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The Vitruvian Man (Template:Langx; {{#invoke:IPA|main}}) is a drawing by the Italian Renaissance artist and scientist Leonardo da Vinci, dated to Template:Circa. Inspired by the writings of the ancient Roman architect Vitruvius, the drawing depicts a nude man in two superimposed positions with his arms and legs apart and inscribed in both a circle and square. It was described by the art historian Carmen C. Bambach as "justly ranked among the all-time iconic images of Western civilization".Template:Sfn Although not the only known drawing of a man inspired by the writings of Vitruvius, the work is a unique synthesis of artistic and scientific ideals and often considered an archetypal representation of the High Renaissance.
The drawing represents Leonardo's conception of ideal body proportions, originally derived from Vitruvius but influenced by his own measurements, the drawings of his contemporaries, and the De pictura treatise by Leon Battista Alberti. Leonardo produced the Vitruvian Man in Milan and the work was probably passed to his student Francesco Melzi. It later came into the possession of Venanzio de Pagave, who convinced the engraver Carlo Giuseppe Gerli to include it in a book of Leonardo's drawings, which widely disseminated the previously little-known image. It was later owned by Giuseppe Bossi, who wrote early scholarship on it, and eventually sold to the Gallerie dell'Accademia of Venice in 1822, where it has remained since. Due to its sensitivity to light, the drawing rarely goes on public display, but it was borrowed by the Louvre in 2019 for their exhibition marking the 500th anniversary of Leonardo's death.
NameEdit
The drawing is described by Leonardo's notes as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}},Template:Sfn variously translated as The Proportions of the Human Figure after Vitruvius,Template:Sfn or Proportional Study of a Man in the Manner of Vitruvius.Template:Sfn It is much better known as the Vitruvian Man.Template:Sfn The art historian Carlo Pedretti lists it as Homo Vitruvius, study of proportions with the human figure inscribed in a circle and a square, and later as simply Homo Vitruvius.Template:Sfn
DescriptionEdit
CompositionEdit
The drawing was executed primarily with pen and light-brown ink, while there are traces of brown wash (watercolor).Template:SfnTemplate:Refn The paper measures Template:Convert, larger than most of Leonardo's folio manuscript sheets,Template:Refn while the paper itself was originally made somewhat unevenly, given its irregular edges.Template:Sfn Close examination of the drawing reveals that it was meticulously prepared, and is devoid of "sketchy and tentative" lines.Template:Sfn Leonardo used metalpoint with a calipers and compass to make precise lines, and small tick marks were used for measurements.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn These compass marks demonstrate an inner structure of "measured intervals" which is displayed in tandem with the general structure created by the geometric figures.Template:Sfn
The Vitruvian Man depicts a nude man facing forward and surrounded by a square, while superimposed on a circle.Template:Sfn The man is portrayed in different stances simultaneously: His arms are stretched above his shoulders and then perpendicular to them, while his legs are together and also spread out along the circle's base.Template:Sfn The scholar Carlo Vecce notes that this approach displays multiple phases of movement at once, akin to a photograph.Template:Sfn The man's fingers and toes are arranged carefully as to not breach the surrounding shapes.Template:Sfn Commentators often note that Leonardo went out of his way to create an artistic depiction of the man, rather than a simple portrayal.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to the biographer Walter Isaacson, the use of delicate lines, an intimate stare, and intricate hair curls, "weaves together the human and the divine".Template:Sfn Pedretti notes close similarities between the man and the angel of Leonardo's earlier Annunciation painting.Template:Sfn
TextEdit
The text above the image reads:
And below: Template:Verse translation
BackgroundEdit
Historical contextEdit
The moderately successful architect and engineer Vitruvius lived from Template:Circa BCE, primarily in the Roman Republic.Template:Sfn He is best known for authoring {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (On Architecture), later called the Ten Books on Architecture, which is the only substantial architecture treatise that survives from antiquity.Template:Sfn The work's third volume includes a discussion concerning body proportions,Template:Sfn where the figures of a man in a circle and a square are respectively referred to as homo ad circulum, homo ad quadratum.Template:Sfn Vitruvius explained that:
19th-century historians often postulated that Leonardo had no substantial inspiration from the ancient world, propagating his stance as a "modern genius" who rejected all of classicism.Template:Sfn This has been heavily disproven by many documented accounts from Leonardo's colleagues or records of him either owning, reading, and being influenced by writings from antiquity.Template:Sfn The treatise of Vitruvius was long kept obscurely in monk's manuscript copies, but "rediscovered" in the 15th century by Poggio Bracciolini among works such as De Rerum natura.Template:Sfn Many artists then attempted to design figures which would satisfy Vitruvius' description, with the earliest being three such images by Francesco di Giorgio Martini around the 1470s.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Leonardo may have been influenced by the architect Giacomo Andrea, with whom he records as having dined within 1490.Template:Sfn Andrea created his own Vitruvian Man drawing that year, which was unknown to scholars until the 1980s.Template:Sfn
- De Architectura030.jpg
lang}} by Vitruvius; illustrated edition by Cesare Cesariano, 1521
- FGMartini1.jpg
One of Francesco di Giorgio Martini's three attempts at creating the ideal "Vitruvian Man"
- Vitruvian Man by Giacomo Andrea.jpg
A "Vitruvian Man" prototype by Giacomo Andrea, 1490
CreationEdit
Leonardo's version of the Vitruvian Man corrected inaccuracies in Vitruvius's account, particularly related to the head, due to use of book two of the De pictura by Leon Battista Alberti.Template:Sfn Earlier drawings of the same subject "assumed that the circle and square should be centered around the navel", akin to Vitruvius's account, while Leonardo made the scheme work by using the man's genitals as the center of the square, and the navel as the center of the circle.Template:Sfn It is likely that Leonardo's drawings dated to 1487–1490, and entitled The proportions of the arm, were related to the Vitruvian Man, possibly serving as preparatory sketches.Template:Sfn
Some commentators have speculated that Leonardo incorporated the golden ratio in the drawing, possibly due to his illustrations of Luca Pacioli's Divina proportione, partially plagiarized from Piero della Francesca,Template:SfnTemplate:Refn concerning the ratio.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, the Vitruvian Man is likely to have been drawn before Leonardo met Pacioli, and there has been doubt over the accuracy of such an observation.Template:Sfn As architectural scholar Vitor Murtinho explains, a circle tangent to the base of a square, with the radius and square sides related by the golden ratio, would pass exactly through the top two corners of the square, unlike Leonardo's drawing. He suggests instead constructions based on a regular octagon or on the vesica piscis.Template:Sfn
Leonardo's drawing is almost always dated to around 1490 during his first Milanese period.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The exact dating is not completely agreed upon and earlier generations of art historians, including Arthur E. Popham, frequently dated the work anywhere from 1485 to 1490.Template:Sfn Two leading art historians differ in this respect; Martin Kemp gives Template:Circa,Template:SfnTemplate:Refn while Carmen C. Bambach contends that the earliest possible date—which "one may not entirely discount"—is 1488.Template:Sfn Bambach, in addition to Pedretti, Giovanna Nepi Scirè and Annalisa Perissa Torrini give a slightly broader range of Template:Circa.Template:Sfn Bambach explains that this range fits "best with the manner of exact, engraving-like parallel hatching contained within robust pen-and-ink outlines, over traces of lead paint, stylus-ruling, and compass composition".Template:Sfn
ProvenanceEdit
After Leonardo's death, the drawing most likely passed to his student Francesco Melzi (1491–1570),Template:Sfn who was bequeathed most of Leonardo's possessions.Template:Sfn From then on, the drawing's provenance history is almost certain: it found its way to Cesare Monti (1594–1650), was passed to his heir Anna Luisa Monti, then to the De Page family, first Template:Ill (in 1777) and then his son Gaudenzio de Page.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn While owned by the elder De Page, he convinced the engraver Carlo Giuseppe Gerli to publish a book of Leonardo's drawings, which would be the first widespread dissemination of the Vitruvian Man and many other Leonardo drawings.Template:Sfn The younger de Page sold the drawing to Giuseppe Bossi, who described, discussed, and illustrated it in the fourth chapter of his 1810 monograph on Leonardo's The Last Supper, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (On The Last Supper of Leonardo da Vinci).Template:Sfn This chapter was published as a stand-alone study the next year {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (On the opinions of Leonardo da Vinci regarding the symmetry of human bodies).Template:Sfn After Bossi's death in 1815, the drawing was sold to the abbot Luigi Celotti in 1818, and entered into the Venetian Gallerie dell'Accademia's collection in 1822, where it has since remained.Template:Sfn Because of its high artistic quality and its well-recorded history of provenance, Leonardo's authorship of the Vitruvian Man has never been doubted.Template:Sfn
The Vitruvian Man is rarely displayed as extended exposure to light would cause fading; it is kept on the fourth floor of the Gallerie dell'Accademia, in a locked room.Template:Sfn In 2019, the Louvre requested to borrow the drawing for their monumental Léonard de Vinci exhibition, which celebrated the 500th anniversary of the artist's death.Template:Sfn They faced substantial resistance from the heritage group Italia Nostra, who contended that the drawing was too fragile to be transported, and filed a lawsuit.Template:Sfn At a hearing on 16 October 2019, a judge ruled that the group had not proven their claim, but set a maximum amount of light for the drawing to be exposed to as well as a subsequent rest period to offset its overall exposure to light.Template:Sfn The Louvre promised to lend paintings by Raphael to Italy for his own 500th death anniversary; Italy's Minister for Cultural Affairs Dario Franceschini stated that "Now a great cultural operation can start between Italy and France on the two exhibitions about Leonardo in France and Raphael in Rome."Template:Sfn
Legal disputeEdit
In 2022, the Gallerie dell'Accademia, which owns the drawing, sued German jigsaw puzzle manufacturer Ravensburger for reproducing the artwork in one of the company's jigsaw puzzles. Ravensburger started selling the 1,000-piece jigsaw puzzle in Italy in 2009 and in 2019 the museum sent the company a cease-and-desist letter and demanded 10% of the revenue. Ravensburger refused to comply and subsequently was sued by the museum under Italy's 2004 Template:Ill which governs reproductions of works deemed to be under Italy's cultural heritage. In its objections, the German company claimed that it had the right to reproduce the artwork because it was already in the public domain for centuries and that the reproduction occurred outside Italy and thus not subject to Italy's Cultural Heritage Code. An Italian court rejected Ravensburger's arguments and decided in favor of the museum.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In a ruling dated 17 November 2022, the court ordered the puzzle company to cease producing the product for commercial purposes and levied a fine of 1,500 euros for every day that the company failed to comply.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn In March 2024, a German court ruled in favor of the company, stating that the Cultural Heritage Code is not applicable outside Italy, and therefore a violation of the sovereignty of the individual states. In response, an Italian government official argues they will challenge this "abnormal" German ruling even before the European and international courts.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Licensing fees for famous artworks are an important source of income for Italian museums, and Italian law says that museums owning famous public domain works hold the copyright on those works forever and can control who is allowed to make copies and derivative works of them.<ref name=":0" />
LegacyEdit
The Vitruvian Man is often considered an archetypal representative of the High Renaissance, just as Leonardo himself came to represent the archetypal Renaissance man.Template:Sfn It holds a unique distinction in aligning art, mathematics, science, classicism, and naturalism.Template:Sfn The art historian Ludwig Heinrich Heydenreich, writing for Encyclopædia Britannica, states, "Leonardo envisaged the great picture chart of the human body he had produced through his anatomical drawings and Vitruvian Man as a {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('cosmography of the microcosm'). He believed the workings of the human body to be an analogy, in microcosm, for the workings of the universe."Template:Sfn
Kemp calls the drawing "the world's most famous drawing",Template:Sfn while Bambach describes it as "justly ranked among the all-time iconic images of Western civilization".Template:Sfn Reflecting on its fame, Bambach further stated in 2019 that "the endless recent fetishizing of the image by modern commerce through ubiquitous reproductions (in popular books, advertising, and the Euro coin) has kidnapped it from the realm of Renaissance drawing, making it difficult for the viewer to appreciate it as a work of nuanced, creative expression."Template:Sfn
ReferencesEdit
NotesEdit
CitationsEdit
SourcesEdit
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Further readingEdit
External linksEdit
Template:Leonardo da Vinci Template:Mathematics and art Template:Subject bar