History, asked by rimichakraverty13, 7 months ago

state any three contributions of Leonardo da Vinci in the field of art​

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Answered by priyajaiswal98
3

Answer:

Contributions to Art. Leonardo da Vinci was a very talented artist who painted the Mona Lisa, the Last Supper, and many more famous paintings. These works were made famous because of Leonardo's understanding Linear Perspective, his integration of light and shadow, and his superb understanding of anatomy.

Answered by sabyasachisn
3

Answer:

Leonardo da Vinci was a very talented artist who  painted the Mona Lisa, the Last Supper, and many more famous paintings.  These works were made famous because of Leonardo's understanding Linear Perspective, his integration of light and shadow, and his superb understanding of anatomy.  In his time he was accepted as a very talented artist.  Many artists after Leonardo mimicked his methods in hope to make their paintings more realistic.  

       

           According to dictionary.com, linear perspective "is a mathematical system for representing three-dimensional objects and space on a two-dimensional surface by means of intersecting lines that are drawn vertically and horizontally and that radiate from one point (one-point perspective), two points (two-point perspective), or several points on a horizon line as perceived by a viewer imagined in an arbitrarily fixed position." Leonardo used linear perspective in all of his paintings to make them more life-like and three-dimensional. He was also one of the first painters to incorporate light and shadows into his paintings as well. Also, because of Leonardo's unfathomable understanding of human anatomy, he was able to make the subjects of the painting three-dimensional as well as the setting.

                   Da Vinci's paintings were different than most others painted during the same time. The majority of the paintings of the renaissance period were flat, and two-dimensional, and never very proportional. Leonardo changed all of this with his new and revolutionary methods. With all of his new painting methods, he changed paintings of the time from flat, and disproportionate to impossibly graphic and real. Although he was such a painting phenomenon, he rarely finished his works, only managing to complete a few. Even so, his impact in the field of art was immense.

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