Леонардо да Винчи — итальянский художник и учёный, изобретатель, писатель, музыкант, один из крупнейших представителей искусства Высокого Возрождения, яркий пример «универсального человека». Он применил свое творчество во всех сферах, в которых используется графическое изображение: он был художником, скульптором, архитектором и инженером. Да Винчи «изобрел» велосипед, самолет, вертолет и парашют примерно на 500 лет раньше своего времени. В чем же заключается секрет гениальности Леонардо да Винчи и какие тайны хранит в себе биография великого деятеля исторической эпохи об этом - в нашем новом видео на канале: "История Леонардо да Винчи: Биография, Загадки и Тайны" .
Леонардо да Винчи, возможно, был величайшим изобретателем в истории. Множество его идей, запечатленных на бумаге, дошли и до наших дней. Привет вы на канале NSK Show и это гениальные изобретения Леонардо да Винчи. Вот о чем речь:
1. Робот-рыцарь
2. Парашют
3. Орнитоптер
4. Бронированный танк
5. Пулемет
6. Города будущего
Leonardo da Vinci: A collection of 119 sketches (HD)Description: "Da Vinci was one of the great creative minds of the Italian Renaissance, hugely influential as an artist and sculptor but also immensely talented as an engineer, scientist and inventor.
Leonardo da Vinci was born on 15 April 1452 near the Tuscan town of Vinci, the illegitimate son of a local lawyer. He was apprenticed to the sculptor and painter Andrea del Verrocchio in Florence and in 1478 became an independent master. In about 1483, he moved to Milan to work for the ruling Sforza family as an engineer, sculptor, painter and architect. From 1495 to 1497 he produced a mural of 'The Last Supper' in the refectory of the Monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan.
Da Vinci was in Milan until the city was invaded by the French in 1499 and the Sforza family forced to flee. He may have visited Venice before returning to Florence. During his time in Florence, he painted several portraits, but the only one that survives is the famous 'Mona Lisa' (1503-1506).
In 1506, da Vinci returned to Milan, remaining there until 1513. This was followed by three years based in Rome. In 1517, at the invitation of the French king Francis I, Leonardo moved to the Château of Cloux, near Amboise in France, where he died on 2 May 1519.
The fame of Da Vinci's surviving paintings has meant that he has been regarded primarily as an artist, but the thousands of surviving pages of his notebooks reveal the most eclectic and brilliant of minds. He wrote and drew on subjects including geology, anatomy (which he studied in order to paint the human form more accurately), flight, gravity and optics, often flitting from subject to subject on a single page, and writing in left-handed mirror script. He 'invented' the bicycle, airplane, helicopter, and parachute some 500 years ahead of their time.
If all this work had been published in an intelligible form, da Vinci's place as a pioneering scientist would have been beyond dispute. Yet his true genius was not as a scientist or an artist, but as a combination of the two: an 'artist-engineer'. His painting was scientific, based on a deep understanding of the workings of the human body and the physics of light and shade. His science was expressed through art, and his drawings and diagrams show what he meant, and how he understood the world to work."