open shirt. The first self-portrait is a studious depiction. Charlot is wearing a brown jacket and gray shirt. -
Inside the Camera Obscura – Optics and Art Under the Spell of the Projected Image
MAX-PLANCK-INSTITUT FÜR WISSENSCHAFTSGESCHICHTE Max Planck Institute for the History of Science 2007 PREPRINT 333 Wolfgang Lefèvre (ed.) Inside the Camera Obscura – Optics and Art under the Spell of the Projected Image TABLE OF CONTENTS PART I – INTRODUCING AN INSTRUMENT The Optical Camera Obscura I A Short Exposition Wolfgang Lefèvre 5 The Optical Camera Obscura II Images and Texts Collected and presented by Norma Wenczel 13 Projecting Nature in Early-Modern Europe Michael John Gorman 31 PART II – OPTICS Alhazen’s Optics in Europe: Some Notes on What It Said and What It Did Not Say Abdelhamid I. Sabra 53 Playing with Images in a Dark Room Kepler’s Ludi inside the Camera Obscura Sven Dupré 59 Images: Real and Virtual, Projected and Perceived, from Kepler to Dechales Alan E. Shapiro 75 “Res Aspectabilis Cujus Forma Luminis Beneficio per Foramen Transparet” – Simulachrum, Species, Forma, Imago: What was Transported by Light through the Pinhole? Isabelle Pantin 95 Clair & Distinct. Seventeenth-Century Conceptualizations of the Quality of Images Fokko Jan Dijksterhuis 105 PART III – LENSES AND MIRRORS The Optical Quality of Seventeenth-Century Lenses Giuseppe Molesini 117 The Camera Obscura and the Availibility of Seventeenth Century Optics – Some Notes and an Account of a Test Tiemen Cocquyt 129 Comments on 17th-Century Lenses and Projection Klaus Staubermann 141 PART IV – PAINTING The Camera Obscura as a Model of a New Concept of Mimesis in Seventeenth-Century Painting Carsten Wirth 149 Painting Technique in the Seventeenth Century in Holland and the Possible Use of the Camera Obscura by Vermeer Karin Groen 195 Neutron-Autoradiography of two Paintings by Jan Vermeer in the Gemäldegalerie Berlin Claudia Laurenze-Landsberg 211 Gerrit Dou and the Concave Mirror Philip Steadman 227 Imitation, Optics and Photography Some Gross Hypotheses Martin Kemp 243 List of Contributors 265 PART I INTRODUCING AN INSTRUMENT Figure 1: ‘Woman with a pearl necklace’ by Vermeer van Delft (c.1664). -
Guide for Educators
FRENCH ART at the SAINT LOUIS ART MUSEUM Guide for Educators © 2019 University of Missouri – St. Louis French Art at the Saint Louis Art Museum Guide for Educators Table of Contents Introduction to the Guide . ii Acknowledgments . iii The Middle Ages . 1 The Renaissance . 12 The Seventeenth Century . 25 The Eighteenth Century . 40 The Nineteenth Century . 80 The Twentieth Century . 156 The Twenty-First Century . 194 Suggested Activities . 197 © 2019 University of Missouri – St. Louis i French Art at the Saint Louis Art Museum Guide for Educators Introduction to the Guide for Educators French Art at the Saint Louis Art Museum is a learning resource developed by the University of Missouri-St. Louis, with assistance from the Saint Louis Art Museum and the Consulate of France in Chicago. This Guide is intended to assist the educator in a course of art history or French as a second language. It contains useful information for introducing students to French art, in a cultural and historical context. Each page of the Guide includes texts which are found on the website of the Learning Resource, https://frenchart.umsl.edu. In that site, you can hear the French texts by clicking on the audiophone icon: The texts give a short overview of each work, followed by a comment on The Historical Moment, The Artistic Genre, and The Artist (if he or she is known). In addition, the Guide offers several questions for the educator to ask students, in a verbal discussion or written composition. Below the small images in the Guide, you will find supplementary information that is not found in the website: the material of composition (for example, limestone or oil on canvas), the dimensions of the work, and the accession number (for example, 3:1935) in the Saint Louis Art Museum.