The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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On the history of painting (660. 661).  
6
60.  
THAT PAINTING DECLINES AND DETERIORATES FROM AGE TO AGE, WHEN  
PAINTERS HAVE NO OTHER STANDARD THAN PAINTING ALREADY DONE.  
Hence the painter will produce pictures of small merit if he takes  
for his standard the pictures of others. But if he will study from  
natural objects he will bear good fruit; as was seen in the painters  
after the Romans who always imitated each other and so their art  
constantly declined from age to age. After these came Giotto the  
Florentine who--not content with imitating the works of Cimabue his  
master--being born in the mountains and in a solitude inhabited only  
by goats and such beasts, and being guided by nature to his art,  
began by drawing on the rocks the movements of the goats of which he  
was keeper. And thus he began to draw all the animals which were to  
be found in the country, and in such wise that after much study he  
excelled not only all the masters of his time but all those of many  
bygone ages. Afterwards this art declined again, because everyone  
imitated the pictures that were already done; thus it went on from  
century to century until Tomaso, of Florence, nicknamed Masaccio,  
showed by his perfect works how those who take for their standard  
any one but nature--the mistress of all masters--weary themselves in  
vain. And, I would say about these mathematical studies that those  
who only study the authorities and not the works of nature are  
468  


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