21 January, 2005

Speaking of Da Vinci

I had the TV on last night but was not watching it and I heard a blurb on the news about finding Da Vinci's Art Studio with never seen paintings, hidden behind locked doors some place in Italy.

I missed parts of it and I have I have been listening to the news and now its all about Gorge Bush.....

Has anyone heard about this new discovery or was I imagining it.

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10 Comments

RQ Trietsch 21 Jan 2005

If you remember what channel it was on, do a search on the station, then the date and then the programing. Also the time of day helps in the search through programming.

Or just e-mail the station and ask.

Jude 21 Jan 2005

Thats a good idea, RQ but I dont know what channel it was on for sure.

The master lol, was watching and flipping channels so fast I never know what channel is on.

I tried to do a search on line but came up empty. I thought maybe someone here might have heard about it.

Volunteer of America 21 Jan 2005

Text from CTV:

Art lovers, historians and experts around the world are marveling at news Leonardo da Vinci's workshop may have been found in Florence.

Italian researchers uncovered the room in a building just off the Piazza of the Santissima Annunziata in the central part of the celebrated city.

"It's obviously tremendously exciting, if it's true," David Franklin, chief curator at the National Gallery of Canada, told CTV's Canada AM.

"The people involved are the most serious, impeccable experts, so I think there's a great reason for optimism," he said.

The abandoned five-room studio was found beyond a hidden staircase that had been covered up during earlier restoration work.

"We certainly know that Leonardo did live and work in that monastery in Florence at that period after 1500, so there's an air of possibility to it."

On the walls, there were paintings that researchers suspect were created by the Renaissance master's own hand.

"For the first time in this case we see birds which are absolutely dynamic, animals which are absolutely vivid, and which remind us of the study done by Leonardo on birds in flight," said art

historian Robert Manescalchi.

The bird images are similar to drawings found in the Codex Atlanticus, an atlas-size collection of da Vinci's work.

But one theory is that the fading frescoes were painted by a workshop student about 500 years ago. Art historians and scientists are eager to put their theory to the test -- but some are urging caution.

"Without having seen the frescoes, anything we have to say is just babble," Keith Christiansen, a curator of European paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, told the New York Times.

Still, Manescalchi says he's been inundated with requests for viewings by curious art historians.

The discovery also strengthens the findings of a recent study which claimed da Vinci likely met Mona Lisa in the church of the Santissima Annunziata, where her husband's family had a chapel.

"The fact that (the Mona Lisa)might have been depicted inside the Annunziata can't be excluded," said Professor Alessandro Vezzosi, director of the Museo ideale Leonardo da Vinci.

"There is nothing which confirms this, except for the fact that the Gherardini family (Mona Lisa's family)had a relationship with the convent."

Still, Franklin was skeptical about the suggestion that da Vinci's famous painting, the Mona Lisa, was actually painted in those rooms.

"The painting was a kind of touchstone for him, and he worked on it for a very long period of time," he said -- noting that da Vinci likely moved the painting around to other locations, including Milan.

Still, the researchers hope their discovery will help flesh out the life of da Vinci, an artist, inventor and scientist, who embodied the ideal of the Renaissance man.

"Every piece of information helps us to understand not only the person but the historical climate at that time," said Annamaria Petrioli Tofani, the director of the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.

Franklin told Canada AM one reason why the rooms were forgotten for so long could be because, while he was alive, da Vinci was not nearly as famous as he is today

"At the time, his fame was very much a fleeting thing in Florence. In fact, there was a lot of antagonism towards him as a negative figure, as a figure who was a little bit unreliable, a little bit flighty."

Still, now that the rooms have been found, Franklin would like to see them kept in tact and open for all to see.

"It would be wonderful to be able to walk up those steps to feel that kind of magnetic, super-charged atmosphere in which Leonardo worked," he said.

"It should be preserved."

Dawn Schmidt 21 Jan 2005

Mark, thank you so much for posting this - man, that would be so phenomenal to walk into that room!

Meghan Henley 21 Jan 2005

Wow! I just sent that to everyone I know. Very interesting. If anyone hears anymore about this please email me!

Ric Strange 21 Jan 2005

Interesting....

Jude 21 Jan 2005

I think it is exciting news, like finding a time capsule. I hope there will be more information about this.

Thank you so much Volunteer of America for posting the information.

22 Jan 2005

RQ Trietsch 23 Jan 2005

Thanks Mark. I also read the article in the paper yesterday or the day before, but never got around to posting it.

What a neat find!

Kristen C 30 Jan 2005

wow, that's really interesting. thanks for sharing.

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