Leonardo Da Vinci

The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci

£315

Introduced By Charles Nicholl

Translated By Edward MacCurdy

Commemorating the 500th anniversary of the death of Leonardo da Vinci, this magnificent Folio collector’s edition reveals his brilliance in three beautifully illustrated volumes with stunning gold-blocked bindings.

The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci

£315
Book Details
 
Presentation Box & BindingQuarter bound in (bonded) leather, with printed cloth sides
Cloth slipcase with printed inset label
Gilded page tops
Ribbon markers
DimensionsEach volume is 9½” x 6¼”
FontSet in Bembo
Pages1432 pages in total (Vol 1:440, Vol 2: 528, Vol 3: 464)
AuthorLeonardo Da Vinci
Illustration102 colour illustrations across 3 Volumes
Publication Date27/02/2009
Editor's Notes
 
Almost 500 years since his death, the genius of Leonardo da Vinci has never been rivalled. In the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper, he created the most iconic images in Western art but his brilliance extended well beyond these masterpieces: da Vinci bequeathed the most extraordinarily diverse body of written work ever created by one individual and his notebooks are among the most precious documents in the world.
This commemorative edition of the 1938 Edward MacCurdy compilation includes writing on almost every subject imaginable: anatomy, medicine, engineering, optics, architecture, hydraulics, botany and natural history. His personal notes offer insights into his passions, preoccupations and eccentricities, while a detailed index allows for easy navigation. Almost 100 of his exquisite drawings have been reproduced to exceptionally high standard: preparatory drawings for The Last Supper, anatomical diagrams such as The Vitruvian Man, and sketches of inventions – including his designs for a flying machine, created hundreds of years before others dared dream of flying. Finally, two insightful essays tell us more about da Vinci and his writings: one by da Vinci biographer Charles Nicholl, and the other by the collection’ translator and editor, Edward MacCurdy.

Leonardo da Vinci was born in 1452 in Tuscany. He was born out of wedlock; his father was a notary and his mother was a servant. Da Vinci lived with his mother until he was five and then moved in with his father and stepmother. He developed an interest in painting at a young age and when he was 14, he was apprenticed to the artist Verrocchio in Florence. Here, he learnt all aspects of art and received some important commissions. However, he was also learning other skills and he eventually moved to Milan to work as an engineering advisor to Ludovico Sforza, the Duke of Milan. He continued studying, sketching and researching and recorded his observations and discoveries on sheets of paper that he collected in notebooks. Da Vinci moved to Rome in 1513, where he lived in a residence in the Vatican and spent time developing his scientific studies. He later made a permanent move to France where he worked for King Francis until his death in 1519.

Charles Nicholl was born in London in 1950. He studied at King’s College, Cambridge. Specialising in biography, history and travel, Nicholl is the author of a number of books, including the Thomas Nashe biography A Cup of News (1984), The Fruit Palace (1998), Leonardo da Vinci: The Flights of the Mind (2005) and The Lodger: Shakespeare on Silver Street (2008). He is Honorary Professor of English at Sussex University and a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.