Nature's Power In Leonardo Da Vinci: Female Power

1401 Words3 Pages

I believe Mary D. Garrard who wrote Leonardo Da Vinci: Female Portraits, Female Nature, was attempting to say that people were threatened by nature’s power, particularly the nature of females. Many males during the Renaissance didn’t believe in nature as powerful. During the Renaissance slogans became popular stating that art was more powerful than nature and common themes like that. Males believed they had control over nature and they could treat it like women who were there only to help reproduce and raise the children. They also might have been threatened by nature because it is so unknown and large that they didn’t know what to expect from it. Leonardo expressed in his work the opposite of what most men during his era did, he showed …show more content…

“Over and over, in the Virgin of the Rocks, the Mona Lisa, the surviving designs for the Leda, the Burlington House cartoon, and the Saint Anne, Leonardo explicitly associated powerful female images with highly developed, visually extraordinary surrounding landscapes, as if to as if to assert the unity between the physical universe and the female cosmic generative principle as a philosophical claim” (Broude, 1992, p. 74).
Leonardo would show the power between the women and nature and show how powerful reproducing is. In the painting Leda and the Swan, Leonardo portrayed a woman whose babies are bursting out of eggs. In many of his paintings Leonardo would include women with their children to link them together by the strength of motherhood. It is believed that Leonardo believed that the “Mona Lisa may result not from Leonardo’s alienation from women, but from the psychic inclusion of the painter himself in an image of a woman, or Woman, who holds the key to nature’s secrets, and with whom he imaginatively identified” (Broude, 1992, p.79). To think that women hold the key to nature would give them a lot of power since nature is important to

Open Document