Leonardo da Vinci Paintings, Leonardo da Vinci Drawings

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Leonardo da Vinci Paintings, Leonardo da Vinci Drawings Today we will discuss Leonardo da Vinci paintings. He was born on April 15, 1452, and died on May 2, 1519. He was one of the leading artists of the High revitalization. His Fifteen works are usually attributed either in the whole or the large part to him. Most of them are paintings on the panel. And he was with the remainder being a fresco, as well as a large drawing on the paper, and also two works in the early stages of the preparation. The authorship of many paintings traditionally attributed to the Leonardo is in doubt. And two major works are also known only as copies. Works are also regularly assigned to the Leonardo with variable degrees of reliability. But none of Leonardo paintings are also signed. The attributions here draw on the opinions of various scholars.

The small numbers of the surviving paintings are also unpaid in part to da Vinci’s frequently terrible experimentation with the new techniques and even with his continual procrastination. Nevertheless, these few works added to his notebooks, and which contain drawings, as well as scientific diagrams, and also his thoughts on the nature of


the painting, comprise by a contribution to later generations of the artists rivaled only by that of his current, Michelangelo. Leonardo da Vinci Paintings “Salvator Mundi”:

Salvator Mundi is a painting of the Christ as Salvator Mundi which also created by Leonardo da Vinci. The painting also shows Jesus, in the Renaissance dress, by giving a blessing with his raised right hand and even crossed fingers while holding a translucent rock crystal orb in his left hand. This is signaling his role as a rescuer of the world and also the master of the cosmos. And it is also representing the “crystalline sphere” of the heavens, as it even supposed during the Renaissance. Around 20 other versions of the work are also known, by the students and followers of the Leonardo. Preliminary chalk and ink drawings of the material by Leonardo held in the Royal Collection. And a Long thought to be a copy, oblique with the overpainting of a lost original. So it also rediscovered in 2005, as well as restored, and also included in the significant Leonardo exhibition at the National Gallery, London, in the session of 2011–12. Many leading scholars have even since considered it to be an original work by the Leonardo da Vinci, though this credit has also been unclear by other specialists. It is one of the fewer than 20 known works by da Vinci and was also the only one to remain in the private hands. It also sold at the sale by Christie’s in New York, on 15 November 2017, for only $450.3 million. They were setting a new record for most expensive painting ever sold. History of Leonardo da Vinci Paintings:

Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi may have also painted for Louis XII of the France and also for his wife, Anne of Brittany. It possibly specially made for around 1500, and shortly when Louis conquered the Duchy of the Milan and also took control of the Genoa in the Second Italian War. Leonardo himself also moved from the Milan to the Florence in 1500. It may also have come to the England with Henrietta Maria when she married with Charles I of the England in 1625. And it also seems to have stayed in her private chambers at the Queen’s House in the Greenwich. Wenceslaus Hollar even made a drawing of the painting and published it in Antwerp in 1650 with the dedication to Leonardus da Vinci pinxit. Painting of Charles I:

Charles I completed in the 1649, and it was the end of English Civil War. And these paintings also included in 1649; there was an inventory of the Royal Collection, valuing


at the £30. The wealth of Charles sold under the English Commonwealth, and these paintings also sold in 1651 to the John Stone, a mason, to settle a balance. But it also returned to the Charles II of England after the English restitution in 1660. And it also included in an inventory of possessions of the Charles at the Palace of Whitehall in 1666. It also inherited by James II of England and may even then has passed to his mistress Catherine Sedley, Countess of Dorchester, whose unlawful daughter with the James became the third wife of the John Sheffield, and it was 1st Duke of the Buckingham and Normanby. And his own illegal son named, Sir Charles Herbert Sheffield, who was 1st Baronet. He also auctioned the painting in 1763 along with the other artworks from the Buckingham House, when this building sold to George III. The disappearing of the Painting: This painting then disappeared from the records until it also bought by a British collector named, Francis Cook. Who was 1st Viscount of the Monserrate? And in 1900, for his collection at Doughty House in Richmond. This painting also damaged from the previous restoration attempts and has attributed to a follower of the Leonardo, Bernardino Luini. The great-grandson of the Cook, Sir Francis Cook, 4th Baronet, and then sold it at an auction in 1958 for £45. As it was a work by Leonardo’s pupil Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio. And this painting remained attributed to Boltraffio until 2011.


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