How to Read Like Leonardo Da Vinci?

Practical tips for the modern reader.

Vashik Armenikus
Curious

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Saint Jerome Writing by Caravaggio | Wiki Commons

A good reader, a major reader, an active and creative reader is a re-reader.

— Vladimir Nabokov

In 1499, Leonardo da Vinci moved from Milan — the city where he had spent last seven years of his life — and returned to his native Florence. Among his belongings were several items of clothes, multiple types of drawing and art supplies, and one-hundred books. He came from a wealthy family but he had never received what was considered ‘official education’, because he was born out of wedlock.

Everything he knew, he owed to nature and books. In his recent biography of Leonardo, Walter Isaacson tells how the young genius used to spend hours observing birds fly and then sketching in his notebook the structure of their wings. What Leonardo couldn’t find in nature, he found in books. He could spend weeks, if not months, studying works of other geniuses. He drew his famous Vitruvian Man by studying works of Vitruvius — architect and civil engineer of ancient Rome.

The Vitruvian Man (c. 1485) Accademia, Venice | Wikicommons

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Vashik Armenikus
Curious

A music expert. Renaissance art student. A passionate reader. I scrutinise art to find its secrets.