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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 3 00:03:36,000 --> 00:03:39,360 Leonardo grew up outside Florence, in the countryside, 4 00:03:39,440 --> 00:03:41,840 in a little village, Vinci. 5 00:03:41,920 --> 00:03:45,200 His mother was a peasant woman. He himself was illegitimate. 6 00:03:45,280 --> 00:03:48,120 But his father was a very respectable notary 7 00:03:48,200 --> 00:03:51,440 who married and had a legitimate family 8 00:03:51,520 --> 00:03:55,000 into which Leonardo was, to some extent, absorbed. 9 00:03:55,079 --> 00:03:58,040 So there was no question of him being disowned. 10 00:03:58,120 --> 00:04:00,400 And his career was supported, 11 00:04:00,480 --> 00:04:05,440 even if it wasn't necessarily going to be a reiteration of his father's career. 12 00:04:05,520 --> 00:04:09,240 And what we've seen quite often in Italian Renaissance history 13 00:04:09,320 --> 00:04:11,920 is that illegitimate sons 14 00:04:12,040 --> 00:04:16,279 have a kind of ambition that takes them to the fore. 15 00:04:18,240 --> 00:04:20,600 Renaissance Italy is very extraordinary. 16 00:04:20,680 --> 00:04:25,880 There is this intellectual driving force because, more than any other country, 17 00:04:26,000 --> 00:04:29,240 they felt the weight, or the tradition of classical antiquity. 18 00:04:29,320 --> 00:04:32,680 Rome was around them and you combined that 19 00:04:32,760 --> 00:04:37,000 with early capitalist economies, on a small scale, but very dynamic. 20 00:04:38,159 --> 00:04:41,480 You had the city states, like Venice, and so on, which had major artists, 21 00:04:41,560 --> 00:04:44,200 but Florence was extraordinary. 22 00:04:44,280 --> 00:04:48,600 In the early 1500s, you had this astonishing flowering 23 00:04:48,680 --> 00:04:50,560 of Brunelleschi, the architect, 24 00:04:50,640 --> 00:04:52,240 Donatello, the sculptor, 25 00:04:52,320 --> 00:04:54,760 Masaccio, the painter, and a host of others. 26 00:04:55,920 --> 00:04:59,200 Art was becoming, in Florence, an intellectual pursuit. 27 00:05:01,240 --> 00:05:03,600 Florence was an intensely mercantile city. 28 00:05:03,680 --> 00:05:05,680 It was a city of transactions. 29 00:05:05,760 --> 00:05:10,640 And even the great Medici had banking interests that spread across Europe. 30 00:05:11,440 --> 00:05:18,040 But they also wanted to show that they were culturally sophisticated 31 00:05:18,120 --> 00:05:21,440 and that they were using their wealth 32 00:05:21,520 --> 00:05:23,160 for the benefit of the city, 33 00:05:23,240 --> 00:05:25,400 for the benefit of their own souls, 34 00:05:25,480 --> 00:05:28,440 when they were commissioning religious works of art. 35 00:05:29,200 --> 00:05:32,080 So what you've got is this lovely melting pot 36 00:05:32,159 --> 00:05:36,360 of factions and families in competition, 37 00:05:36,440 --> 00:05:40,159 and painters who might serve one or other of them 38 00:05:40,240 --> 00:05:43,760 and who were also themselves looking over their shoulder 39 00:05:43,840 --> 00:05:46,840 all the time for what the latest innovation was. 40 00:05:50,000 --> 00:05:54,080 "Leonardo's father one day took some of his son's drawings 41 00:05:54,159 --> 00:05:58,040 to the artist Andrea del Verrocchio, who was a good friend of his, 42 00:05:58,120 --> 00:06:00,400 and directly asked him what he thought. 43 00:06:01,360 --> 00:06:04,320 Andrea was astonished by what he saw 44 00:06:04,400 --> 00:06:07,640 and arranged that Leonardo should enter his workshop." 45 00:06:08,880 --> 00:06:12,040 Giorgio Vasari, painter and historian. 46 00:07:35,720 --> 00:07:39,560 This is the Tobias and the Angel from the studio of Andrea del Verrocchio, 47 00:07:39,640 --> 00:07:42,840 a painting from the early to mid-1470s. 48 00:07:44,159 --> 00:07:48,880 It's an apocryphal story in which the Archangel Raphael comes to young Tobias 49 00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:51,440 and instructs him to take parts of the fish, 50 00:07:51,520 --> 00:07:53,640 the gall, and the liver, and the heart, I believe, 51 00:07:53,720 --> 00:07:56,800 as a remedy to cure the blindness of his father. 52 00:07:58,600 --> 00:08:01,800 It raises some very interesting questions about how workshops work 53 00:08:01,880 --> 00:08:05,600 and, indeed, how Leonardo functioned within the Verrocchio workshop. 54 00:08:06,520 --> 00:08:09,160 Verrocchio was one of the pre-eminent workshops. 55 00:08:09,240 --> 00:08:12,800 Many very important painters passed through the Verrocchio studio 56 00:08:12,880 --> 00:08:15,040 in the 1460s and '70s. 57 00:08:16,000 --> 00:08:18,880 I think one of the appeals of working with Andrea del Verrocchio 58 00:08:19,000 --> 00:08:20,120 for someone like Leonardo 59 00:08:20,200 --> 00:08:23,480 was the fact that this was, like many of these Florentine workshops, 60 00:08:23,560 --> 00:08:26,440 a production centre for all manner of objects, 61 00:08:26,520 --> 00:08:28,480 both two-dimensional, three-dimensional. 62 00:08:28,560 --> 00:08:32,720 There was drawing, there was painting, there was casting, there was carving. 63 00:08:32,799 --> 00:08:36,200 And, of course, the multiplicity of interests that Leonardo demonstrated 64 00:08:36,280 --> 00:08:37,360 in his subsequent career 65 00:08:37,440 --> 00:08:41,720 certainly had some resonance with what went on in the Verrocchio studio. 66 00:08:43,200 --> 00:08:46,240 Where this painting in particular is involved, I think, 67 00:08:46,320 --> 00:08:50,400 it's raised some very interesting ideas about collaboration and delegation, 68 00:08:50,480 --> 00:08:53,240 suggesting that some of the details of this picture 69 00:08:53,320 --> 00:08:56,840 might have been by the young Leonardo as an apprentice. 70 00:08:57,720 --> 00:09:01,120 We know that he had some sort of formal training in the Verrocchio workshop 71 00:09:01,200 --> 00:09:03,920 between 1469 and 1472. 72 00:09:04,800 --> 00:09:07,400 It's been suggested that certain elements 73 00:09:07,480 --> 00:09:09,080 that are more naturally observed, 74 00:09:09,160 --> 00:09:10,480 more realistically observed, 75 00:09:10,560 --> 00:09:13,640 have a higher degree of skill in execution, 76 00:09:13,720 --> 00:09:15,800 like the movement of the dog and the fur, 77 00:09:15,880 --> 00:09:19,800 or the fish and the way it hangs from the string so convincingly, 78 00:09:19,880 --> 00:09:23,040 might be ascribed to the young Leonardo himself. 79 00:09:24,120 --> 00:09:26,520 The traditional painting medium in the Renaissance, 80 00:09:26,600 --> 00:09:28,800 certainly at the beginning of the 15th century, 81 00:09:28,880 --> 00:09:32,320 was egg... egg used, mixed with water and pigments, 82 00:09:32,400 --> 00:09:34,800 and applied in a fine, hatched way. 83 00:09:37,160 --> 00:09:39,840 The introduction of oil painting is something that happened 84 00:09:39,920 --> 00:09:42,480 during the latter part of the 15th century. 85 00:09:42,560 --> 00:09:47,040 There were instances of pictures appearing from Northern Europe 86 00:09:47,120 --> 00:09:51,680 and I think it had a tremendous impact on the way Italian artists worked, 87 00:09:51,760 --> 00:09:55,560 both a need, or an interest rather, in learning how to paint this way, 88 00:09:55,640 --> 00:09:59,000 but also it opened up different ideas about what you could depict 89 00:09:59,080 --> 00:10:01,120 and what effects you could make. 90 00:10:01,200 --> 00:10:03,880 We can point to certain moments. 91 00:10:04,000 --> 00:10:07,320 For example, the arrival of the van der Goes Portinari altarpiece 92 00:10:07,400 --> 00:10:08,880 in Florence from Bruges 93 00:10:09,000 --> 00:10:12,480 was a revelation, I think, to Florentine artists working in that time. 94 00:10:14,360 --> 00:10:17,520 With Leonardo, it's certainly true that oil painting 95 00:10:17,600 --> 00:10:20,800 was a relatively new technique that was available. 96 00:10:20,880 --> 00:10:25,080 It certainly allowed him to explore and to depict things 97 00:10:27,320 --> 00:10:31,360 the optics of vision and the way that things go in and out of focus, 98 00:10:31,440 --> 00:10:35,560 or the way that shadows lose their colour in lower light. 99 00:10:36,680 --> 00:10:41,200 All these things you can achieve much more convincingly with the oil medium. 100 00:10:41,280 --> 00:10:42,880 That certainly was his interest, 101 00:10:43,000 --> 00:10:45,240 and it lies deep at the heart of many of the things 102 00:10:45,320 --> 00:10:48,160 he tried to do and paint later in his career. 103 00:10:53,440 --> 00:10:55,560 Leonardo thought that paintings should be able 104 00:10:55,640 --> 00:10:57,480 to show everything that was visible 105 00:10:57,560 --> 00:11:00,840 and everything that was invisible in our universe. 106 00:11:00,920 --> 00:11:05,280 He started that way of thinking 107 00:11:05,360 --> 00:11:08,840 by looking very, very closely at the world around him. 108 00:11:09,520 --> 00:11:13,560 For example, one of his very earliest drawings shows, apparently, 109 00:11:13,640 --> 00:11:16,000 a view of the Arno Valley. 110 00:11:16,080 --> 00:11:20,920 It's dated, it feels like an observation and yet there are aspects to it 111 00:11:21,040 --> 00:11:26,400 which I think most of us would now agree are almost impossible. 112 00:11:26,480 --> 00:11:29,640 So the point of his landscapes, 113 00:11:29,720 --> 00:11:32,800 the point of his observation of the human figure, 114 00:11:32,880 --> 00:11:38,400 is that he's always wanting to move from the specific to the ideal 115 00:11:38,480 --> 00:11:42,320 and from the observed to the imagined. 116 00:12:48,120 --> 00:12:52,120 Probably his earliest independent painting was The Annunciation, 117 00:12:52,200 --> 00:12:54,800 which is a long, rectangular panel, 118 00:12:54,880 --> 00:13:00,520 with the standard subject of the angel and the Virgin Mary, 119 00:13:00,600 --> 00:13:03,680 but with enormous amount of effort going into it. 120 00:13:04,560 --> 00:13:09,200 Leonardo spends a lot of time on the perspective of the Virgin's house, 121 00:13:09,920 --> 00:13:12,360 and we know from scientific examination, 122 00:13:12,440 --> 00:13:14,200 the walls, initially, are rather different 123 00:13:14,280 --> 00:13:16,280 with the window in a different place. 124 00:13:16,360 --> 00:13:18,720 So, he's saying, "Look, I can do perspective." 125 00:13:21,280 --> 00:13:24,800 The draperies are done taking a lay figure with linen, 126 00:13:24,880 --> 00:13:27,840 which is then soaked in clay and draped over the figures, 127 00:13:27,920 --> 00:13:30,520 giving a very sculptural impression. 128 00:13:32,160 --> 00:13:35,440 And, above all, he is saying, "Look what I can do with nature." 129 00:13:35,920 --> 00:13:41,040 The carpets of flowers in the enclosed garden, which is symbolic of the Virgin, 130 00:13:41,120 --> 00:13:43,840 are absolutely wriggling with life and vitality. 131 00:13:44,880 --> 00:13:47,880 And then the angel's wing is based on a bird. 132 00:13:48,640 --> 00:13:51,640 You've got this observation of the feathers. 133 00:13:53,360 --> 00:13:56,560 The primaries at the end of the wing have deteriorated a lot. 134 00:13:56,640 --> 00:13:59,880 So, there's a rather offsetting brown smudge, 135 00:14:00,000 --> 00:14:01,360 but you look at the rest of the wing, 136 00:14:01,440 --> 00:14:03,800 the secondaries, all the other feathers, 137 00:14:03,880 --> 00:14:06,600 are painted with this enormous sense of observation. 138 00:14:06,680 --> 00:14:08,920 So, this young man is saying, 139 00:14:09,040 --> 00:14:13,520 "Look what I can do. I can master all the key things in art." 140 00:14:15,360 --> 00:14:21,120 The Annunciation that Leonardo made very early in his career 141 00:14:21,200 --> 00:14:28,600 can be seen as the culmination of his apprenticeship 142 00:14:28,680 --> 00:14:30,880 in Verrocchio's workshop. 143 00:14:31,840 --> 00:14:36,480 We have continued to study and make new investigations. 144 00:14:36,560 --> 00:14:41,200 Not only looking at the finished painting 145 00:14:41,280 --> 00:14:43,920 but also understanding all the stages 146 00:14:44,040 --> 00:14:48,200 Leonardo went through to arrive at the final composition. 147 00:14:48,280 --> 00:14:50,400 Looking at the changes he made 148 00:14:50,480 --> 00:14:54,640 he clearly did not arrive immediately 149 00:14:54,720 --> 00:14:58,000 at a complete and definitive conclusion. 150 00:14:58,720 --> 00:15:02,000 There is undoubtedly on Leonardo's part 151 00:15:02,080 --> 00:15:04,600 a kind of internal challenge. 152 00:15:05,280 --> 00:15:08,040 So this is not so much a problem of wanting 153 00:15:08,120 --> 00:15:13,320 immediately to prove himself as an innovative artist 154 00:15:13,400 --> 00:15:19,400 but really the need to challenge himself 155 00:15:19,480 --> 00:15:21,680 and therefore to progress. 156 00:15:22,520 --> 00:15:30,320 One has the sense he's never satisfied by whatever he's doing. 157 00:15:31,360 --> 00:15:34,320 Therefore it's more a dialogue of Leonardo with himself 158 00:15:34,400 --> 00:15:40,400 than with the rest of artistic society. 159 00:16:17,720 --> 00:16:19,840 "Verrocchio was making a picture 160 00:16:19,920 --> 00:16:22,920 in which St. John was baptising Christ, 161 00:16:23,040 --> 00:16:27,440 and Leonardo worked on an angel who was holding some garments. 162 00:16:27,520 --> 00:16:31,080 Even though he was so young he accomplished it in such a manner 163 00:16:31,160 --> 00:16:34,360 that it was much better than Verrocchio's own figures 164 00:16:34,440 --> 00:16:37,400 that were located beside the angel of Leonardo. 165 00:16:38,320 --> 00:16:42,400 This was the reason why Andrea never again wanted to touch colours, 166 00:16:42,480 --> 00:16:47,800 dismayed that a young man understood painting better than he." 167 00:16:48,840 --> 00:16:50,840 Giorgio Vasari. 168 00:16:53,160 --> 00:16:56,880 "He's a poor pupil who does not surpass his master." 169 00:16:57,000 --> 00:16:58,320 Leonardo. 170 00:17:03,080 --> 00:17:10,839 I think that we see Leonardo in contrast to Verrocchio most clearly 171 00:17:10,920 --> 00:17:13,359 in the Baptism of Christ in the Uffizi, 172 00:17:13,440 --> 00:17:18,400 where a fairly orthodox landscape 173 00:17:18,480 --> 00:17:21,280 is changed to a remarkable degree 174 00:17:21,359 --> 00:17:26,319 as Leonardo's imagination literally floods the plain 175 00:17:26,400 --> 00:17:32,480 to bring water and movement and light into a picture 176 00:17:32,560 --> 00:17:35,760 that otherwise might have been somewhat static. 177 00:17:37,080 --> 00:17:40,440 What Leonardo does is provide a unity, 178 00:17:40,520 --> 00:17:47,600 a unifying factor that turns a good picture into a remarkable one. 179 00:17:58,200 --> 00:18:01,920 Generally speaking, and we certainly see this with Raphael later, 180 00:18:02,040 --> 00:18:04,720 the young artists tend to get commissioned 181 00:18:04,800 --> 00:18:06,560 to do smaller scale paintings. 182 00:18:06,640 --> 00:18:08,600 The less expensive ones, as it were. 183 00:18:08,680 --> 00:18:11,280 Which is Madonnas and portraits, 184 00:18:11,360 --> 00:18:14,920 and in Leonardo's case, portraits of women in particular. 185 00:18:15,040 --> 00:18:17,480 He's already getting the narrative Madonna, 186 00:18:17,560 --> 00:18:19,560 which was one of his great contributions 187 00:18:19,640 --> 00:18:22,480 to reforming "Madonna and Child" painting. 188 00:18:22,560 --> 00:18:24,760 So he's already, in these little pictures 189 00:18:24,840 --> 00:18:27,880 which are, on the whole, conventional subjects, 190 00:18:28,000 --> 00:18:30,520 he's already stretching his wings, as it were. 191 00:19:03,920 --> 00:19:06,800 "Leonardo then made a picture of Our Lady 192 00:19:06,880 --> 00:19:09,760 which was in the possession of Pope Clement VII, 193 00:19:09,840 --> 00:19:11,800 and which is very excellent. 194 00:19:13,400 --> 00:19:15,560 Amongst other things that were in it, 195 00:19:15,640 --> 00:19:19,480 he reproduced a carafe full of water containing some flowers. 196 00:19:20,440 --> 00:19:23,680 In addition to the marvellous lifelikeness of the flowers, 197 00:19:23,760 --> 00:19:26,720 he had imitated the dewdrops of the water on them, 198 00:19:26,800 --> 00:19:30,680 so that they seemed more alive than life itself." 199 00:19:31,760 --> 00:19:33,520 Giorgio Vasari. 200 00:19:35,480 --> 00:19:39,080 "Little babies are thin at all their joints, 201 00:19:39,160 --> 00:19:43,560 and the intervals located between the joints are fat, 202 00:19:43,640 --> 00:19:49,520 and this happens because the skin over the joints is without any flesh 203 00:19:49,600 --> 00:19:52,400 other than that of the nature of sinew, 204 00:19:52,480 --> 00:19:57,840 while a juicy fleshiness is found between one joint and another." 205 00:19:59,240 --> 00:20:00,480 Leonardo. 206 00:21:02,200 --> 00:21:05,120 "The first intention of the painter 207 00:21:05,200 --> 00:21:09,320 is to make a flat surface display a body 208 00:21:09,400 --> 00:21:13,440 as if modelled and separated from this plane, 209 00:21:13,520 --> 00:21:19,240 and he who surpasses others in this skill deserves most praise. 210 00:21:20,480 --> 00:21:25,680 This accomplishment, with which the science of painting is crowned, 211 00:21:25,760 --> 00:21:29,640 arises from light and shade." 212 00:21:30,800 --> 00:21:32,080 Leonardo. 213 00:21:34,200 --> 00:21:37,120 I think if Leonardo had died early, 214 00:21:37,200 --> 00:21:42,160 we would regard this little group of early pictures as being very strange. 215 00:21:42,240 --> 00:21:45,760 He's doing things that other artists weren't trying to do, 216 00:21:45,840 --> 00:21:48,880 and they're very brilliant but slightly uneven. 217 00:21:49,000 --> 00:21:53,040 If you look at Ginevra de' Benci you've got this extraordinary picture 218 00:21:53,120 --> 00:21:57,440 with this woman looking at you very directly, which is very daring. 219 00:21:57,520 --> 00:22:00,280 Normally, women were portrayed in profile. 220 00:22:00,360 --> 00:22:03,560 This was a matter of social decorum. 221 00:22:04,880 --> 00:22:08,400 Her flesh is painted with extraordinary subtle modelling 222 00:22:08,480 --> 00:22:10,720 and he's used his hand in the paint 223 00:22:10,800 --> 00:22:15,480 and in that sheen of hair at the top, within the juniper bush, 224 00:22:15,560 --> 00:22:21,040 absolutely daggering these sharp leaves out against the sheen, 225 00:22:21,120 --> 00:22:23,200 creating this amazing contrast. 226 00:22:23,880 --> 00:22:26,640 He trained as a sculptor, after all, amongst other things, 227 00:22:26,720 --> 00:22:28,880 but he's saying, "This is what painting can do. 228 00:22:29,000 --> 00:22:31,480 Sculpture can't do all this colouristic thing." 229 00:22:31,560 --> 00:22:34,680 Then you go into this amazing, misty landscape. 230 00:22:34,760 --> 00:22:38,120 You've got trees which fade into the background 231 00:22:38,200 --> 00:22:42,280 and, of course again, sculpture can't do these atmospheric effects 232 00:22:42,360 --> 00:22:43,840 in quite that way. 233 00:22:44,880 --> 00:22:47,120 He is much obsessed, later on, 234 00:22:47,200 --> 00:22:51,440 saying that painting is the superior art to everything, including sculpture 235 00:22:51,520 --> 00:22:54,720 and he seems to be doing this, in a way, in the portraits. 236 00:22:54,800 --> 00:22:57,560 It's a strange portrait; 237 00:22:57,640 --> 00:23:00,440 quite a lot of the Leonardos look at us very hard, 238 00:23:00,520 --> 00:23:02,160 which is always unsettling. 239 00:24:22,280 --> 00:24:25,720 The Madonna Benois is popular and will always stay popular 240 00:24:25,800 --> 00:24:28,520 because it brings you this kind of happiness 241 00:24:28,600 --> 00:24:36,000 which, in principle, is not the issue in the story of The Virgin and the Christ, 242 00:24:36,080 --> 00:24:39,320 because she knows what is going to happen to her child. 243 00:24:39,400 --> 00:24:43,440 And this young girl doesn't know, which is maybe wrong philosophically, 244 00:24:43,520 --> 00:24:45,400 because it's a story of tragedy. 245 00:24:45,480 --> 00:24:49,680 We have to understand it is a tragedy because he suffered because of us. 246 00:24:53,640 --> 00:24:57,240 It's joy, enjoyment, and she's happy. 247 00:24:57,320 --> 00:24:59,840 But art always needs some explanation 248 00:24:59,920 --> 00:25:04,440 so here we have these white flowers in the sign of a cross. 249 00:25:04,520 --> 00:25:07,800 It's for all those who are looking at it. 250 00:25:07,880 --> 00:25:10,520 If you are a Christian you see something like a cross, 251 00:25:10,600 --> 00:25:11,760 it must mean something. 252 00:25:11,840 --> 00:25:15,320 So when you see the cross, and you see the mother and child, 253 00:25:15,400 --> 00:25:19,160 you must remember that the child will be crucified on the cross. 254 00:25:20,840 --> 00:25:23,920 In Leonardo first of all he was always experimenting and experimenting, 255 00:25:24,040 --> 00:25:29,480 but also he was developing into the line of developing mystery. 256 00:25:29,560 --> 00:25:33,440 All these shadows and all these strange looks and strange smiles. 257 00:25:33,520 --> 00:25:36,080 He was developing and experimenting together. 258 00:25:36,160 --> 00:25:39,520 He was doing experiments to develop something more mysterious. 259 00:25:45,320 --> 00:25:49,560 Leonardo had an ambition of thought 260 00:25:49,640 --> 00:25:53,480 that would have singled him out in any community at any time. 261 00:25:53,560 --> 00:25:57,840 So he saw painting, which was, of course, his primary medium, 262 00:25:57,920 --> 00:26:04,320 as the way to both explore and express a new understanding, 263 00:26:04,400 --> 00:26:09,800 a new investigation of the world and of God's laws of creation. 264 00:26:09,880 --> 00:26:12,360 I think that that's the key. 265 00:26:13,000 --> 00:26:17,400 So we don't know very much about his biography at this point. 266 00:26:17,480 --> 00:26:20,520 We know that he was likely homosexual 267 00:26:20,600 --> 00:26:23,120 and that there were other things 268 00:26:23,200 --> 00:26:28,000 that would have given him a kind of slightly outsider-insider status. 269 00:26:28,080 --> 00:26:31,520 He was certainly not distracted ever by family duties. 270 00:26:31,600 --> 00:26:35,840 He was, therefore, somewhat self-indulgent in some ways. 271 00:26:35,920 --> 00:26:38,480 He was somebody who had the time 272 00:26:38,560 --> 00:26:41,400 and gave himself the space 273 00:26:41,480 --> 00:26:45,520 to undertake this extraordinary investigation of the world. 274 00:26:46,680 --> 00:26:49,560 Leonardo, the man, is very elusive. 275 00:26:49,640 --> 00:26:54,840 The notes we have of what Leonardo looked like and how he behaved... 276 00:26:54,920 --> 00:26:57,800 First of all, there is only one reputable likeness of him, 277 00:26:57,880 --> 00:26:59,280 and that's at Windsor. 278 00:26:59,360 --> 00:27:00,680 It's a profile drawing. 279 00:27:00,760 --> 00:27:04,120 Very beautiful, fine features, very beautifully dressed hair, 280 00:27:04,200 --> 00:27:06,560 which corresponds to descriptions. 281 00:27:07,280 --> 00:27:10,680 The testimony is, and we can see from his notes 282 00:27:10,760 --> 00:27:13,040 as to what he bought for his entourage to buy, 283 00:27:13,120 --> 00:27:16,000 they dressed very well, very stylishly, 284 00:27:16,080 --> 00:27:20,920 and part of Leonardo's point as a painter was the painter was a gentleman. 285 00:27:21,040 --> 00:27:25,480 He wasn't like a sculptor who sat there covered in dust like a baker, 286 00:27:25,560 --> 00:27:27,080 as Leonardo put it. 287 00:27:27,800 --> 00:27:32,360 So he aims to cultivate this very courtly, very well-mannered exterior. 288 00:27:33,040 --> 00:27:35,040 I think he inspired immense loyalty 289 00:27:35,120 --> 00:27:39,080 with this very tight circle of intimate, young men 290 00:27:39,160 --> 00:27:41,160 that he kept around him, 291 00:27:41,240 --> 00:27:43,840 but I think in other respects he's very elusive. 292 00:28:11,920 --> 00:28:13,600 Leonardo is widely understood 293 00:28:13,680 --> 00:28:16,520 as one of the great polymaths of the Renaissance. 294 00:28:16,600 --> 00:28:21,160 He was experienced and skilled in painting, sculpture, architecture, 295 00:28:21,240 --> 00:28:24,400 engineering and many branches of the sciences as well, 296 00:28:24,480 --> 00:28:27,840 study of botany, anatomy, geology and so on. 297 00:28:28,800 --> 00:28:32,160 It's important to understand that these are Leonardo's working papers; 298 00:28:32,240 --> 00:28:36,240 they are his drawings and notes towards his scientific and artistic projects. 299 00:28:36,320 --> 00:28:39,760 Leonardo was also one of the most skilled draughtsmen of the Renaissance. 300 00:28:39,840 --> 00:28:42,840 so he was able to take this wonderful vision of the world around him 301 00:28:42,920 --> 00:28:44,760 and to get it down on paper. 302 00:28:45,560 --> 00:28:49,680 And it is through his drawings that we get an insight into Leonardo the man; 303 00:28:49,760 --> 00:28:53,040 how his mind worked, how he pulled his projects together. 304 00:28:53,120 --> 00:28:57,320 It's a unique way to understand what Leonardo was doing in his daily work. 305 00:28:58,480 --> 00:29:02,440 He's left behind a record of a personality 306 00:29:02,520 --> 00:29:08,080 who is thinking through his hands at every moment of the day. 307 00:29:08,160 --> 00:29:10,640 He sees something, he sketches it. 308 00:29:10,720 --> 00:29:15,320 He wants to remember something, he writes a list on the same page, 309 00:29:15,400 --> 00:29:20,000 he makes notes to himself about what other kinds of things to study 310 00:29:20,080 --> 00:29:22,520 but also what to have for lunch. 311 00:29:22,600 --> 00:29:28,280 So he doesn't separate out his artistic life, his scientific life 312 00:29:28,360 --> 00:29:30,120 from his personal life. 313 00:29:30,200 --> 00:29:35,160 He leads this extraordinarily inquisitive, 314 00:29:35,240 --> 00:29:38,160 curiosity-focused existence. 315 00:30:35,360 --> 00:30:37,880 Leonardo was fascinated by horses 316 00:30:38,000 --> 00:30:40,280 and equine anatomy throughout his career, 317 00:30:40,360 --> 00:30:44,600 and some of his first drawings of horses were done in connection 318 00:30:44,680 --> 00:30:46,680 with The Adoration of the Magi, 319 00:30:46,760 --> 00:30:51,040 a commission from the convent of San Donato a Scopeto, 320 00:30:51,120 --> 00:30:54,520 which is just outside Florence, on the way to Pisa, 321 00:30:54,600 --> 00:30:59,720 and Leonardo makes a large number of studies of horses. 322 00:30:59,800 --> 00:31:03,560 Neither of these figures, and the horses, 323 00:31:03,640 --> 00:31:08,480 appear exactly as they are in these drawings in the painting. 324 00:31:08,560 --> 00:31:10,560 There are comparable figures 325 00:31:10,640 --> 00:31:14,240 but they're not in that sense studies directly for the painting. 326 00:31:15,680 --> 00:31:20,280 As images of horses, particularly, they're very contrasting. 327 00:31:20,360 --> 00:31:24,120 On one, you've got these horses ambling. 328 00:31:24,200 --> 00:31:27,760 He's obviously very interested in the position of the feet 329 00:31:27,840 --> 00:31:30,200 to suggest a sense of movement. 330 00:31:30,280 --> 00:31:32,040 The action, if you like, the energy, 331 00:31:32,120 --> 00:31:35,240 is happening in the form of the riders on top, 332 00:31:35,320 --> 00:31:36,920 who are blowing trumpets. 333 00:31:37,040 --> 00:31:39,880 He's making his mind up about which direction they're going. 334 00:31:40,000 --> 00:31:45,560 And by contrast, this other drawing is just bursting with energy. 335 00:31:45,640 --> 00:31:52,800 The horse lurches forward and there's this amazing billowing cloak behind him, 336 00:31:52,880 --> 00:31:56,640 so there's this pool of energy between horse and rider. 337 00:31:57,360 --> 00:31:59,520 What they do have in common, I think though, 338 00:31:59,600 --> 00:32:03,880 is that he gives the horses this amazing monumentality. 339 00:32:05,520 --> 00:32:08,040 With this drawing in particular, 340 00:32:08,120 --> 00:32:11,680 there are various sets of hooves there as he tries to suggest the movement 341 00:32:11,760 --> 00:32:16,000 and get the position of the horse in that rearing state 342 00:32:16,080 --> 00:32:19,560 and again trying to draw this billowing, 343 00:32:19,640 --> 00:32:21,320 this transparent piece of drapery, 344 00:32:21,400 --> 00:32:24,800 caught in the wind and create that sense of energy. 345 00:32:24,880 --> 00:32:27,560 It's a sort of breathlessness and a freshness 346 00:32:27,640 --> 00:32:30,480 in the way he handles the medium, which is extraordinary. 347 00:33:43,880 --> 00:33:46,720 "Leonardo da Vinci has undertaken to paint a panel 348 00:33:46,800 --> 00:33:48,240 for our main altarpiece, 349 00:33:48,320 --> 00:33:53,160 which he is obliged to have completed in 24 or at the most 30 months. 350 00:33:53,760 --> 00:33:58,920 He must supply his own colours and gold and any other expenses he might incur." 351 00:33:59,800 --> 00:34:06,040 Contract for the Adoration of the Kings for San Donato a Scopeto, July 1481. 352 00:34:39,719 --> 00:34:42,920 If we are looking at finished and unfinished paintings, 353 00:34:43,040 --> 00:34:46,600 the first great Leonardo must be the Adoration of the Magi. 354 00:34:47,320 --> 00:34:50,159 It completely reworks that subject 355 00:34:50,239 --> 00:34:54,280 and turns it into something urgent, passionate and completely novel, 356 00:34:54,360 --> 00:34:57,200 in terms of the tenor of the composition, 357 00:34:57,280 --> 00:35:01,600 the turbulence, the sheer disturbance of the arrival of Christ on Earth. 358 00:35:03,840 --> 00:35:07,400 The Adoration of the Kings by Leonardo da Vinci 359 00:35:07,480 --> 00:35:12,520 leaves us increasingly surprised the more we look at it 360 00:35:12,600 --> 00:35:15,560 and especially after the recent restoration 361 00:35:15,640 --> 00:35:18,120 which was done by us here at the Opificio 362 00:35:18,200 --> 00:35:21,400 we can much better understand this work 363 00:35:21,480 --> 00:35:23,520 even in its unfinished state. 364 00:35:25,320 --> 00:35:29,920 Here he assembles more than 70 figures 365 00:35:30,040 --> 00:35:32,800 all drawn by hand. 366 00:35:32,880 --> 00:35:37,720 There is clearly an impetus on Leonardo's part 367 00:35:37,800 --> 00:35:41,800 to try to create a composition 368 00:35:41,880 --> 00:35:46,480 that he knows he probably can't complete. 369 00:35:46,560 --> 00:35:51,440 We don't know how many of these sketched figures 370 00:35:51,520 --> 00:35:54,200 would have been in the final work 371 00:35:54,280 --> 00:36:00,480 but there is clearly not the space for all of them. 372 00:36:12,400 --> 00:36:16,200 The restoration of the Adoration of the Kings lasted five years. 373 00:36:20,720 --> 00:36:22,440 The biggest surprise was that 374 00:36:22,520 --> 00:36:26,320 underneath all these varnishes 375 00:36:26,400 --> 00:36:30,920 which had deposited one after the other on the surface 376 00:36:31,040 --> 00:36:34,280 a level of transparency was recovered 377 00:36:34,360 --> 00:36:37,040 that revealed the space. 378 00:36:41,440 --> 00:36:44,160 What had seemed to be exclusively 379 00:36:44,240 --> 00:36:48,120 a painting entirely on a single plane 380 00:36:48,200 --> 00:36:50,200 thus a two-dimensional painting 381 00:36:50,280 --> 00:36:54,200 suddenly recovered this sense of genuine space. 382 00:36:56,880 --> 00:37:00,920 Leonardo was commissioned to paint the Adoration of the Kings 383 00:37:01,040 --> 00:37:03,200 by the monks of San Donato in Scopeto. 384 00:37:04,320 --> 00:37:09,800 Leonardo worked for them for only a relatively short time. 385 00:37:09,880 --> 00:37:12,920 We have documents that tell us 386 00:37:13,040 --> 00:37:15,840 it was a few months, at most a year. 387 00:37:15,920 --> 00:37:18,680 The painting remained unfinished 388 00:37:18,760 --> 00:37:24,280 because Leonardo headed for Milan leaving behind the city of Florence. 389 00:37:25,280 --> 00:37:32,000 In Milan Leonardo could find a way to establish himself more 390 00:37:32,080 --> 00:37:35,480 perhaps more easily than he could in Florence 391 00:37:35,560 --> 00:37:37,840 where there was more competition. 392 00:37:53,120 --> 00:37:57,120 In the 1480s, Leonardo decides to get out of Florence. 393 00:37:57,800 --> 00:38:00,080 He goes for a wide range of reasons. 394 00:38:00,160 --> 00:38:03,720 In part he's pushed, he hasn't finished a whole lot of commissions 395 00:38:03,800 --> 00:38:05,480 and he owes people some money. 396 00:38:05,560 --> 00:38:12,120 In part he's pulled because Milan is this wonderful growing, vibrant city 397 00:38:12,200 --> 00:38:16,200 ruled not by a legitimate Duke of Milan 398 00:38:16,280 --> 00:38:18,440 but by the uncle, 399 00:38:18,520 --> 00:38:24,120 Ludovico Maria Sforza, a man of enormous talent and ambition. 400 00:38:25,440 --> 00:38:28,360 We have a surviving letter from Leonardo, 401 00:38:28,440 --> 00:38:31,280 a draft, not in his own hand, 402 00:38:31,360 --> 00:38:35,160 which explains why the duke should hire him. 403 00:38:35,240 --> 00:38:39,840 He goes through an extraordinary range of opportunities and talents 404 00:38:39,920 --> 00:38:43,360 that he can offer to this new ambitious ruler. 405 00:38:43,440 --> 00:38:46,640 He can provide war machines, he can do bridges, 406 00:38:46,720 --> 00:38:49,880 he can do architecture of all types. 407 00:38:50,680 --> 00:38:54,040 At the very end of this letter we get a short line, 408 00:38:54,120 --> 00:38:57,920 it says simply, "Oh, and I can paint as well." 409 00:38:58,720 --> 00:39:00,400 The Sforza family ruled 410 00:39:00,480 --> 00:39:03,560 and the idea that an artist's relationship 411 00:39:03,640 --> 00:39:09,520 with a great prince was emblematic of their mutual powers, 412 00:39:09,600 --> 00:39:11,920 their joint creativity, 413 00:39:12,040 --> 00:39:16,200 was something which would allow Leonardo a freedom of movement, 414 00:39:16,280 --> 00:39:17,560 a freedom of expression, 415 00:39:17,640 --> 00:39:20,720 that he would never have encountered in Florence. 416 00:40:12,160 --> 00:40:14,120 "The painter who has knowledge 417 00:40:14,200 --> 00:40:17,880 of the cords, muscles, and tendons 418 00:40:18,000 --> 00:40:24,280 will know well in moving a limb which cord is the cause of its motion 419 00:40:24,360 --> 00:40:29,840 and which muscle in swelling is the cause of the contraction of this cord, 420 00:40:29,920 --> 00:40:34,560 and which cord, transformed into the thinnest cartilage, 421 00:40:34,640 --> 00:40:38,480 surrounds and binds together the said muscle. 422 00:40:39,240 --> 00:40:45,760 By these means he will become a varied and comprehensive demonstrator 423 00:40:45,840 --> 00:40:51,040 of the various muscles in keeping with various effects in the figure." 424 00:40:52,080 --> 00:40:53,440 Leonardo. 425 00:40:57,160 --> 00:40:59,800 I love the Saint Jerome in particular, 426 00:40:59,880 --> 00:41:03,480 partly because it's a picture about vision. 427 00:41:04,360 --> 00:41:08,360 Saint Jerome is having a vision of the crucifix, 428 00:41:08,440 --> 00:41:13,080 as a result of his self-punishment with a rock, 429 00:41:13,160 --> 00:41:15,520 so this idea that there's a connection 430 00:41:15,600 --> 00:41:21,600 between the bodily and the spiritual that is being played out for us. 431 00:41:22,800 --> 00:41:26,320 I believe that the lion in the foreground 432 00:41:26,400 --> 00:41:31,200 Leone, Leonardo. 433 00:41:31,280 --> 00:41:36,120 I think that the fact that the lion is so much a part of the picture, 434 00:41:36,200 --> 00:41:39,000 normally he's tucked away as a kind of attribute 435 00:41:39,080 --> 00:41:41,480 that helps identify Saint Jerome, 436 00:41:41,560 --> 00:41:45,080 says something about how Leonardo 437 00:41:45,160 --> 00:41:47,240 is placing himself in the work 438 00:41:47,320 --> 00:41:51,720 and placing himself as the observer of the saint's activity 439 00:41:51,800 --> 00:41:53,520 and of the saint's vision. 440 00:41:54,840 --> 00:41:58,200 Leonardo's painting technique is very particular 441 00:41:58,280 --> 00:42:01,160 and I think the most important thing to realise about it 442 00:42:01,240 --> 00:42:03,760 is that it gave him room for manoeuvre. 443 00:42:04,600 --> 00:42:07,480 Some of that is to do with the use of oil paint 444 00:42:07,560 --> 00:42:11,840 that allows him to work more slowly than tempera would have done, 445 00:42:11,920 --> 00:42:14,640 the medium that his master Verrocchio used, 446 00:42:14,720 --> 00:42:19,880 but some of it is to do with simply a kind of planning and thinking 447 00:42:20,000 --> 00:42:25,600 and overlaying that is something one comes to look for in a work by Leonardo. 448 00:42:27,680 --> 00:42:32,680 He talks about the capacity of a painter to find the image, 449 00:42:32,760 --> 00:42:37,200 the clear image, from within almost a, sort of, muddle of ideas. 450 00:42:37,280 --> 00:42:39,320 So he might plan quite carefully on paper. 451 00:42:39,400 --> 00:42:43,520 He might draw a cartoon, he might transfer that to a panel, 452 00:42:43,600 --> 00:42:46,800 but that's only the beginning for the next creative process. 453 00:42:46,880 --> 00:42:50,920 He's certainly not filling in the drawing with colour. 454 00:42:51,040 --> 00:42:54,160 He's continuing to work and rework. 455 00:42:55,520 --> 00:42:59,720 So it's recently been realised that the unfinished St. Jerome 456 00:42:59,800 --> 00:43:05,480 contains observations of anatomy that he made in the years around 1490, 457 00:43:05,560 --> 00:43:10,040 but then he came back to it in the first part of the 16th century, 458 00:43:10,120 --> 00:43:14,440 when he was revisiting his first sequence of anatomical investigations 459 00:43:14,520 --> 00:43:17,080 and he thought again about the neck, 460 00:43:17,160 --> 00:43:20,920 the shoulder bone and all those areas in that picture. 461 00:43:21,600 --> 00:43:25,720 So the paintings themselves would mirror his thinking 462 00:43:25,800 --> 00:43:29,720 and his investigation as they themselves evolved. 463 00:43:35,080 --> 00:43:39,520 We tend to separate out the secular from the sacred. 464 00:43:39,600 --> 00:43:45,280 This is a divide that neither Leonardo nor his patrons would have recognised. 465 00:43:45,360 --> 00:43:47,880 The court of Milan that Leonardo joined 466 00:43:48,000 --> 00:43:53,080 was very, very interested in Platonic philosophical concepts, 467 00:43:53,160 --> 00:44:00,240 the notion that you can understand the divine through the idealised. 468 00:44:00,320 --> 00:44:04,640 So in taking the best and the most beautiful 469 00:44:04,720 --> 00:44:11,280 and then idealising them in a single image you are getting closer to God, 470 00:44:11,360 --> 00:44:13,680 you are getting closer to the divine, 471 00:44:13,760 --> 00:44:17,520 you are getting closer to the truth. 472 00:45:35,720 --> 00:45:38,560 Leonardo da Vinci painted The Virgin of the Rocks 473 00:45:38,640 --> 00:45:40,640 at some point after 1483. 474 00:45:41,440 --> 00:45:46,040 He painted it for the Brotherhood of the Immaculate Conception 475 00:45:46,120 --> 00:45:50,440 for a chapel in the church of San Francesco Grande in Milan. 476 00:45:52,600 --> 00:45:57,360 In this picture Leonardo shows the Virgin Mary 477 00:45:57,440 --> 00:46:01,680 taking St. John the Baptist under her protection 478 00:46:01,760 --> 00:46:05,200 while he kneels in adoration of the Infant Jesus 479 00:46:05,280 --> 00:46:07,840 who is centred at the bottom of the composition. 480 00:46:07,920 --> 00:46:11,760 The Infant Jesus is under the protection of an angel. 481 00:46:12,720 --> 00:46:15,720 Leonardo chose a background composed of rocks 482 00:46:15,800 --> 00:46:19,360 which most definitely has a symbolic meaning. 483 00:46:20,160 --> 00:46:24,640 The rocks create a sort of grotto, a place of refuge 484 00:46:24,720 --> 00:46:27,040 imbued with symbolism 485 00:46:27,120 --> 00:46:29,640 that seeks to reveal the purity 486 00:46:29,720 --> 00:46:31,720 and chastity of the Virgin Mary. 487 00:46:32,880 --> 00:46:36,800 This is truly a place protected from original sin 488 00:46:36,880 --> 00:46:40,720 which therefore echoes the idea of the immaculate conception. 489 00:46:41,920 --> 00:46:43,160 In The Virgin of the Rocks 490 00:46:43,240 --> 00:46:46,640 we can see the great attention that Leonardo pays 491 00:46:46,720 --> 00:46:50,640 to everything concerning the natural world. 492 00:46:50,720 --> 00:46:53,320 The rocks, flowers, plants 493 00:46:53,400 --> 00:46:56,080 that are scattered throughout this composition. 494 00:46:56,800 --> 00:47:00,640 So it reflects in part Leonardo's world 495 00:47:00,720 --> 00:47:04,520 but this precise representation of nature 496 00:47:04,600 --> 00:47:07,080 is actually an image of the incarnation of God. 497 00:47:08,120 --> 00:47:09,760 God is made man in this painting. 498 00:47:09,840 --> 00:47:13,280 You see Jesus who is placed on the Earth 499 00:47:13,360 --> 00:47:17,720 and Leonardo is seeking to represent this mystery of the incarnation 500 00:47:17,800 --> 00:47:20,560 in the broader sense of nature, 501 00:47:20,640 --> 00:47:25,120 a history that begins with God's creation. 502 00:47:25,200 --> 00:47:32,000 He's showing us a humanity that is revitalised and renewed 503 00:47:32,080 --> 00:47:34,080 by the arrival of Christ on Earth. 504 00:47:38,280 --> 00:47:41,440 Something that's absolutely wonderful in this painting 505 00:47:41,520 --> 00:47:44,400 is the use of light and shade. 506 00:47:46,160 --> 00:47:49,320 The lighting is really very dark 507 00:47:49,400 --> 00:47:51,800 since we have no natural sunlight 508 00:47:51,880 --> 00:47:55,880 so the lighting is very delicate, very mysterious 509 00:47:56,000 --> 00:47:59,480 which brings this mystery of the incarnation to life. 510 00:48:01,400 --> 00:48:04,480 Leonardo also pays great attention 511 00:48:04,560 --> 00:48:09,520 to the transformation of colour under the effects of light. 512 00:48:09,600 --> 00:48:12,360 The Virgin of the Rocks is without doubt 513 00:48:12,440 --> 00:48:14,720 the first masterpiece by Leonardo 514 00:48:14,800 --> 00:48:16,360 in which one can admire 515 00:48:16,440 --> 00:48:20,320 the extremely sophisticated, extremely fine way 516 00:48:20,400 --> 00:48:23,040 in which this colour is rendered 517 00:48:23,120 --> 00:48:26,080 particularly the reds and the shadows 518 00:48:26,160 --> 00:48:32,120 which transform the painting into a tonal vision. 519 00:48:32,200 --> 00:48:33,720 This is undeniable. 520 00:49:54,160 --> 00:49:58,160 Madonna Litta is the main icon of the Hermitage for many people. 521 00:49:58,240 --> 00:50:01,120 It's very profound, it's very human, 522 00:50:01,200 --> 00:50:06,400 there's a very strong feeling of sorrow, with the beautiful face of the Madonna. 523 00:50:07,120 --> 00:50:08,680 It has fantastic colours, 524 00:50:08,760 --> 00:50:12,120 it's the colours that also brings people to look at it. 525 00:50:13,000 --> 00:50:16,040 It works very well together with Madonna Benois 526 00:50:16,120 --> 00:50:18,640 because, you know, simple but still it works. 527 00:50:20,920 --> 00:50:25,680 This is a young Leonardo and here the girl is so happy, 528 00:50:25,760 --> 00:50:28,760 she doesn't know what will happen to her child. 529 00:50:28,840 --> 00:50:33,360 And there you have Leonardo of age, it was painted in Milan, 530 00:50:33,440 --> 00:50:35,160 and here you have Madonna which knows 531 00:50:35,240 --> 00:50:38,120 what will happen to her child and so it is very profound. 532 00:50:39,560 --> 00:50:44,360 Certainly there is some idea that maybe some of the pupils of Leonardo 533 00:50:44,440 --> 00:50:46,080 participated in doing this painting; 534 00:50:46,160 --> 00:50:48,080 it's very much possible. 535 00:50:50,480 --> 00:50:53,600 In Madonna Litta, look at her eyes, 536 00:50:54,160 --> 00:50:57,480 because her eyes and her figure in general, 537 00:50:57,560 --> 00:51:01,680 this is the best pronounced idea of Madonna. 538 00:51:12,640 --> 00:51:16,600 Leonardo's first posting away from Florence to Milan 539 00:51:16,680 --> 00:51:19,480 seems to have been for his musical skills, 540 00:51:19,560 --> 00:51:22,040 not for his artistic or engineering skills. 541 00:51:22,120 --> 00:51:25,920 He was sent as a sort of diplomatic present to the Duke of Milan, 542 00:51:26,040 --> 00:51:29,240 who apparently was very keen on the sound of the lira da braccio, 543 00:51:29,320 --> 00:51:33,320 which is a sort of violin instrument particularly good for improvising on. 544 00:51:33,400 --> 00:51:37,400 And Leonardo tipped up, and supposedly played better, 545 00:51:37,480 --> 00:51:39,880 according to Vasari in his Lives of the Artists, 546 00:51:40,000 --> 00:51:41,840 than all the Milanese musicians, 547 00:51:41,920 --> 00:51:44,640 which must have been intensely irritating for them. 548 00:51:45,560 --> 00:51:48,760 Leonardo says about music that it's similar to painting 549 00:51:48,840 --> 00:51:53,800 because in the same way that the limbs have a proportionality between them, 550 00:51:53,880 --> 00:51:56,040 seen in his Vitruvian Man, for example, 551 00:51:56,120 --> 00:52:00,400 the intervals in music had this same relationship based on maths. 552 00:52:00,480 --> 00:52:04,320 And so, in the same way that painting is science made visible, 553 00:52:04,400 --> 00:52:06,680 science is made audible in music. 554 00:52:50,120 --> 00:52:55,320 "Music is not to be regarded other than as the sister of painting, 555 00:52:55,400 --> 00:52:58,640 inasmuch as she is dependent on hearing, 556 00:52:58,720 --> 00:53:01,480 second sense behind that of sight. 557 00:53:02,440 --> 00:53:07,440 She composes a harmony from the conjunction of her proportional parts, 558 00:53:07,520 --> 00:53:10,520 which make their effect instantaneous, 559 00:53:10,600 --> 00:53:16,600 being constrained to arise and die in one or more harmonic intervals. 560 00:53:17,760 --> 00:53:21,520 My approach shall be just as the musician's is with notes." 561 00:53:22,800 --> 00:53:23,880 Leonardo. 562 00:53:28,400 --> 00:53:31,720 Leonardo is a highly experimental painter 563 00:53:31,800 --> 00:53:35,800 but he's not stupid, he's also going to produce the kinds of work 564 00:53:35,880 --> 00:53:40,520 that his patrons want and that his patrons will pay for. 565 00:53:40,600 --> 00:53:45,680 So he develops a highly characteristic style of his own 566 00:53:45,760 --> 00:53:48,760 which reflects not simply his understanding 567 00:53:48,840 --> 00:53:51,360 of how people look and see 568 00:53:51,440 --> 00:53:55,160 but also of what they want to see in front of them. 569 00:55:05,880 --> 00:55:09,880 We don't really know why this painting was created. 570 00:55:10,000 --> 00:55:16,560 Most likely it was a commission from Leonardo's patron 571 00:55:16,640 --> 00:55:21,000 Duke Ludovico Sforza, requesting a portrait of his mistress. 572 00:55:21,920 --> 00:55:28,840 In this painting we see a beautiful woman 573 00:55:28,920 --> 00:55:33,040 who is in love and committed to Ludovico Sforza. 574 00:55:33,120 --> 00:55:37,400 We know she was a well-educated person 575 00:55:37,480 --> 00:55:39,360 who wrote poetry 576 00:55:39,440 --> 00:55:42,440 while at the same time she was lauded 577 00:55:42,520 --> 00:55:47,000 and considered a muse by other artists. 578 00:55:47,880 --> 00:55:53,760 I think that her extraordinary attributes and unique qualities 579 00:55:53,840 --> 00:55:59,480 led to her achieving an exceptional position in Ludovico's court. 580 00:56:00,720 --> 00:56:05,840 Leonardo's painting is remarkable 581 00:56:05,920 --> 00:56:10,720 in the way that it deals 582 00:56:10,800 --> 00:56:14,760 with a subject in motion. 583 00:56:14,840 --> 00:56:19,680 Cecilia Gallerani is turning towards someone 584 00:56:19,760 --> 00:56:23,440 who is outside the painting's frame. 585 00:56:23,520 --> 00:56:28,680 We are dealing with a snapshot, 586 00:56:28,760 --> 00:56:33,400 a portrait which shows one specific moment. 587 00:56:34,600 --> 00:56:37,840 The painting is exceptional due to its intimacy. 588 00:56:37,920 --> 00:56:41,240 It is exceptional thanks to the technique used 589 00:56:41,320 --> 00:56:46,480 but it also carries an enormous emotional charge. 590 00:56:47,320 --> 00:56:49,320 Thinking about its history 591 00:56:49,400 --> 00:56:55,440 but also about the story of Cecilia Gallerani 592 00:56:55,520 --> 00:56:59,000 we can contemplate pure beauty. 593 00:58:01,600 --> 00:58:06,440 "If the poet says that he can inflame men with love, 594 00:58:06,520 --> 00:58:10,840 which is the central aim in all animal species, 595 00:58:10,920 --> 00:58:16,760 the painter has the power to do the same, and to an even greater degree. 596 00:58:17,440 --> 00:58:23,240 In that he can place in front of the lover the true likeness of the beloved, 597 00:58:23,320 --> 00:58:26,320 often making him kiss and speak to it." 598 00:58:27,720 --> 00:58:28,880 Leonardo. 599 00:58:31,400 --> 00:58:33,840 La Belle Ferronni?re is a painting 600 00:58:33,920 --> 00:58:40,080 about which we know relatively few historical details. 601 00:58:40,920 --> 00:58:43,560 Nevertheless there is enough evidence 602 00:58:43,640 --> 00:58:46,400 to help us understand where and when 603 00:58:46,480 --> 00:58:49,240 Leonardo painted this lovely portrait. 604 00:58:50,200 --> 00:58:52,520 The young woman in the painting 605 00:58:52,600 --> 00:58:55,440 is dressed in clothing that was the height of fashion 606 00:58:55,520 --> 00:59:00,160 in Milan towards the end of the 1480s and 1490s. 607 00:59:01,000 --> 00:59:05,000 We can therefore be absolutely certain 608 00:59:05,080 --> 00:59:07,760 that Leonardo painted this portrait 609 00:59:07,840 --> 00:59:11,840 when he was living under the patronage of Ludovico Sforza. 610 00:59:11,920 --> 00:59:16,240 One of the most appealing theories for La Belle Ferronni?re 611 00:59:16,320 --> 00:59:19,320 is that it may be a portrait of Lucrezia Crivelli, 612 00:59:19,400 --> 00:59:22,760 Ludovico Sforza's final mistress. 613 00:59:25,000 --> 00:59:29,400 Her gaze may at first seem to be looking at us 614 00:59:29,480 --> 00:59:34,120 but it isn't directed at the viewer, it slightly eludes us 615 00:59:34,200 --> 00:59:36,600 and is turned to her left. 616 00:59:37,720 --> 00:59:41,240 So you have the impression of a body in movement. 617 00:59:41,320 --> 00:59:46,440 Ultimately this extremely seductive woman is slipping away from us. 618 00:59:46,520 --> 00:59:49,760 She doesn't look at us and is turned away. 619 00:59:52,600 --> 00:59:58,480 Much has been imagined and written about this gaze which escapes us. 620 00:59:58,560 --> 01:00:02,000 Maybe this was something that Leonardo's patron wanted. 621 01:00:02,080 --> 01:00:07,080 Maybe Ludovico Sforza, if the subject is one of his mistresses, 622 01:00:07,160 --> 01:00:12,840 wanted to show in this painting that her gaze belongs only to him 623 01:00:12,920 --> 01:00:15,760 and must elude any other viewer. 624 01:01:50,360 --> 01:01:52,760 The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci 625 01:01:52,840 --> 01:01:59,080 is a ghost in the refectory of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan. 626 01:02:00,160 --> 01:02:05,480 It's a hint of what it must have originally looked like. 627 01:02:05,560 --> 01:02:09,880 It's hard for us today, given the number of copies that exist, 628 01:02:10,000 --> 01:02:12,360 given the influence that it has had 629 01:02:12,440 --> 01:02:17,800 to really understand how radical it was in the period itself. 630 01:02:18,600 --> 01:02:21,160 It was radical in the way it was painted 631 01:02:21,240 --> 01:02:26,600 using highly experimental and unfortunately not very good techniques 632 01:02:26,680 --> 01:02:28,680 in terms of its long-term survival. 633 01:02:28,760 --> 01:02:34,360 It was radical in terms of the way that the apostles and Christ interact. 634 01:02:34,440 --> 01:02:37,520 It was radical in the facial features that were pictured, 635 01:02:37,600 --> 01:02:39,200 in the gestures, 636 01:02:39,280 --> 01:02:45,040 in the astonishing interactivity of all of those characters. 637 01:02:45,120 --> 01:02:48,360 And now we can only get a hint 638 01:02:48,440 --> 01:02:52,680 of just how beautiful it must have once been. 639 01:03:24,920 --> 01:03:27,480 This is an academic copy 640 01:03:27,560 --> 01:03:30,400 made for posterity, as well as, 641 01:03:30,480 --> 01:03:34,160 perhaps, by one of Leonardo's pupils trying to come closer to the master. 642 01:03:35,240 --> 01:03:38,240 But looking at the composition of this 643 01:03:38,320 --> 01:03:42,760 and looking at where Leonardo sited the original, 644 01:03:42,840 --> 01:03:46,440 it's something to do with the level of ambition, 645 01:03:46,520 --> 01:03:51,120 the illusion, the notion that all art requires a leap of faith. 646 01:03:51,200 --> 01:03:54,760 But this one, perhaps unlike anything that's happened before, 647 01:03:54,840 --> 01:03:58,880 would have seemed to the people who saw it as miraculous. 648 01:03:59,000 --> 01:04:01,200 This really did suggest another room, 649 01:04:01,280 --> 01:04:06,440 another space, in which recognisable human beings were eating. 650 01:04:06,520 --> 01:04:09,800 The idea that that would be sited in a dining room 651 01:04:09,880 --> 01:04:13,720 where monks would look up to it has additional resonance. 652 01:04:13,800 --> 01:04:20,320 And it's something to do with the sum total of Leonardo's explorations 653 01:04:20,400 --> 01:04:23,160 both into the human face, into the human figure, 654 01:04:23,240 --> 01:04:26,360 theology, architecture, optics. 655 01:04:26,440 --> 01:04:28,480 It's his masterwork. 656 01:04:30,000 --> 01:04:33,560 It's clear that this is a heftily contracted work 657 01:04:33,640 --> 01:04:36,640 between Leonardo and Ludovico Sforza 658 01:04:36,720 --> 01:04:40,400 but, at the same time, it's clear that Leonardo either has license to 659 01:04:40,480 --> 01:04:44,360 or pushes at the boundaries of what had been produced 660 01:04:44,440 --> 01:04:46,000 in images of the Last Supper before. 661 01:04:46,080 --> 01:04:49,880 So it starts with conventional theology, the moment where Christ says, 662 01:04:50,000 --> 01:04:51,800 "One of you will betray me," 663 01:04:51,880 --> 01:04:53,440 but, even as you look at the work, 664 01:04:53,520 --> 01:04:58,680 you realise it conflates a series of mini-narratives into one image. 665 01:04:58,760 --> 01:05:02,240 It has this kind of underlying rhythm that binds it together. 666 01:05:02,320 --> 01:05:08,080 It has this central figure and actually everything emanates from Him. 667 01:05:08,160 --> 01:05:12,080 So you see Saint James throwing his arms out. 668 01:05:12,160 --> 01:05:14,680 You see Saint Thomas pointing upwards as if to say, 669 01:05:14,760 --> 01:05:16,560 "Is this the will of God?" 670 01:05:16,640 --> 01:05:20,680 And actually Judas is always interesting in the Last Supper, 671 01:05:20,760 --> 01:05:23,480 and not just in the way that he carries the bag of silver, 672 01:05:23,560 --> 01:05:25,400 it becomes the symbol of his betrayal, 673 01:05:25,480 --> 01:05:31,720 but the way that Peter leans across to whisper manically in Saint John's ear; 674 01:05:31,800 --> 01:05:35,360 he pushes Judas away but towards us, 675 01:05:35,440 --> 01:05:38,320 so he's both of the scene and separated from it. 676 01:05:40,520 --> 01:05:45,440 Because of publishing and mechanical reproduction, photography, 677 01:05:46,400 --> 01:05:49,640 we have a much greater sense of histories of art 678 01:05:49,720 --> 01:05:51,920 and what's important because of reproduction, 679 01:05:52,040 --> 01:05:56,040 but we forget that actually it was only the most public of monuments 680 01:05:56,120 --> 01:05:57,800 that had that broad appeal. 681 01:05:57,880 --> 01:06:00,120 A lot of art was produced for private spaces 682 01:06:00,200 --> 01:06:03,040 churches. 683 01:06:03,120 --> 01:06:07,120 This work was produced for a private dining room of a monastery in Milan 684 01:06:07,200 --> 01:06:10,600 and yet, in its lifetime, stories spread. 685 01:06:10,680 --> 01:06:14,360 The work became an object of curiosity. People wanted to see it. 686 01:06:15,360 --> 01:06:18,560 In the way we look at the Renaissance, 687 01:06:18,640 --> 01:06:24,080 there's no doubt that this work is a major pivotal moment. 688 01:06:32,320 --> 01:06:36,320 We should take into account Leonardo did lots of other things. 689 01:06:36,400 --> 01:06:40,640 One of his roles was as an impresario, visual things at the court, 690 01:06:40,720 --> 01:06:42,800 doing stage scenery and so on. 691 01:06:42,880 --> 01:06:46,760 The one glimpse of this we have, really, from finished, surviving works, 692 01:06:46,840 --> 01:06:49,160 is the Sala delle Asse. 693 01:06:49,240 --> 01:06:54,080 This is a big, corner room in this majestic Sforza castle. 694 01:06:55,160 --> 01:06:58,480 It's very battered, it was completely overpainted at one point. 695 01:06:58,560 --> 01:07:00,400 So, it was completely covered in. 696 01:07:00,480 --> 01:07:02,600 It's now undergoing more restoration 697 01:07:02,680 --> 01:07:05,800 and there are some bits that absolutely speak of Leonardo. 698 01:07:05,880 --> 01:07:08,120 He conceived a scheme of decoration 699 01:07:08,200 --> 01:07:12,440 with trees coming up from a rocky substratum, 700 01:07:12,520 --> 01:07:13,920 and you can see the roots. 701 01:07:14,040 --> 01:07:17,520 There are drawings for the roots amongst these horizontal rocks. 702 01:07:17,600 --> 01:07:20,600 They rise in the form of great trunks, 703 01:07:20,680 --> 01:07:23,680 and then these ramify through the ceiling, 704 01:07:25,840 --> 01:07:30,120 Ludovico Sforza's nickname was il Moro, 705 01:07:30,200 --> 01:07:33,080 which is the mulberry, or the black man. 706 01:07:33,160 --> 01:07:36,720 So, this is emblematic of Ludovico il Moro. 707 01:07:37,440 --> 01:07:39,600 There is a gold chain running through them. 708 01:07:39,680 --> 01:07:42,880 Again, a knotted chain, which is almost certainly reference 709 01:07:43,000 --> 01:07:46,400 to the d'Este family, his wife was Beatrice d'Este, 710 01:07:46,480 --> 01:07:51,600 and in the centre there is the dynastic shield of Ludovico and of Beatrice. 711 01:09:00,680 --> 01:09:03,000 "Leonardo has just finished a little picture 712 01:09:03,080 --> 01:09:07,080 he is doing for one Robertet, a favourite of the King of France. 713 01:09:07,160 --> 01:09:11,880 It is of a Madonna seated as if she were about to spin yarn. 714 01:09:12,840 --> 01:09:16,279 The child has placed his foot on the basket of yarns 715 01:09:16,359 --> 01:09:18,640 and has grasped the yarnwinder 716 01:09:18,720 --> 01:09:23,160 and gazes attentively at the four spokes that are in the form of a cross. 717 01:09:24,279 --> 01:09:28,600 As if desirous of the cross he smiles and holds it firm, 718 01:09:28,680 --> 01:09:31,240 and is unwilling to yield it to his mother 719 01:09:31,319 --> 01:09:33,640 who seems to want to take it away from him. 720 01:09:35,160 --> 01:09:37,680 This is as much as I could get from Leonardo." 721 01:09:38,559 --> 01:09:39,760 Fra Pieto. 722 01:10:12,200 --> 01:10:17,040 Leonardo was around in 1499, when the French arrived 723 01:10:17,120 --> 01:10:18,520 and, Florimond Robertet, 724 01:10:18,600 --> 01:10:21,760 who was Secretary of State to three successive French kings, 725 01:10:21,840 --> 01:10:25,559 was amongst the invaders and he commissioned a small Madonna 726 01:10:26,480 --> 01:10:29,840 and we have an eye witness, Fra Pietro da Novellara, 727 01:10:29,920 --> 01:10:34,080 the Head of the Carmelites in Mantua, writing a letter to Isabella d'Este, 728 01:10:34,160 --> 01:10:36,240 who describes what Leonardo is doing. 729 01:10:36,320 --> 01:10:41,040 He describes a little dramatic picture, and we had two versions of that. 730 01:10:41,840 --> 01:10:43,240 You can see what's happening, 731 01:10:43,320 --> 01:10:47,040 that these two pictures are on the easels in the studio 732 01:10:47,120 --> 01:10:50,840 and Leonardo develops a bit in one, he develops a bit in another, 733 01:10:50,920 --> 01:10:54,920 and you can almost see, step by step, how these are resulting. 734 01:10:56,320 --> 01:10:58,720 They come out as very beautiful pictures 735 01:10:58,800 --> 01:11:01,840 with some studio participation, undoubtedly. 736 01:11:01,920 --> 01:11:06,200 But it's a fascinating insight to say he's doing this for Robertet, 737 01:11:06,280 --> 01:11:09,760 so why don't we do another very saleable one beside it? 738 01:12:43,440 --> 01:12:47,080 If there's one thing that everyone can agree on 739 01:12:47,160 --> 01:12:51,400 it's that the Mona Lisa is truly the most famous painting in the world. 740 01:12:52,440 --> 01:12:54,760 Not only the most famous painting by Leonardo da Vinci 741 01:12:54,840 --> 01:12:57,559 but of all time, by any artist. 742 01:12:59,559 --> 01:13:05,720 This painting is quite extraordinary, for various reasons. 743 01:13:05,800 --> 01:13:09,200 Leonardo himself created a myth around this painting. 744 01:13:09,280 --> 01:13:12,240 Then its theft at the beginning of the 20th century. 745 01:13:12,880 --> 01:13:15,400 Then its reinterpretation by various artists 746 01:13:15,480 --> 01:13:17,559 and its use in advertising 747 01:13:17,640 --> 01:13:21,840 means that it has become the embodiment of painting, 748 01:13:21,920 --> 01:13:26,600 the most famous image of all the pictures ever painted. 749 01:13:27,600 --> 01:13:31,040 There's been much discussion about the identity of the sitter 750 01:13:31,120 --> 01:13:35,600 but I think that we can state with some certainty 751 01:13:35,680 --> 01:13:40,880 that the Mona Lisa depicts a Florentine woman 752 01:13:41,000 --> 01:13:44,559 called Lisa Gherardini del Giocondo. 753 01:13:45,680 --> 01:13:49,920 We know that she was born in Florence in 1479 754 01:13:50,040 --> 01:13:53,520 although the family was from the surrounding areas of Florence 755 01:13:53,600 --> 01:13:55,200 around Siena. 756 01:13:55,280 --> 01:13:59,320 We know she married a certain Francesco del Giocondo 757 01:13:59,400 --> 01:14:03,080 who was a silk merchant and whose business was doing very well 758 01:14:03,160 --> 01:14:04,920 so it really was a decent marriage. 759 01:14:05,720 --> 01:14:09,840 We can assume that Leonardo had a special relationship with this family, 760 01:14:09,920 --> 01:14:11,920 maybe with this woman 761 01:14:12,040 --> 01:14:15,440 and that her face and her personality 762 01:14:15,520 --> 01:14:21,840 was of sufficient interest to encourage him 763 01:14:21,920 --> 01:14:27,080 to paint her and make this one of his greatest masterpieces. 764 01:14:29,680 --> 01:14:31,720 The extraordinary thing about the Mona Lisa 765 01:14:31,800 --> 01:14:34,559 is the subtlety of her expression. 766 01:14:35,440 --> 01:14:37,520 People have always said that she is smiling 767 01:14:37,600 --> 01:14:41,040 but the smile isn't very pronounced. 768 01:14:41,559 --> 01:14:45,680 Some people have seen a touch of melancholy 769 01:14:45,760 --> 01:14:48,440 or other human expressions. 770 01:14:50,040 --> 01:14:54,840 Leonardo brings this subtle smile to life 771 01:14:54,920 --> 01:15:00,440 thanks to his technique, known as sfumato. 772 01:15:03,520 --> 01:15:05,640 No edges can be seen. 773 01:15:05,720 --> 01:15:08,160 There is an initial edge, or rather lines 774 01:15:08,240 --> 01:15:13,840 but Leonardo blurs these by overlaying layers of paint in glazes. 775 01:15:13,920 --> 01:15:18,920 These are layers of extremely transparent oil paint 776 01:15:19,040 --> 01:15:23,240 and this is what creates this sense of vibration, 777 01:15:23,320 --> 01:15:26,720 this extremely vibrant effect that the smile has. 778 01:15:26,800 --> 01:15:29,520 And this is what gives subtlety 779 01:15:29,600 --> 01:15:34,160 and mystery to the expression. 780 01:15:35,880 --> 01:15:38,920 I've been lucky enough to see the Mona Lisa out of its frame 781 01:15:39,040 --> 01:15:41,160 and in a light that penetrated 782 01:15:41,240 --> 01:15:44,200 its current, very brown varnish, 783 01:15:44,280 --> 01:15:49,480 to reveal a range of colour that is absolutely astonishing. 784 01:15:49,559 --> 01:15:55,280 It has not just the gravity, the timelessness, 785 01:15:55,360 --> 01:15:58,559 the eternal feminine that people talk about, 786 01:15:58,640 --> 01:16:04,400 but it has a kind of immediacy, a sense of a real personality. 787 01:16:04,480 --> 01:16:07,320 So the Mona Lisa is both Leonardo's ideal 788 01:16:07,400 --> 01:16:12,240 and a real Florentine woman who he chose to represent that ideal. 789 01:16:12,320 --> 01:16:15,880 I think that's the part that sometimes gets left out. 790 01:16:16,000 --> 01:16:19,920 She's become so emblematic, so iconic, 791 01:16:20,040 --> 01:16:23,080 that we don't see the human being anymore. 792 01:16:24,480 --> 01:16:26,800 Artists work in a number of different ways 793 01:16:26,880 --> 01:16:30,880 and one thing that one can say unquestionably about Leonardo 794 01:16:31,000 --> 01:16:35,480 is that he worked slowly and extraordinarily thoughtfully, 795 01:16:35,559 --> 01:16:37,200 as well as erratically. 796 01:16:37,280 --> 01:16:40,480 So all of his pictures, I think, 797 01:16:40,559 --> 01:16:43,400 were the result of tremendous planning 798 01:16:43,480 --> 01:16:49,320 and then a process that was of continual creativity, 799 01:16:49,400 --> 01:16:52,240 to a point where it was never really clear 800 01:16:52,320 --> 01:16:55,559 when a picture was actually finished and when it wasn't. 801 01:16:56,360 --> 01:17:00,680 What happened, to my mind, in Mona Lisa is it begins as a portrait, 802 01:17:01,440 --> 01:17:04,280 and Leonardo progressively, over the years, 803 01:17:04,360 --> 01:17:09,680 poured everything he knew about the painting and poetry 804 01:17:09,760 --> 01:17:11,760 into that single picture. 805 01:17:11,840 --> 01:17:14,840 So it becomes a very remarkable, complicated thing. 806 01:17:14,920 --> 01:17:16,920 You've got the optics. 807 01:17:17,040 --> 01:17:20,240 He is looking, at that time, at the complexity of the human eye, 808 01:17:20,320 --> 01:17:24,200 and he says, "The eye does not know the edge of any body." 809 01:17:24,280 --> 01:17:27,880 This extreme blurring and indefiniteness is a scientific thing 810 01:17:28,000 --> 01:17:30,080 but it's also a poetic thing. 811 01:17:30,160 --> 01:17:34,040 It also corresponds to this poetic, beloved lady 812 01:17:34,120 --> 01:17:36,400 who is always out of reach. 813 01:17:36,480 --> 01:17:38,760 You can look at the physics of drapery. 814 01:17:38,840 --> 01:17:41,880 He is interested in how different thicknesses of drapery 815 01:17:42,000 --> 01:17:44,440 compress and curl, and so on. 816 01:17:45,160 --> 01:17:48,920 You've got the mountainous landscape, which is full of geology. 817 01:17:49,040 --> 01:17:51,080 You've got a high lake and a low lake, 818 01:17:51,160 --> 01:17:55,080 and he says at one point "the Arno Valley was like that." 819 01:17:55,160 --> 01:17:59,720 The amount he puts into it in terms of science is just extraordinary, 820 01:17:59,800 --> 01:18:02,920 the amount he puts into it in terms of poetry and psychology, 821 01:18:03,040 --> 01:18:04,320 it's just extraordinary. 822 01:18:04,400 --> 01:18:07,800 So it becomes what I call a "universal picture." 823 01:18:07,880 --> 01:18:11,520 Everything he can do in painting is all put into that 824 01:18:11,600 --> 01:18:15,680 and even if we only get out a fraction of it as a spectator, 825 01:18:15,760 --> 01:18:17,640 it is still very remarkable. 826 01:19:51,320 --> 01:19:53,720 To me the extraordinary thing about the Salvator Mundi 827 01:19:53,800 --> 01:19:57,000 is that it precisely demonstrates 828 01:19:57,080 --> 01:20:00,800 how Leonardo's observation of natural phenomena 829 01:20:00,880 --> 01:20:05,800 can be used at the service of the creation of a vision of God. 830 01:20:07,160 --> 01:20:10,000 For example, looking at the hands, 831 01:20:10,080 --> 01:20:12,600 which have an immediacy and a presence, 832 01:20:12,680 --> 01:20:16,760 they practically break out of the painting into our realm, 833 01:20:16,840 --> 01:20:18,840 and how that's contrasted with this 834 01:20:18,920 --> 01:20:22,080 almost spectral quality for the face of Christ. 835 01:20:23,640 --> 01:20:26,320 I think what Leonardo's doing there is showing that, 836 01:20:26,400 --> 01:20:31,600 as an artist whose talent was, as he would have believed, God-given, 837 01:20:31,680 --> 01:20:37,080 that he has access to a vision of Christ which was beyond the norm, 838 01:20:37,160 --> 01:20:40,000 which was almost miraculous in its own right 839 01:20:40,080 --> 01:20:44,680 and he's bringing Christ into the present, 840 01:20:44,760 --> 01:20:46,840 into our imaginations, 841 01:20:46,920 --> 01:20:50,280 through the power of his imagination. 842 01:20:50,360 --> 01:20:55,480 He creates a whole world around that crystal orb, 843 01:20:55,559 --> 01:21:01,360 and he chooses to both represent the world as you see it 844 01:21:01,440 --> 01:21:08,040 and to then edit and distort in order to arrive at a greater truth. 845 01:21:08,120 --> 01:21:15,520 To me, at least, Leonardo is all about arriving at the greater truth. 846 01:21:24,800 --> 01:21:28,320 The image itself, the idea of the Salvator Mundi subject 847 01:21:28,400 --> 01:21:31,520 is actually rather archaic, it's an old one. 848 01:21:31,600 --> 01:21:35,440 That is a frontal portrayal of Christ blessing with one hand, 849 01:21:35,520 --> 01:21:37,800 holding an orb in the other. 850 01:21:37,880 --> 01:21:42,120 But what Leonardo does is take something that is very traditional 851 01:21:42,200 --> 01:21:46,400 and creates something much broader and deeper with it. 852 01:21:46,480 --> 01:21:49,680 In the orb, taking something which is normally... 853 01:21:49,760 --> 01:21:52,680 Let's say it began as a representation of the Earth 854 01:21:52,760 --> 01:21:56,040 and then not just turning it into a glass sphere 855 01:21:56,120 --> 01:22:00,480 but into a crystal sphere and something that really represents the Universe 856 01:22:00,559 --> 01:22:03,000 rather than just the Earth. 857 01:22:03,080 --> 01:22:08,640 In the same way the image of Christ is not one of a forbidding figure, 858 01:22:08,720 --> 01:22:13,840 it's one of someone that one can relate to in this very personal way, 859 01:22:13,920 --> 01:22:15,760 even in an emotional way. 860 01:22:15,840 --> 01:22:20,200 So I think what he's done here is given this new life and new meaning. 861 01:22:23,000 --> 01:22:25,000 My own sense with this picture is that 862 01:22:25,080 --> 01:22:26,920 it was painted over a long period of time, 863 01:22:27,040 --> 01:22:29,559 as many of Leonardo's pictures were. 864 01:22:29,640 --> 01:22:32,440 So it may well have begun as a commission 865 01:22:32,520 --> 01:22:36,080 but it would seem that it's a picture that began 866 01:22:36,160 --> 01:22:39,280 in the very first years of the 16th century 867 01:22:39,360 --> 01:22:42,200 and that he had with him when he died. 868 01:22:42,280 --> 01:22:45,480 So if there were a specific patron at the beginning 869 01:22:45,559 --> 01:22:47,160 there certainly wasn't one at the end 870 01:22:47,240 --> 01:22:51,559 and I think it allowed Leonardo to do whatever he wanted to. 871 01:22:54,360 --> 01:22:57,360 One aspect I think that's particularly interesting 872 01:22:57,440 --> 01:23:00,440 is looking at the picture in relation to The Last Supper, 873 01:23:00,520 --> 01:23:02,160 because, of course, in The Last Supper, 874 01:23:02,240 --> 01:23:05,720 the figure of Christ is not terribly well preserved. 875 01:23:05,800 --> 01:23:09,559 And early on it was said in written accounts 876 01:23:09,640 --> 01:23:13,640 that Leonardo couldn't bring himself to portray Christ, 877 01:23:13,720 --> 01:23:16,240 that it was just somehow beyond him. 878 01:23:16,320 --> 01:23:19,720 I think that we know that's not necessarily the case now, 879 01:23:19,800 --> 01:23:25,120 because here he has tackled this most challenging subject 880 01:23:25,200 --> 01:23:29,200 and created this indelible image of Christ 881 01:23:29,280 --> 01:23:32,640 as a figure who is both divine and human. 882 01:23:35,480 --> 01:23:40,320 How one defines Leonardo in looking at the picture is a hard thing to define. 883 01:23:40,400 --> 01:23:42,800 One aspect is certainly the quality of the picture 884 01:23:42,880 --> 01:23:47,720 and the absolute phenomenal way in which optical effects are conveyed, 885 01:23:47,800 --> 01:23:51,720 whether it's the shadow on the fingernail of the blessing hand 886 01:23:51,800 --> 01:23:57,840 or whether it's the change in tonalities across the skin tones of Christ. 887 01:23:57,920 --> 01:24:00,840 But beyond that I think it's the effect, 888 01:24:00,920 --> 01:24:05,000 it's this emotional direct connection that one has 889 01:24:05,080 --> 01:24:11,080 between the viewer and this man who painted this picture 500 years ago. 890 01:24:11,160 --> 01:24:14,040 That's really something that can't be imitated. 891 01:26:05,600 --> 01:26:08,800 For a long time it was thought that the monks of the brotherhood 892 01:26:08,880 --> 01:26:11,320 had rejected the painting of The Virgin of the Rocks 893 01:26:11,400 --> 01:26:13,800 for iconographic reasons. 894 01:26:13,880 --> 01:26:16,720 But they didn't reject the painting, 895 01:26:16,800 --> 01:26:19,800 they just didn't agree to pay Leonardo more for it. 896 01:26:21,000 --> 01:26:25,880 Nevertheless he adapted it, changing it for another buyer. 897 01:26:26,000 --> 01:26:29,160 This painting passed to another art lover, 898 01:26:29,240 --> 01:26:31,120 possibly the Duke of Milan himself. 899 01:26:31,200 --> 01:26:36,040 But ultimately Leonardo was bound by the contract from the Immaculate Conception. 900 01:26:36,120 --> 01:26:38,120 So he painted a second picture, 901 01:26:38,200 --> 01:26:41,400 the version which is now in the National Gallery, London. 902 01:26:42,680 --> 01:26:46,440 One of the key evolutions between this work and the one in the Louvre 903 01:26:46,520 --> 01:26:49,320 is the fact that he's thought about the way 904 01:26:49,400 --> 01:26:51,720 he might unify the space 905 01:26:51,800 --> 01:26:54,440 and make a more convincing depiction of the grotto, 906 01:26:54,520 --> 01:26:57,840 which goes up above, to the top of the composition. 907 01:26:57,920 --> 01:27:01,720 There's no sky above, as in the Louvre work, 908 01:27:01,800 --> 01:27:05,840 and the way he can make quite dramatic use of dappled lighting 909 01:27:05,920 --> 01:27:08,160 to fall across the forms in certain ways, 910 01:27:08,240 --> 01:27:12,440 like the way it catches the front of the Baptist's left foot 911 01:27:12,520 --> 01:27:16,280 or falls across the arm of the angel and you see the void behind. 912 01:27:16,360 --> 01:27:20,040 All those things, I think, are based and rooted in observation, 913 01:27:20,120 --> 01:27:21,920 and then twisted, I think, 914 01:27:22,040 --> 01:27:24,880 to enhance the kind of expressive qualities of the work. 915 01:27:26,160 --> 01:27:29,680 The advance in this work has to do with the kind of guiding intelligence 916 01:27:29,760 --> 01:27:32,360 about how the whole is orchestrated, 917 01:27:32,440 --> 01:27:35,200 how the rich dark-brown under-modelling 918 01:27:35,280 --> 01:27:37,600 that lies beneath the whole thing is brought up in a way 919 01:27:37,680 --> 01:27:41,000 that it makes the use of selective colour 920 01:27:41,080 --> 01:27:44,000 much more effective and believable. 921 01:27:44,080 --> 01:27:47,400 You have here an interest, of course, in giving the Virgin 922 01:27:47,480 --> 01:27:50,680 the most brightly coloured, the most strongly saturated hues 923 01:27:50,760 --> 01:27:54,000 but the angels are wearing similar colours in a lower key. 924 01:27:54,080 --> 01:27:58,200 All of that colour, kind of being corroded by shadow 925 01:27:58,280 --> 01:28:00,680 is very, very carefully worked out. 926 01:28:01,480 --> 01:28:04,800 I certainly look at the way the materials are used in the angel, 927 01:28:04,880 --> 01:28:07,720 where it's the concentration of effort 928 01:28:07,800 --> 01:28:09,559 to create the effect that he wishes 929 01:28:09,640 --> 01:28:14,120 when you have this kind of brownish, almost grisaille under-modelling 930 01:28:14,200 --> 01:28:19,240 that's really exploited and left to tell very strongly in the angel's costume. 931 01:28:19,320 --> 01:28:22,559 Then it's a selective area where he's built up the highlights, 932 01:28:22,640 --> 01:28:25,800 and where he's put the fine detail, and where it's not there. 933 01:28:25,880 --> 01:28:29,160 I think those choices are the things that are truly thrilling 934 01:28:29,240 --> 01:28:32,080 and speak absolutely to the hand of Leonardo. 935 01:28:33,000 --> 01:28:36,400 He thought about audience probably less than many artists 936 01:28:36,480 --> 01:28:40,040 because I think he didn't seem to be a "people-pleaser" 937 01:28:40,120 --> 01:28:42,800 in terms of looking at the history of his commissions. 938 01:28:42,880 --> 01:28:47,920 One has the sense that his interests were his own concerns 939 01:28:48,040 --> 01:28:50,880 and how he might express those. 940 01:28:51,000 --> 01:28:52,440 The paintings themselves 941 01:28:52,520 --> 01:28:55,680 are almost an illustration of his intellectual endeavour 942 01:28:55,760 --> 01:28:57,040 rather than an end product, 943 01:28:57,120 --> 01:28:59,680 and so I think "finish" meant something different to him. 944 01:28:59,760 --> 01:29:01,600 It certainly feels that way. 945 01:29:01,680 --> 01:29:04,680 I don't think it's the same single-minded pursuit 946 01:29:04,760 --> 01:29:08,320 of fame and reputation you might find in other artists 947 01:29:08,400 --> 01:29:12,680 who were more concerned with success in the conventional sense. 948 01:29:13,720 --> 01:29:16,640 I think this was a devotional object, obviously, 949 01:29:16,720 --> 01:29:20,160 but I think it also always would have been understood 950 01:29:20,240 --> 01:29:23,600 by the more educated or the more enlightened viewers 951 01:29:23,680 --> 01:29:27,160 in the late 15th century as something that had these other artistic, 952 01:29:27,240 --> 01:29:29,760 intrinsic artistic interest as well. 953 01:29:31,920 --> 01:29:36,160 its impact in religious, philosophical, or psychological terms. 954 01:29:36,240 --> 01:29:39,760 I think in some ways there's an essential truth that still survives 955 01:29:39,840 --> 01:29:43,240 and comes to us even in a gallery in the 21st century. 956 01:30:54,520 --> 01:30:58,040 St. John the Baptist remains quite a mysterious painting 957 01:30:58,559 --> 01:31:01,320 but we can assume that Leonardo 958 01:31:01,400 --> 01:31:04,920 worked out its composition between 1506 and 1508 959 01:31:05,040 --> 01:31:07,880 when he was living between Florence and Milan. 960 01:31:08,640 --> 01:31:12,840 St. John the Baptist was very popular in Florence, 961 01:31:12,920 --> 01:31:15,280 indeed he's one of the patron saints of the city. 962 01:31:16,160 --> 01:31:19,480 Did he paint this picture for a Florentine art lover? 963 01:31:19,559 --> 01:31:22,880 Or could it be that he painted this picture for himself? 964 01:31:23,000 --> 01:31:24,600 As an act of devotion 965 01:31:24,680 --> 01:31:27,200 and also as an act of artistic research? 966 01:31:27,280 --> 01:31:28,280 It's possible. 967 01:31:30,040 --> 01:31:31,920 What is wonderful about St. John the Baptist 968 01:31:32,040 --> 01:31:37,480 is that it reveals a huge amount about Leonardo's research into light. 969 01:31:38,160 --> 01:31:42,680 St. John the Baptist is an extraordinarily economical painting. 970 01:31:43,320 --> 01:31:45,320 There is practically no colour. 971 01:31:45,400 --> 01:31:48,760 There are only transitions from shadow to light. 972 01:31:50,120 --> 01:31:53,920 And this St. John the Baptist is perhaps the most beautiful illustration 973 01:31:54,040 --> 01:31:57,440 of the first words of the Gospel according to St. John, 974 01:31:57,520 --> 01:31:59,800 namely words uniquely centred 975 01:31:59,880 --> 01:32:03,920 on the appearance of light in darkness. 976 01:32:05,040 --> 01:32:08,720 The first light announcing the arrival of Jesus Christ 977 01:32:08,800 --> 01:32:11,240 but a light that will disappear. 978 01:32:11,320 --> 01:32:14,720 And Leonardo shows us this here. 979 01:32:15,800 --> 01:32:18,920 We are faced with an apparition 980 01:32:19,040 --> 01:32:21,760 but an apparition that is destined to disappear. 981 01:32:21,840 --> 01:32:23,840 And that is the ambiguity of this painting. 982 01:32:26,040 --> 01:32:28,400 Is this an appearance or a disappearance? 983 01:32:28,480 --> 01:32:31,040 Leonardo shows us both. 984 01:32:32,120 --> 01:32:33,880 This is one of the most beautiful 985 01:32:34,000 --> 01:32:37,360 and extraordinary works from a pictorial perspective 986 01:32:37,440 --> 01:32:39,720 in terms of its economy 987 01:32:39,800 --> 01:32:42,840 and truly as an artistic creation. 988 01:32:47,800 --> 01:32:54,120 Leonardo, from 1507 to 1513, is in Milan and he is a painter, 989 01:32:54,200 --> 01:32:56,440 an engineer, to the French king, Louis XII. 990 01:32:56,520 --> 01:33:00,160 So, he has very strong links with the French. 991 01:33:00,240 --> 01:33:03,000 He then goes to Rome under Medician patronage. 992 01:33:03,080 --> 01:33:07,600 Leo X, Giovanni de' Medici, became the very young Pope 993 01:33:07,680 --> 01:33:12,680 and Leonardo's patron was Giuliano, who was Pope Leo's brother. 994 01:33:14,440 --> 01:33:16,440 You've certainly got the younger artists. 995 01:33:16,520 --> 01:33:18,520 You've got Michelangelo in Rome, 996 01:33:18,600 --> 01:33:21,800 he had finished the Sistine ceiling by the time Leonardo arrived, 997 01:33:21,880 --> 01:33:25,360 and Raphael is doing amazing narratives. 998 01:33:27,320 --> 01:33:33,559 Giuliano dies, he dies quite young, and Leonardo is left without a patron. 999 01:33:33,640 --> 01:33:35,480 He then got a very good offer. 1000 01:33:36,240 --> 01:33:40,440 He was paid a huge amount by Francis I, the French king, 1001 01:33:40,520 --> 01:33:43,880 basically Francis had bought a star, 1002 01:33:44,000 --> 01:33:46,600 like a football club would now buy a star striker. 1003 01:33:46,680 --> 01:33:48,760 You had bought your star artist. 1004 01:33:51,600 --> 01:33:53,440 Leonardo crossed the Alps 1005 01:33:53,520 --> 01:33:56,360 and he carried three masterpieces 1006 01:33:56,440 --> 01:33:59,920 which are the Mona Lisa, St. Anne, and St. John the Baptist. 1007 01:34:01,000 --> 01:34:06,280 It was a long journey and certainly his last. 1008 01:34:07,120 --> 01:34:12,320 The king gave him the use of the ch?teau 1009 01:34:12,400 --> 01:34:16,120 with an income of a thousand ?cus which was a fortune 1010 01:34:16,200 --> 01:34:22,000 and the freedom to work on royal commissions. 1011 01:34:23,920 --> 01:34:25,360 He was expected to do things, 1012 01:34:25,440 --> 01:34:28,440 but the pressure in Florence was for hand to mouth, 1013 01:34:28,520 --> 01:34:30,760 you know, of doing a painting and being paid. 1014 01:34:30,840 --> 01:34:32,200 He wasn't well suited for that. 1015 01:34:32,280 --> 01:34:37,280 So, being an ornament of the great Renaissance court of Francis I 1016 01:34:37,360 --> 01:34:38,680 suited him very well. 1017 01:34:39,400 --> 01:34:41,120 Like Henry VIII in Britain, 1018 01:34:41,200 --> 01:34:45,440 part of Francis' ambition was to attract in big artists. 1019 01:34:45,520 --> 01:34:48,840 They saw themselves as great Renaissance princes 1020 01:34:48,920 --> 01:34:51,880 buying into the new learning in visual arts, 1021 01:34:52,000 --> 01:34:54,280 in literature, in music, and so on. 1022 01:34:54,360 --> 01:34:57,200 So Francis is immensely important, 1023 01:34:57,280 --> 01:34:59,600 and I think a very gracious patron to Leonardo 1024 01:34:59,680 --> 01:35:02,400 in the last three years of his life. 1025 01:35:07,000 --> 01:35:10,800 "The king, who had often lovingly visited him, 1026 01:35:10,880 --> 01:35:14,440 arrived one day, and out of reverence, 1027 01:35:14,520 --> 01:35:18,240 Leonardo raised himself in bed to a sitting position, 1028 01:35:18,320 --> 01:35:22,080 speaking of his illness and the symptoms he was exhibiting, 1029 01:35:22,160 --> 01:35:25,160 and above all how he had given offense to God 1030 01:35:25,240 --> 01:35:26,680 and to the people of the world 1031 01:35:26,760 --> 01:35:29,880 for not having worked on his art as he should have done. 1032 01:35:31,400 --> 01:35:37,520 Leonardo expired in the arms of the king." 1033 01:35:38,880 --> 01:35:40,320 Giorgio Vasari. 1034 01:36:53,880 --> 01:36:56,600 Of Leonardo's last paintings 1035 01:36:56,680 --> 01:36:59,360 The Virgin and Child with St. Anne is doubtless the most ambitious. 1036 01:37:02,480 --> 01:37:05,280 St. Anne, the Virgin Mary and the Infant Jesus. 1037 01:37:07,080 --> 01:37:10,800 And Leonardo kept on working on this history scene 1038 01:37:10,880 --> 01:37:12,400 right up to the end of his life. 1039 01:37:15,160 --> 01:37:18,240 This painting is also hugely important because 1040 01:37:18,320 --> 01:37:19,760 of Leonardo's last paintings 1041 01:37:19,840 --> 01:37:23,360 it is this one that offers an extremely rich 1042 01:37:23,440 --> 01:37:25,280 and global vision of nature. 1043 01:37:27,440 --> 01:37:31,280 The painting contains Leonardo's finest landscape 1044 01:37:31,360 --> 01:37:34,360 because it has a monumental quality that is extraordinary, 1045 01:37:34,440 --> 01:37:37,080 even more imposing than the landscape in the Mona Lisa. 1046 01:37:38,200 --> 01:37:41,040 And the ground, made up of layers of rock, 1047 01:37:41,120 --> 01:37:42,719 is absolutely extraordinary. 1048 01:37:44,360 --> 01:37:45,760 Without doubt 1049 01:37:45,840 --> 01:37:47,840 if you want to study Leonardo da Vinci 1050 01:37:47,920 --> 01:37:50,160 when you look at his work as a whole 1051 01:37:50,240 --> 01:37:52,240 The Virgin and Child with St. Anne should be regarded 1052 01:37:52,320 --> 01:37:53,880 as the culmination of his research 1053 01:37:54,000 --> 01:37:55,680 and the work that best reveals 1054 01:37:55,760 --> 01:38:00,080 his scientific, poetic and artistic investigations. 1055 01:38:03,040 --> 01:38:05,240 But I would say that there's a second aspect 1056 01:38:05,320 --> 01:38:07,400 that I particularly like in this painting 1057 01:38:07,480 --> 01:38:09,280 and that is the Virgin Mary's face. 1058 01:38:10,400 --> 01:38:14,000 Here again Leonardo has achieved something extraordinary, 1059 01:38:14,080 --> 01:38:16,280 this understanding of the human expression. 1060 01:38:17,880 --> 01:38:21,200 Leonardo died before he could put 1061 01:38:21,280 --> 01:38:25,240 the final layers of glaze on the Virgin Mary's face. 1062 01:38:25,320 --> 01:38:29,320 It was the most subtle face and expression in the entire painting 1063 01:38:29,400 --> 01:38:34,240 and he was trying to express the moment of the Virgin Mary's conversion. 1064 01:38:34,320 --> 01:38:37,040 The moment when the mother of Jesus 1065 01:38:37,120 --> 01:38:39,840 accepts the death of her son. 1066 01:38:39,920 --> 01:38:41,040 From being a mother, 1067 01:38:41,120 --> 01:38:43,520 someone who wishes to prevent this death, 1068 01:38:43,600 --> 01:38:45,840 she becomes instead the mother of God. 1069 01:38:45,920 --> 01:38:49,559 She accepts this destiny and his journey towards death. 1070 01:38:50,760 --> 01:38:53,600 And so we have this smile 1071 01:38:53,680 --> 01:38:56,680 which emerges from an expression of sadness 1072 01:38:56,760 --> 01:39:00,680 and it's only Leonardo, with his understanding of humanity, 1073 01:39:00,760 --> 01:39:02,600 of the human expression, 1074 01:39:02,680 --> 01:39:05,920 who is capable, with this poetry, this simplicity 1075 01:39:06,040 --> 01:39:07,840 of revealing such sentiments. 1076 01:39:09,800 --> 01:39:11,280 It was incredibly moving 1077 01:39:11,360 --> 01:39:15,440 when we restored the painting between 2010 and 2012 1078 01:39:15,520 --> 01:39:20,440 to discover Leonardo's final brushstrokes 1079 01:39:20,520 --> 01:39:25,639 on the Virgin Mary and on St. Anne's dress. 1080 01:39:26,719 --> 01:39:30,719 This really was for him his ultimate work 1081 01:39:31,600 --> 01:39:34,040 and the painting for which he never stopped 1082 01:39:34,120 --> 01:39:38,480 imagining additional refinements and new ideas 1083 01:39:38,559 --> 01:39:41,400 each one more sublime than the last. 90377

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