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Leonardo : The Artist and the Man

Leonardo : The Artist and the Man
by Serge Bramly, Sian Reynolds (Translator)

 

Leonardo Da Vinci

Leonardo da Vinci
by Jack Wasserman

 

Leonardo Da Vinci and a Memory of His Childhood (Freud, Sigmund, Works.)

Leonardo da Vinci and a Memory of His Childhood 
by Sigmund Freud, James Strachey (Editor), Alan Tyson (Translator)

Leonardo da Vinci (1452 - 1519)

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Leonardo Da Vinci: The Complete Paintings

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The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci (Volume 1)The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci (Volume 1) by Leonardo da Vinci

This 2-Volume collection published by Dover wonderfully exhibits Leonardo's works with his sketches, designs and ideas. If you ever wondered what Leonardo thought, then these are the books to get. The book is set up with the text in two columns; the left in the original Italian, and the right side in the translated English. In those words are written of Leonardo's philosophical ideas, lives of where he lived and his surroundings, his theories on color, perspective, proportion, architecture, foliage, physiology and so many other things that the Great One was curious about. Throughout the book and amidst the text are Leonardo's sketches, thumbnail sketches, workings of famous pieces such as the Last Supper, some anatomical drawings - and in those pages you can see Leonardo's handwriting which he tended to write backwards. The value and reference is endless, especially for the artist. This edition is reprinted from the 1833 version originally entitled "Literary Works of Leonardo Da Vinci." This is a 2-volume set, which is sold separately, but for the price, it is so worth the money. Highly recommended! -- Anonymous Review

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The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci (Volume 2) by Leonardo da Vinci

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Leonardo on the Human BodyLeonardo on the Human Body by Leonardo da Vinci

Leonardo Da Vinci's anatomical drawings, due to his extreme curiosity, became one of his most profound works to date. Published by Dover from the original text 1952. The book is set up in 2 columns and broken up into headers of different anatomical structures; either of bones, muscles, ventricles of the heart or brains... Within the text there are italicized words. These are the words written on the drawing itself, in Leonardo's usual backward writing style. Some of you might be curious, beyond the drawings themselves to read what Leonardo thought at the time. And from there is the authors commentary. For those interested in anatomy, drawing, painting or anything in the art field, this book is highly recommended, for it has limitless reference value. I continually look at it for my drawings. One will also notice that many of the "models" are of the same body or person. This is because Leonardo asked a friend on his deathbed if he could cut him up, dissect him and then draw him. The friend, of course, consented to this, and so we have Leonardo's masterpiece. Highly recommended! -- Anonymous Review

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Leonardo da Vinci

From The Knitting Circle

Excerpt:

In 1476 Leonardo was twice anonymously denounced to the Florentine authorities for alleged acts of sodomy, once with a 17-year-old model or prostitute Jacapo Saltarelli. In 1432 Florence had become the first European city to set up a special authority, called the Uffiziali di Notte (Officers of the Night), to prosecute crimes of sodomy. Leonardo was held in confinement for two months but was acquitted because of a lack of witnesses...

  

A Troubled Beginning

From Sparknotes.com

Excerpt:

In 1476, just as Leonardo was becoming a master in his own right, probably functioning as a partner to Verrocchio, he was suddenly plagued by scandal. Along with three other young men, he was anonymously accused of sodomy, which in Florence was a criminal offense, even though in most cases the authorities looked the other way and the general culture attached little social stigma to homosexuality.

Leonardo was 24 years old at the time. The accusation specifically charged him with a homosexual interaction with one Jacopo Saltarelli, a notorious prostitute. The charges were brought in April, and for a time Leonardo and the other defendants were under the watchful eye of Florence's "Officers of the Night"--a kind of renaissance vice squad...

  

Leonardo da Vinci

From GayGate.com

Excerpt:

The quintessential universal genius, Leonardo was an artist of great originality and power, a versatile thinker, and a far ranging innovator and scientist. He left over 8,000 pages of notebooks containing scientific projects, inventions, architectural designs and sketches. It is through Sigmund Freud's famous essay "Leonardo da Vinci and a Memory of His Childhood" (1910) that the Renaissance master has had most influence on the modern gay psyche, for it was in this essay--written at a time when he was analyzing his own feelings about his former intimate friend Wilhelm Fliess--that Freud first developed his theories about the "causes" of homosexuality...

  

Leonardo da Vinci may have had son, says scholar

From The Times of India Online

A Leonardo da Vinci scholar has raised the tantalizing possibility that the Renaissance master had an illegitimate son -- an idea in sharp contrast with the traditional perception of Leonardo as gay...

  

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