THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Michiko Kaktuani
By the age of 42 (in an era in which life expectancy was 40), Leonardo da Vinci had yet to create anything commensurate with his lofty ambitions. At that point, Ross King writes in his new book, “Leonardo and ‘The Last Supper” he “had produced only a few scattered paintings, a bizarre-looking music instrument, some ephemeral decorations for masques and festivals and many hundreds of pages of notes and drawings for studies he had not yet published, or for inventions he had not yet built.” In this volume Mr. King — gives us a gripping account of how that painting was created and how it represents, in his view, one of the few times in Leonardo’s life that he managed to “harness and concentrate his relentless energies and restless obsessions.” [link]
Tuesday, 30 October 2012
Book Review: Ross King’s "Leonardo and 'The Last Supper'”
Posted on 01:30 by john mical
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment