The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


google search for The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
647 648 649 650 651

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225

same type.  
The drawings Pl. LXXXIV No. 2, Pl. LXXXVI No. 1 and 2 and the ground  
flour ("flour" sic but should be "floor" ?) of the building in the  
drawing Pl. XCI No. 2, with the interesting decoration by gigantic  
statues in large niches, are also, I believe, more in the style  
Bramante adopted at Rome, than in the Lombard style. Are we to  
conclude from this that Leonardo on his part influenced Bramante in  
the sense of simplifying his style and rendering it more congenial  
to antique art? The answer to this important question seems at first  
difficult to give, for we are here in presence of Bramante, the  
greatest of modern architects, and with Leonardo, the man comparable  
with no other. We have no knowledge of any buildings erected by  
Leonardo, and unless we admit personal intercourse--which seems  
probable, but of which there is no proof--, it would be difficult to  
understand how Leonardo could have affected Bramante's style. The  
converse is more easily to be admitted, since Bramante, as we have  
proved elsewhere, drew and built simultaneously in different  
manners, and though in Lombardy there is no building by him in his  
classic style, the use of brick for building, in that part of Italy,  
may easily account for it.  
Bramante's name is incidentally mentioned in Leonardo's manuscripts  
in two passages (Nos. 1414 and 1448). On each occasion it is only a  
slight passing allusion, and the nature of the context gives us no  
due information as to any close connection between the two artists.  
649  


Page
647 648 649 650 651

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225