Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers Thomas Hockey 120 Accesses Alternate Name Vinci, Leonardo da Born Florence, (Italy), 15 April 1452 Died Cloux, near Amboise, (Indre-et-Loire), France, 2 May 1519 da Vinci, Leonardo. Courtesy of History of Science Collections, University of Oklahoma ...
The author describes the figures in question and cites Leonardo scholar Martin Kemp. The author talks about the number of lost works of Leonardo that people have claimed to have discovered. The article also provides some biographical information on Leonardo.EBSCO_AspSmithsonian...
Leonardo on the Human Body: The Anatomical, Physiological, and Embryological Drawings of Leonardo da Vinci. With Translations, Emendations and a Biographical Introduction. Henry Schuman, New York. Charles Nicholl (2005). Leonardo da Vinci, The Flights of the Mind. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-029681-6...
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Geometry and Dynamics in the Art of Leonardo da Vinci After a short biographical sketch in chapter one, chapter two explains how Leonardo contributed to a" semiotics of art". Two central concepts of his analysis of art are" geometry" and" dynamics". The application of these two notions to ...
The Data generally requested to use the Website’s is biographical information and contact details. The optional, explicit and voluntary sending of emails to the addresses indicated on the Website by the user entails the subsequent acquisition of the sender's address, necessary to answer the user...
Copyright information © 2014 Springer Science+Business Media New York About this entry Cite this entry (2014). Vinci, Leonardo da. In: Hockey, T.,et al.Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-9917-7_100473 ...
The psychobiographical literature on Leonardo da Vinci provides an ideal test case of the applied psychoanalysis. Starting with Freud's study in 1910, Leonardo has attracted more psychoanalytic, and in particular psychobiographical, attention for a longer period of time than any other visual artist....
The author talks about the number of lost works of Leonardo that people have claimed to have discovered. The article also provides some biographical information on Leonardo.doi:10.1515/semi.2009.074Landi, AnnSmithsonian
He would become close friends with Leonardo da Vinci, the iconic symbol of the Renaissance. This study analyzes simultaneously the lives of Pacioli and Leonardo, using a 'biographical lens' approach, incorporating older research and more recent work, to shed new light on the...