Marking 500 years since his death, "Leonardo da Vinci: A Life in
Drawing", which opens at The Queen's Gallery on Friday, boasts
more than 200 drawings by the Renaissance artist, taken from
"the unrivalled holdings" in Britain's Royal Collection.
The drawings by da Vinci, acquired during the reign on Charles
II, have been kept together since the artist's death on May 2,
1519 in France's Loire Valley.
"The drawings show that Leonardo was a serious practitioner of
sculpture, architecture, engineering and a scientist in many
different fields," said Martin Clayton, exhibition curator and
head of Prints and Drawings at Royal Collection Trust.
"He saw himself as a fully rounded figure, but drawing is the
activity that pulls it all together."
Highlights include the only two surviving portraits of da Vinci
drawn during his lifetime, including one by an assistant that
was previously unseen by the public.
"This drawing shows a certain wistfulness I think, a certain
melancholy even," Clayton said. "It's not Leonardo, the great
philosopher gazing into the distance. It's a flesh and blood man
at the end of a career that had achieved a great deal, but also
maybe failed to achieve a great deal as well."
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There are also preparatory sketches for his works "The Last Supper"
and "Salvator Mundi", a portrait of Christ which became the most
expensive painting sold at auction when it went for a record $450
million in 2017.
Other items include "Leonardo's studies of hands for Adoration of
the Magi", which appears to be drawn on a blank sheet but, under
ultraviolet light, reveal other "disappeared" drawings.
His anatomical studies are also on display, including one that
Clayton said "was used by him to prepare his artistic projects, but
also to conduct his scientific investigations."
"Leonardo knew that these drawings at the end of his life were the
only real record of what he had worked on and what he had achieved,
and so if you want to understand Leonardo in the round, drawing is
the only way that you can do that," Clayton said. "This exhibition
gives visitors a full picture of Leonardo."
(Reporting by Lisa Keddie; Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian;
Editing by Edmund Blair)
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