Leonardo Da Vinci Accomplishments

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Determining the meaning of perfection, in respect to the past, is increasingly hard as our society falls off the pathway of art and design. Throughout history the concept of perfection has changed tremendously in the last few millennia, for in the time of great artists and architects like leonardo da vinci, michelangelo, Georges Seurat, perfection laid within the realm of numbers, patterns, and structural design.

One of the biggest and widely known names throughout history would be Leonardo Da Vinci, a skilled artist, architect, and innovator. Da Vinci was known across Europe for all of his inventions and works of art. He was said to be one of the best and most creative minds to live in his time. Sadly his time, like many others in this …show more content…

He was also a proficient architect, artist, and sculptor, and, just as Leonardo was, he was a master of many sciences. His paintings and art have been looked on as extremely beautiful and pleasant. He was commissioned by popes and lords to paint and build for his work was the best of the best. Every detail that he portrayed was thought to be masterful and perfect. His works through europe are known and studied still through the world today just like leonardo’s masterpieces. The buildings and sculptures he erected still stand …show more content…

Leonardo’s most known works such as “The Last Supper”, and the “Mona Lisa” both have equated and utilized the fibonacci sequence to create symmetry and to make these works more perfect. The same ratio is used in Michelangelo's most noteworthy masterpieces such as the mural on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, the sculpture “David”, and the tomb he was commissioned to create for the Pope. A far less known artist, Georges Seurat was said to take the golden ratio and apply it to just about every aspect of his artwork. Famous works like Steinbrecher, Bridge of Courbevoie, and Ein-Haus-zwischen-Bäumen are all great example of how the golden ratio can be seen in nature. It also shows how an artist can take a scene because they find it beautiful and more pleasing than that of the last thing they saw for some reason and when they paint it and we can see that these perfect ratios can be captured every day in the world around us. This shows that nature in itself tends to lean into untapped

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