Blockbuster Leonardo da Vinci exhibition opens in Edinburgh

The head of Leda (c 1505-1508) by Leonardo da VinciThe head of Leda (c 1505-1508) by Leonardo da Vinci
The head of Leda (c 1505-1508) by Leonardo da Vinci
The largest-ever display of Italian Renaissance artist and inventor Leonardo da Vinci works in Scotland opens today at The Queen’s Gallery at Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh.

‘Leonardo da Vinci: A Life in Drawing’ marks the 500th anniversary of the artist’s death and includes 80 of his greatest drawings, selected entirely from the Royal Collection.

Among the highlights of the exhibition are the only two surviving likenesses of Leonardo made during the artist’s lifetime.

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One is the well-known formal portrait of the artist, drawn by his pupil Francesco Melzi (A portrait of Leonardo, c.1515–18).

An assistant at the Queen's Gallery in Edinburgh at the new Leonardo da Vinci exhibition.An assistant at the Queen's Gallery in Edinburgh at the new Leonardo da Vinci exhibition.
An assistant at the Queen's Gallery in Edinburgh at the new Leonardo da Vinci exhibition.
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Leonardo da Vinci gave us a Man for all time

The sketch of an old man, whose identity was previously not known, was identified as a depiction of Leonardo during research for the exhibition.

The exhibition explores the full range of the artist’s interests, providing a comprehensive survey of Leonardo’s life and a unique insight into the workings of his mind.

Each thematic grouping contains examples of the artist's finest drawings

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Leonardo was revered in his day as a painter, but he completed only around 20 paintings.

He was respected as a sculptor and architect, but no sculpture or buildings by him survive.

He was a military and civil engineer, but his schemes were never realised.

As an anatomist, he dissected 30 human corpses, but his ground-breaking anatomical work was never published.

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He planned treatises on painting, water, mechanics, the growth of plants and many other subjects, but none was ever finished.

Much of his life’s work was unrealised or destroyed, so that Leonardo’s greatest achievements survive only in his drawings and notes.

Each thematic grouping contains examples of the artist’s finest drawings.

A number of preparatory studies for paintings are on display, including a study for The Madonna and Child with St Anne and a lamb (c.1508–19), and four of the six surviving preparatory studies for the Last Supper (c.1495–8).

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One of these is the sole compositional study that exists for the painting, fluidly sketched by Leonardo on a sheet of paper covered with other drawings, and on display in Scotland for the first time.

Key anatomical studies include The skull sectioned (1489), The fetus in the womb (c.1511) and The cardiovascular system and principal organs of a woman (c.1509–10), on which Leonardo’s inky thumbprint can be seen.

The natural world is explored through detailed landscapes, studies of water and in botanical studies, the finest developed in preparation for the now lost painting Leda and the Swan. Drawings of horses abound throughout Leonardo’s work, including studies for three equestrian monuments that were never realised.

The exhibition ends a year-long nationwide event.

"The drawings of Leonardo da Vinci are both incredibly beautiful and the main source of our knowledge of the artist."

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In February, 144 of Leonardo’s drawings from the Royal Collection were displayed in 12 simultaneous exhibitions at museums and galleries UK-wide attracting more than one million visitors in three months.

In May 2019, the drawings were displayed at The Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace, to form the largest exhibition of his work in over 65 years.

It attracted the highest number of visitors per day in the almost 60-year history of The Queen’s Galleries.

Martin Clayton, head of prints and drawings, Royal Collection Trust, said: ‘The drawings of Leonardo da Vinci are both incredibly beautiful and the main source of our knowledge of the artist.

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“As our year-long celebration of Leonardo’s life draws to a close with the largest exhibition of his work ever shown in Scotland, we hope that as many people as possible will take this unique opportunity to see these extraordinary works, and engage with one of the greatest minds in history.”

* ‘Leonardo da Vinci: A Life in Drawing’ is at The Queen’s Gallery, Palace of Holyroodhouse, 22 November 2019 – 15 March 2020.

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