The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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VITELLONE, with whose works Leonardo was certainly familiar, and by  
all the writers of the Renaissance Perspective and Optics were not  
regarded as distinct sciences. Perspective, indeed, is in its widest  
application the science of seeing. Although to Leonardo the two  
sciences were clearly separate, it is not so as to their names; thus  
we find axioms in Optics under the heading Perspective. According to  
this arrangement of the materials for the theoretical portion of the  
libro di pittura propositions in Perspective and in Optics stand  
side by side or occur alternately. Although this particular chapter  
deals only with Optics, it is not improbable that the words partirĂ²  
la presente opera in 3 parti may refer to the same division into  
three sections which is spoken of in chapters 14 to 17.].  
The plan of the book on Painting (14--17).  
1
4.  
ON THE THREE BRANCHES OF PERSPECTIVE.  
There are three branches of perspective; the first deals with the  
reasons of the (apparent) diminution of objects as they recede from  
the eye, and is known as Diminishing Perspective.--The second  
contains the way in which colours vary as they recede from the eye.  
The third and last is concerned with the explanation of how the  
objects [in a picture] ought to be less finished in proportion as  
they are remote (and the names are as follows):  
3
2


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1 306 613 919 1225