6th Year Art History
Students please answer the following Question from 2015 Higher Level Paper on Leonardo Da Vinci.
Leonardo Da Vinci (1452-1519) study of Science and Nature as well as his acute powers of observation led him to create some of the greatest works of the Renaissance.
Discuss this statement with reference to the painting illustrated.
In your answer refer to the name of the work, subject matter,composition,technique and the period in which the work was produced
And
Briefly describe and discuss One other named work by this artist.
illustrate your answer.
Leonardo Da Vinci (1452-1519) study of Science and Nature as well as his acute powers of observation led him to create some of the greatest works of the Renaissance.
Discuss this statement with reference to the painting illustrated.
In your answer refer to the name of the work, subject matter,composition,technique and the period in which the work was produced
And
Briefly describe and discuss One other named work by this artist.
illustrate your answer.
Here are additional notes on this painting to help you in your answer.
In April of
1483, the Confraternity of the Immaculate Conception commissioned Leonardo to
paint the Virgin of the
Rocks as part of an altarpiece for its chapel
in the church of San
Francesco Grande in Milan .
The painting was done on a wooden panel which was meant to be
placed within a larger sculpted altarpiece for the chapel. Oil paints
were used for the pigments.
At this time in the late fifteenth century, oil was still a
new medium which had only recently been adopted by Italian painters. It
had been used with much success for decades by painters in northern Europe , such as Jan van Eyck and Rogier van der Weyden,
who were able to capture detail on a microscopic level and convey a sense of
realism that was unattainable using other types of pigment. Now that oil
paints had arrived in Italy ,
Leonardo was able to use them to great advantage to create theVirgin of the
Rocks, one of the great early masterpieces using
this media in the Italian peninsula.
For the painting’s composition, Leonardo placed several
figures in a basic pyramidal arrangement. The placement of figures in
this way reflected the typical approach taken by other Renaissance artists
working in the pictorial arts, such as Lorenzo Ghiberti in his competition
panel for the bronze doors of the Florence
baptistery, and Masaccio in the Holy Trinity fresco in the side chapel of Santa Maria Novella in Florence . Here, the
patrons had requested that Leonardo include the Virgin Mary, the Christ Child,
and at least one angel, but in order to give better balance to the scene
Leonardo included the figure of John the Baptist as well.
The figure on the left is St. John , and the figure seated on the right
is Christ. Adding to this confusion is the fact that not only is the
Christ Child not seated in the Virgin’s lap, but she is not even touching her
son. Instead, her hand is on the back of St. John , who knees in adoration toward his
cousin. Christ, in turn, blesses St.
John .
Leonardo has created a scene in which all the figures
interact through gestures and glances to create a more unified whole. The
angel on the right glances out at the viewer while pointing at St. John , whose gaze toward Christ provides a
main focal point of the painting. The Virgin also gazes down at her son,
and the placement of her left hand reinforces the emphasis on Christ. The
connection between the Virgin and St.
John is then made by the placement of her right
hand. Thus, although the pyramidal composition is something that had been
employed by Renaissance artists for decades, the way Leonardo made all the
figures interact in a naturally-engaging way is different.
In
addition to the dynamism of the figural group, the Virgin of the Rocks is
also noteworthy for its rocky, almost mysterious setting in which the figures
are placed. It is not the type of heavenly space symbolized by the golden
background of older altarpieces, such as those by Cimabue, Giotto, or
Duccio. Nor is it an idealistic landscape that can be found in Fra
Filippo Lippi’s painting of the Virgin and Child. Instead, it is dark,
misty, and cavernous.
On the
left side in the distance, the forms become less distinct as they get lost in a
haze of foggy atmosphere, which illustrates the implementation of aerial perspective. The very smooth
transition between colors and between light and dark that Leonardo used in this
painting is called sfumato, which
means “smoky”. Not only is it visible in the landscape, but also in the
figures, who are cast in light which smoothly turns into areas of dark
shade. It is similar to the traditional chiaroscuro technique
used by earlier Italian painters, but it is more refined and elevated to convey
a higher level of visual realism.
This
painting is one of Leonardo’s early masterpieces, and it shows his reliance on traditional
Italian Renaissance pictorial devices but also his movement beyond this
tradition. If you want to see this painting today, you can do so by
visiting the Louvre in Paris ,
France .
Alternatively, you can see another version of this same painting in the
National Gallery, London ,
which was likely a copy made by Leonardo in the mid-1490s.
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