Hollar “copia” Leonardo: l’uso della carta lucida per incisioni in scala 1:1

Hollar “copied” Leonardo: The use of ‘carta lucida’ for incisions on a 1:1 scale Hollar “copied” Leonardo for Lord Arundel and, as already demonstrated, in some cases he did it in real size (1:1). In this work process Hollar, following a technique already described by Cennino Cennino in his Book of...

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Main Author: Margherita Melani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Journals 2020-08-01
Series:Incontri: Rivista Europea di Studi Italiani
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rivista-incontri.nl/article/view/8875
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spelling doaj-b3321f6690e4489db9ee63a490ee7bfd2021-10-02T13:12:33ZengOpen JournalsIncontri: Rivista Europea di Studi Italiani0169-33792214-77052020-08-0135110.18352/incontri.10331Hollar “copia” Leonardo: l’uso della carta lucida per incisioni in scala 1:1Margherita Melani0Nuova Fondazione Rossana e Carlo PedrettiHollar “copied” Leonardo: The use of ‘carta lucida’ for incisions on a 1:1 scale Hollar “copied” Leonardo for Lord Arundel and, as already demonstrated, in some cases he did it in real size (1:1). In this work process Hollar, following a technique already described by Cennino Cennino in his Book of Art, uses carta lucida: a sheet of paper made transparent through the use of oils that allows him to have an exact copy on the real size of any works of art. An example of this working process can be one drawing attributed to the Follower of Leonardo da Vinci now at the Teylers Museum in Haarlem (inv. A 5). It is an ink drawing on carta lucida with the copy in the real size of a man seen in profile, from the left side of a drawing of Leonardo with a couple of men represented en face (Windsor, RL 12490). The size of the male figure reproduced in Leonardo’s autograph, in the Harlem copy as well as in the Hollar’s engraving is always almost identical. A dimensional match that allows to formulate a new proposal for attribution and to include the Haarlem’s drawing in the corpus of Hollar’s drawings as an example of his workflow.https://rivista-incontri.nl/article/view/8875Leonardo da VinciWenceslaus Hollarincisionecarta lucidacopia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Margherita Melani
spellingShingle Margherita Melani
Hollar “copia” Leonardo: l’uso della carta lucida per incisioni in scala 1:1
Incontri: Rivista Europea di Studi Italiani
Leonardo da Vinci
Wenceslaus Hollar
incisione
carta lucida
copia
author_facet Margherita Melani
author_sort Margherita Melani
title Hollar “copia” Leonardo: l’uso della carta lucida per incisioni in scala 1:1
title_short Hollar “copia” Leonardo: l’uso della carta lucida per incisioni in scala 1:1
title_full Hollar “copia” Leonardo: l’uso della carta lucida per incisioni in scala 1:1
title_fullStr Hollar “copia” Leonardo: l’uso della carta lucida per incisioni in scala 1:1
title_full_unstemmed Hollar “copia” Leonardo: l’uso della carta lucida per incisioni in scala 1:1
title_sort hollar “copia” leonardo: l’uso della carta lucida per incisioni in scala 1:1
publisher Open Journals
series Incontri: Rivista Europea di Studi Italiani
issn 0169-3379
2214-7705
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Hollar “copied” Leonardo: The use of ‘carta lucida’ for incisions on a 1:1 scale Hollar “copied” Leonardo for Lord Arundel and, as already demonstrated, in some cases he did it in real size (1:1). In this work process Hollar, following a technique already described by Cennino Cennino in his Book of Art, uses carta lucida: a sheet of paper made transparent through the use of oils that allows him to have an exact copy on the real size of any works of art. An example of this working process can be one drawing attributed to the Follower of Leonardo da Vinci now at the Teylers Museum in Haarlem (inv. A 5). It is an ink drawing on carta lucida with the copy in the real size of a man seen in profile, from the left side of a drawing of Leonardo with a couple of men represented en face (Windsor, RL 12490). The size of the male figure reproduced in Leonardo’s autograph, in the Harlem copy as well as in the Hollar’s engraving is always almost identical. A dimensional match that allows to formulate a new proposal for attribution and to include the Haarlem’s drawing in the corpus of Hollar’s drawings as an example of his workflow.
topic Leonardo da Vinci
Wenceslaus Hollar
incisione
carta lucida
copia
url https://rivista-incontri.nl/article/view/8875
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