Leonardo: Discovering the Life of Leonardo Da Vinci
Category: Books,Arts & Photography,History & Criticism
Leonardo: Discovering the Life of Leonardo Da Vinci Details
From Publishers Weekly An "impeccable dandy," charming, brilliant and strikingly handsome da Vinci (1452-1519) emerges in this fresh, gripping portrait as a genius torn by inner conflicts. The polymath artist/engineer/scientist was an illegitimate child traumatized by separation from his loving mother, writes Bramly, biographer of Man Ray. Analyzing Leonardo's notebooks and annotated erotic drawings, as well as contemporary sources, the author depicts the Renaissance prodigy as a man who felt rejected by his father, ambivalent about his homosexuality and both curious about and disgusted by male-female sex. Though vehemently anticlerical, Leonardo believed in God--indeed, was almost jealous of the Creator, whom he called "inventor of everything." Bramly has dusted off the primary sources to make da Vinci a startlingly prescient, relevant figure in this exceptional biography. Illustrations not seen by PW. Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. Read more From Library Journal While there is no lack of scholarship about the protean genius of da Vinci, this competent biographical treatment can nevertheless be welcomed. Bramly neither seriously elucidates the core elements of da Vinci's scientific and technological concerns nor profoundly illuminates the formal nature of his artistic achievement, but this chronologically structured survey is not without its introductory value. The necessarily frustrating recitation of da Vinci's brilliantly conceived but unfinished or aborted projects is neatly set within the context of contemporary patronage. The central mysteries of this well-documented yet enigmatic personality are suggested without the author's acquiescing to the allure of facile pscyhologizing. But though serviceable, this introduction would have benefited from a more extensive scrutiny of da Vincian literature and a greater appreciation of the impact of the artist's limited oeuvre on the history of art. For popular collections.- Robert Cahn, Fashion Inst. of Technology, New YorkCopyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. Read more From Kirkus Reviews Unlike earlier biographers, many of whom considered Leonardo divine or demonic, French novelist and biographer Bramly offers the image of a gifted, methodical, rational, emotionally simple craftsman whose personal life remains wrapped in mysteries--some intentional and others, such as the loss of his grave and many of his works, the results of time and circumstance. Born in 1452, illegitimate son of a notary and a peasant girl, contemporary of Machiavelli, Columbus, Erasmus, and Michelangelo, Leonardo appears here as only one among many geniuses, though distinguished by engaging eccentricities: a playful good nature; unusual personal beauty; a preoccupation with hygiene; an inability to complete or even begin the many commissions he won in painting and sculpture; a disregard for politics in a stormy age during which his livelihood depended on being allied with political power; and a form of dyslexia that made him write from right to left and in reverse, rendering his many notebooks nearly incomprehensible. A homosexual, he is believed to have been chaste except for relations he may have had with a young boy he adopted. More preoccupied with mechanics than art, Leonardo designed cities that were never built, flying machines that could not be built, and invented a theory of color--yet could not complete the Mona Lisa or, for that matter, The Last Supper, itself an experiment in fresco. Bramly presents Leonardo much as he represented himself, a collection of lights, names, lines, dates that merely introduce an artist who, judging from his self-portrait with its averted eyes and shadows, as Bramly points out, does not want to be known. Still, there must be more to know: surely Bramly could have shared more of Leonardo's voice from the many notebooks that he clearly read and claims to understand. And, while Bramly belittles Freud's reading of Leonardo's psyche, he offers little to replace it, indeed almost no insight into his subject's inner life or the sources of his creative energy. (Four pages of color photos; 75 b&w photos--not seen.) -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. Read more
Reviews
detailed story of a very unusual man who we generally think of as an artist but i now know was also a scientist and a philosopher.worth the time to read.