The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


google search for The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
45 46 47 48 49

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225

art of Painting. They are therefore here placed at the beginning. In  
section 50 the theory of the "Pyramid of Sight" is distinctly and  
expressly put forward as the fundamental principle of linear  
perspective, and sections 52 to 57 treat of it fully. This theory of  
sight can scarcely be traced to any author of antiquity. Such  
passages as occur in Euclid for instance, may, it is true, have  
proved suggestive to the painters of the Renaissance, but it would  
be rash to say any thing decisive on this point.  
Leon Battista Alberti treats of the "Pyramid of Sight" at some  
length in his first Book of Painting; but his explanation differs  
widely from Leonardo's in the details. Leonardo, like Alberti, may  
have borrowed the broad lines of his theory from some views commonly  
accepted among painters at the time; but he certainly worked out its  
application in a perfectly original manner.  
The axioms as to the perception of the pyramid of rays are followed  
by explanations of its origin, and proofs of its universal  
application (58--69). The author recurs to the subject with endless  
variations; it is evidently of fundamental importance in his  
artistic theory and practice. It is unnecessary to discuss how far  
this theory has any scientific value at the present day; so much as  
this, at any rate, seems certain: that from the artist's point of  
view it may still claim to be of immense practical utility.  
According to Leonardo, on one hand, the laws of perspective are an  
4
7


Page
45 46 47 48 49

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225