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Szerkesztő:Cranach~huwiki/próbalap3

A Wikipédiából, a szabad enciklopédiából

Major extant works

[szerkesztés]
Image
(sort by size of the original)
Details
(sort by title)
Attribution status and notes Dating
(sort by earliest)
&0000000000021266000000 Sablon:Hs
Angyali üdvözlet
Olaj és tempera nyárfa falemezen
98 × 217 cm
Uffizi, Firenze
&0000000000000002000000
Általánosan elfogadott
Leonardo legkorábbi fennmaradt munkája. A festményt 1869-ig Verocchiónak tulajdonították, mára általánosan elfogadott mint Leonardo alkotása: Liphart, Bode, Lubke, Muller-Walde, Berenson, Clark, Goldscheider és mások.[1]
&0000000000000001000000
1473–74 körül (Kemp 2011)
1472–1476 körül (Syson 2011)
1473–1475 körül (Zöllner 2011)
1472–1475 körül, feltehetően 1473–74 (Marani 2000)
&0000000000026727000000 Sablon:Hs
Krisztus megkeresztelése
Olaj és tempera nyárfa falemezen
177 × 151 cm
Uffizi, Firenze
&0000000000000004000000
Verrocchio és Leonardo
Andrea del Verrocchio alkotása. A festmény bal oldalán látható angyal figuráját, Verrocchio műhelyében tanulóként dolgozó Leonardo da Vinci készítette.[2] It is generally considered that Leonardo also painted much of the background landscape and the torso of Christ. Vasari's statement that the angel on the left is by Leonardo is confirmed by studies by Bode, Seidlitz and Guthman, and accepted by McCurdy, Wasserman and others.[1]
&0000000000000004000000
1476 körül (Kemp 2011)
1470–1472 körül és 1475 körül
(Zöllner 2011)
1469–1472 körül by Verrocchio, then resumed by Leonardo perhaps mid-1470s (Covi 2005, p. 186)
probably 1475–1478 (Marani 2000)
&0000000000002945000000 Sablon:Hs
Szegfűs madonna
Olaj és tempera (?) nyárfa falemezen
62 × 47.5 cm
Alte Pinakothek, München
&0000000000000004000000
Általánosan elfogadott
Leonardo festménye, ismeretlen flamand festő javításaival.[1]
&0000000000000003000000
1475–76 körül (Kemp 2011)
1477–78 körül (Syson 2011)
1472–1478 (?) körül (Zöllner 2011)
between 1473 and 1478
(Marani 2000)
&0000000000001424000000 Sablon:Hs
Női portré (Ginevra de' Benci)
Olaj és tempera nyárfa lemezen Oil and tempera on poplar panel
38.8 × 36.7 cm, 15.3 × 14.4 in
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
&0000000000000003000000
Általánosan elfogadott
The work was proposed as a Leonardo by Waagen in 1866, and supported by Bode. Early 20th-century scholars were vociferous in their disagreement, but most current critics accept both the authorship and the identity of the sitter.[1]
&0000000000000002000000
1476–1478 körül (Kemp 2011)
1474/1478 körül (Syson 2011)
1478–1480 körül (Zöllner 2011)
1474/1475–76 körül (Marani 2000)
&0000000000001634000000 Sablon:Hs
Madonna Benois (Madonna virággal)
olaj falemezen, vászonra áthelyezve
49.5 × 33 cm
Ermitázs, Szentpétervár
&0000000000000004000000
Általánosan elfogadott
Most critics believe that it coincides with a Madonna mentioned by Leonardo in 1478.[1]
&0000000000000005000000
1479–80 körül (Kemp 2011)
1481 előtt (Syson 2011)
1478–1480 körül (Zöllner 2011)
probably after March 1481 (Marani 2000)
&0000000000060000000000 Sablon:Hs
Háromkirályok imádása (unfinished)
Oil (underpainting) on wood panel
240 × 250 cm, 96 × 97 in
Uffizi, Firenze
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott

Forensic and scientific analysis by M. Seracini now proves that the paint was not applied by da Vinci, but considerably later, so that only the sketch can be "universally accepted" (see M. Henneberger https://www.nytimes.com/2002/04/21/magazine/the-leonardo-cover-up.html. Archives | 2002, The New York Times Magazine, 21 April 2002, "The Leonardo Cover-Up"). Carlo Pedretti, the greatest da Vinci scholar states that the results are unambiguous: "From what he showed me ... it's clear that Leonardo's original sketch was gone over by an anonymous painter." Pedretti adds that he was surprised, though not disappointed, that the news was finally getting out – "it's extremely important and should be said because it has to be clarified."

&0000000000000006000000
1479–1481 körül (Kemp 2011)
1480–1482 körül (Syson 2011)
1481/2 (Zöllner 2011)
1481 (Marani 2000)
&0000000000007725000000 Sablon:Hs
Szent Jeromos (befejezetlen)
Tempera and oil on walnut panel
103 × 75 cm, 41 × 30 in
Vatikáni Múzeum, Vatikán
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott
&0000000000000007000000
1480–1482 körül (Kemp 2011)
1488–1490 körül (Syson 2011)
1480–1482 körül (Zöllner 2011)
talán 1480 körül (Marani 2000)
&0000000000001386000000 Sablon:Hs
Madonna Litta
Tempera (and oil?) on poplar panel
42 × 33 cm
Hermitage, St Petersburg
&0000000000000007000000
Általánosan elfogadott
Martin Kemp claims that the Gallery exhibited the Madonna Litta, on loan from the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, as an autograph work, even though the National Gallery’s own curators believed it to be by a pupil, Boltraffio.[3]
&0000000000000008000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Zöllner 2011)
not in checklist of Marani 2000
&0000000000024278000000 Sablon:Hs
Sziklás Madonna
(Louvre version)
Oil on wood panel, transferred to canvas
199 × 122 cm, 78.3 × 48.0 in
Louvre, Párizs
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott
Considered by most historians to be the earlier of the two versions.
&0000000000000009000000
1483–Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
1483–Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
1483–1484/5 (Zöllner 2011)
between 1483 and 1486
(Marani 2000)
&0000000000001440000000 Sablon:Hs
Zenész képmása (befejezetlen)
Tempera és olaj dóifa (?) lemezen
45 × 32 cm
Pinacoteca Ambrosiana, Milánó
&0000000000000006000000
Általánosan elfogadott[a]
&0000000000000010000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Zöllner 2011)
probably Sablon:Circa (Marani 2000)
&0000000000002106000000 Sablon:Hs
Hölgy hermelinnel
Olaj, tempera, diófa
54 × 39 cm
Czartoryski Múzeum, Krakkó
&0000000000000003000000
Általánosan elfogadott
First published as a Leonardo in 1889 and subject to wide disagreement, but now generally accepted. The attribution of the Ginevra de' Benci has supported the attribution of this painting.[1] The subject has been identified as Cecilia Gallerani.[4]
&0000000000000011000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
1489/1490 (Zöllner 2011)
1489–90 (Marani 2000)
&0000000000022740000000 Sablon:Hs
Sziklás Madonna
(London version)
Oil on parqueted poplar panel
189.5 × 120 cm, 74.6 × 47.25 in
National Gallery, London
&0000000000000004000000
Általánosan elfogadott
Generally accepted as postdating the version in the Louvre, with collaboration of Ambrogio de Predis' and perhaps others.[1] Some consider the work of Leonardo's workshop under his direction. The date is not universally agreed.
&0000000000000012000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa
(Syson 2011)
Sablon:Circa
(Zöllner 2011)
1491 / 1494, finished by 1508 (Marani 2000)
&0000000000404800000000 Sablon:Hs
Az utolsó vacsora
Tempera, gesso, pitch and mastic
460 × 880 cm, 181 × 346 in
Convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie-templom, Milánó
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott
On 9 February 1498 Luca Pacioli described the mural as being complete.[5]
&0000000000000013000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
1492–7/8 (Syson 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Zöllner 2011)
between 1494 and 1498
(Marani 2000)
&0000000000002728000000 Sablon:Hs
La belle ferronnière ()'ismeretlen nő portréja'
Oil on walnut panel
62 × 44 cm
Louvre, Paris
&0000000000000006000000
Általánosan elfogadott
&0000000000000014000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Zöllner 2011)
Sablon:Circa or 1495–6
(Marani 2000)
&0000000000500000000000 Sablon:Hs
Sala delle Asse
Tempera on plaster
Castello Sforzesco, Milan
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott
Two fragments of Leonardo’s decorative scheme for this room were rediscovered in the late 19th century; they were covered over as they were thought not to be by his hand and were rediscovered again in 1954.[5]
&0000000000000015000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Zöllner 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Marani 2000)
&0000000000014910000000 Sablon:Hs
The Virgin and Child with St Anne and St John the Baptist
Charcoal, black and white chalk on tinted paper, mounted on canvas
142 × 105 cm, 55.7 × 41.2 in
National Gallery, London
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott
&0000000000000016000000
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
1499–1500 or Sablon:Circa (Zöllner 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Chapman & Faietti 2010)
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2006)
Italian scholars: Sablon:Circa; Pedretti and Anglo-Saxon scholars: 1506–1508, but Wassermann: 1499
(Marani 2000)
&0000000000002898000000 Sablon:Hs
Portrait of Isabella d'Este
Black and red chalk, yellow pastel chalk on paper
61 × 46.5 cm
Louvre, Paris
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott
&0000000000000017000000
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
December 1499 – March 1500 (?) (Zöllner 2011)
end of 1499 / early 1500
(Marani 2000)
&0000000000001799519999 Sablon:Hs
Orsós Madonna (The Buccleuch Madonna)
Oil on walnut panel
48.9 × 36.8 cm
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh (on long-term loan from the Buccleuch collection)
Leonardo and another artist?[b]
Leonardo was documented as working on a painting of this subject in Florence in 1501; it appears to have been delivered to its patron in 1507. This and the Lansdowne Madonna are the most likely candidates for being that work, but neither is considered to be wholly autograph. Scientific examination has revealed "strikingly complex and similar" underdrawings in both versions, suggesting that Leonardo was involved in the making of both.[6]
The use of walnut wood suggests the earlier terminus post quem of 1499, as Leonardo's Milanese paintings are on this support.[7]
&0000000000000018000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
1501–1507 (Zöllner 2011)
no date in Marani 2000
&0000000000001827279999 Sablon:Hs
Orsós Madonna (Lansdowne-i Madonna)
Olaj falemez (transferred to canvas and later re-laid on panel)
50.2 × 36.4 cm
Private collection, United States
Underdrawing by Leonardo?[c]
&0000000000000018000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Zöllner 2011)
no date in Marani 2000
&0000000000018816000000 Sablon:Hs
The Virgin and Child with St. Anne
Oil on wood panel
168 × 112 cm, 66.1 × 44.1 in
Louvre, Paris
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott
&0000000000000019000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Marani 2000)
&0000000000004070000000 Sablon:Hs
Mona Lisa
Olaj, fa
76.8 × 53.0 cm, 30.2 × 20.9 in
Louvre, Párizs
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott
&0000000000000020000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
1503–1506 and later (1510?) (Zöllner 2011)
probably begun Sablon:Circa, finished by 1513–14
(Marani 2000)
&0000000000002978239999 Sablon:Hs
Salvator Mundi
Oil on wood panel
65.6 x 45.4 cm
(25.8 × 17.9 in)
&0000000000000004000000
Generally accepted, but disputed by several specialists[8]
Previously presumed to be a later copy of the lost original painting. Purchased in 2005 and restored, it has gained acceptance as Leonardo's original. Pentimenti (changes to the composition) were found in the thumb of Christ's right hand and elsewhere which are indicators of the painting's status as an "original".[9] The painting set a new record for sale price (US$450 million) when auctioned by Christie's in 2017.[10][11]
Matthew Landrus thinks the record-breaking work was painted primarily by Leonardo’s assistant, Bernardino Luini.[12]
&0000000000000018000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Syson 2011)
Sablon:Circa? (Marani 2000, when thought lost
&0000000000000518000000 Sablon:Hs
Head of a Woman
(La Scapigliata)
Earth, amber and white lead on wood panel
24.7 × 21 cm
Galleria Nazionale, Parma
&0000000000000001000000
Általánosan elfogadott[d]
&0000000000000020000000
Sablon:Circa (Marani 2000)
not in checklist of Kemp 2011 or Zöllner 2011
&0000000000003933000000 Sablon:Hs
Keresztelő Szent János
Oil on walnut panel
69 × 57 cm, 27.2 × 22.4 in
Louvre, Paris
&0000000000000004000000
Általánosan elfogadott
The "Anonimo Gaddiano" wrote that Leonardo painted a St. John. This is generally considered Leonardo's last masterpiece.[1]
&0000000000000021000000
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Zöllner 2011)
Sablon:Circa (Marani 2000)

Manuscripts

[szerkesztés]
Sample image Details Pages Notes Dates
Codex Atlanticus
C.A.
Pinacoteca Ambrosiana, Milan
1,119
12 volumes, collated by the sculptor Pompeo Leoni.
1478–1519
Codex Windsor
W.
Royal Collection, Windsor
153 1478–1518
Codex Arundel
B.L., Arundel MS. or Br.M.
British Library, London
283 1480–1518
Codex Trivulzianus
Triv.
Biblioteca Trivulziana, Castello Sforzesco, Milan
55 (originally 62) Sablon:Circa
Codex Forster
Forster I, II and III (including I1, I2 and II2); formerly known as S.K.M.I, II and III
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
354
Five pocket notebooks bound into three volumes, here listed in chronological order.
  • I.2 (Milan, Sablon:Circa): Discusses hydraulic engineering, the moving and raising of water and perpetual motion.
  • III (Milan, Sablon:Circa: Notes on geometry, weights and hydraulics interspersed with sketches of horses’ legs, what might be designs for ball costumes and a description of the anatomy of the human head.
  • II.1 (Milan, Sablon:Circa): Notes on the theory of proportions and other miscellaneous material.
  • II.2 (Milan, 1495–1497): Notes on the theory of weights, traction, stresses and balances.
  • I.1 (Florence, 1505): Notes on the measurement of solid bodies and on topology.[13]
1487–1505
Paris Manuscripts
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H (including H1, H2 and H3), I (including I1 and I2), K (including K1, K2 and K3), L and M
Bibliothèque de l’Institut de France, Paris
more than 2500
12 volumes, here listed in chronological order.
  • B (1488–1490; 84 folios): Notebook including designs for flying machines (including the "helicopter"), a submarine, centrally-planned churches and war machines.[14]
  • C (1490–91; 28 folios. One section missing.) Treatise on light and shade; also discusses flow of water and percussion.[15]
  • A (Sablon:Circa): Fragment of a larger MS which included the Codex Ashburnham II. Subjects covered include painting, perspective, water and mechanics.[16]
  • H (1493–94; 142 folios): Three pocket notebooks bound together. Discusses Euclidean geometry and the design of drawing materials.[17]
  • M (late 1490s–1500; 48 folios): A pocket notebook on geometry, ballistics and botany.[18]
  • L (1497–1502; 94 folios): A notebook on military engineering, used by Leonardo when he was in the employ of Cesare Borgia.[19]
  • K (1503–1508; 128 folios): Three pocket notebooks, mainly on geometry.[20]
  • I (1497–1505; 139 folios): Two pocket notebooks with notes on geometry, architecture, Latin, perspective and proportions for painters.[21]
  • D (1508–09; 10 folios with 20 drawings): Discusses theories of vision.[22]
  • F (1508–1513; 96 folios): Discusses water, optics, geology and astronomy.[23]
  • E (1513–14; originally 96 folios): Discusses weights and the effects of gravity, an invention for draining the Pontine Marshes, geometry, painting and the flight of birds.[24]
  • G (1510–1515; 93 folios): Primarily discusses botany.[25]
1488–1505
Codex Madrid
Madrid I and Madrid II
Biblioteca Nacional de España, Madrid
197
Two volumes, rediscovered in 1966.
  • I (1490s): Mainly concerned with the science of mechanisms.[26]
  • II (1503–04): Miscellaneous drawings, including maps of the Arno relating to the project to divert its course and notes and drawings relating to the casting of the Sforza monument.[27]
1490s–1504
Codex Ashburnham
Ash.I. or B.N.2037 (formerly part of MS.B.)
Ash.II or B.N.2038 (formerly part of MS.A.)
Bibliothèque de l’Institut de France, Paris
Two volumes, taken out of Paris Manuscripts A and B and sold to the Earl of Ashburnham, who returned them to Paris in 1890.
Sablon:Circa
Codex on the Flight of Birds
Turin
Biblioteca Reale, Turin
18
Originally part of Paris Manuscript B; probably stolen by Count Guglielmo Libri in around 1840–1847.[28]
dated 1505
Codex Leicester
Leic.
Private collection, United States
72 1506–1510
Codex Urbinas and libro A
Urb. and L°A.
Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Vatican City
An anthology of writings by Leonardo compiled after his death by his pupil Francesco Melzi. An abridged version was published in 1651 as a treatise on painting (Trattato della Pittura).[29]
Sablon:Circa

Lost works

[szerkesztés]
Image Details Notes Dating
Dragon shield
A juvenile work described by Giorgio Vasari, who said it was sold by Ser Piero da Vinci to merchants, who then sold it on to the Duke of Milan.[30]
Adam and Eve
Watercolour cartoon for a tapestry
Described in great detail by Vasari and the "Anonimo Gaddiano". Painted for the King of Portugal, it was in the collection of Ottaviano de' Medici in Vasari's lifetime. The composition might have inspired a drawing by Francesco di Giorgio Martini in the Christ Church Picture Gallery, Oxford.[30]
Medusa
Oil on panel
A juvenile work described by Vasari.
San Bernardo Altarpiece
Oil on panel
A commission for the chapel in Palazzo della Signoria, Florence, allocated to Leonardo on 10 January 1478 but never completed.[30] The commission had originally been given to Piero del Pollaiolo on 24 December 1477; its reallocation might have been arranged by Leonardo's father, who was a notary to the Signoria. After Leonardo's failure to fulfill the commission it was given to Domenico Ghirlandaio on 20 May 1483, but he did not complete the work either. It is sometimes mistakenly said that a Virgin and Child with Saints in the Uffizi by Filippino Lippi was the work finally delivered to the chapel, but this was painted for the Sala dei Dugento (council hall) of the palace.[31]
Anghiari csata
The remains of Leonardo's fresco may have been discovered in the Hall of the Five Hundred (Salone dei Cinquecento) in the Palazzo Vecchio, Florence.
Commissioned 4 May 1504
Leda and the Swan
Recorded by Cassiano dal Pozzo as being at Château de Fontainebleau in 1625.
There are nine known copies of the painting, including:
Sablon:Circa[30]
Angel of the Annunciation
The painting is described by Vasari. A drawing survives among studies for the Battle of Anghiari (see below). The drawing at right, known as The Incarnate Angel is a satirical copy, perhaps by Salaì, in the Kunstmuseum Basel.[32] There are some extant copies of the subject by Leonardeschi, including:
  • Workshop of Leonardo da Vinci? Angel of the Annunciation, c. 1505–13? Oil on canvas (transferred from panel), 66 × 47.3 cm, Hermitage, St Petersburg.[33]
  • Workshop of Leonardo da Vinci? St John the Baptist, c. 1508–13? Panel, 71 × 52 cm, Kunstmuseum Basel.[34]
  • Workshop of Leonardo da Vinci? St John the Baptist, c. 1508–13? Oil on panel, 75 × 53.4 cm, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.[35]
  • Baccio Bandinelli. Annunciate Angel. Sketch after Leonardo da Vinci.
Sablon:Circa[30]

Works without consensus on attribution

[szerkesztés]
Image Details Attribution Status and Notes Dating
&0000000000000201000000 &0000000000000003000000
Dreyfus Madonna
Oil on panel
15.7 × 12.8 cm, 6.13 × 5 in
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
&0000000000000007000000
Previously attributed to Verrocchio or Lorenzo di Credi. The anatomy of the Christ Child is so poor as to discourage firm attribution by most critics while some believe that it is a work of Leonardo's youth. This attribution was made by Suida in 1929. Other art historians such as Shearman and Morelli attribute the work to Verrocchio.[1] Daniel Arasse discusses this painting as a youthful work in Leonardo da Vinci, (1997).[36]
probably Sablon:Circa
(Marani 2000)
Tobias and the Angel
Egg tempera on poplar
83.6 × 66 cm
National Gallery, London
A painting by Verrocchio while Leonardo was in his workshop. Martin Kemp suggests that Leonardo may have painted some part of this work, most likely the fish. David Alan Brown, of the National Gallery in Washington, attributes the painting of the dog to him as well.
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
no date in Marani 2000, but accepted by him
The Holy Infants Embracing
Several versions in private collections.
Sablon:Circa
Portrait of a Lady in Profile
Pinacoteca Ambrosiana, Milan
Generally attributed to Ambrogio de Predis. The face is thought to show the hand of Leonardo.[37]
Sablon:Circa
La Bella Principessa
Bodycolour (pastel) on vellum
33 × 22 cm
Private collection, Switzerland
Identified as a Leonardo by Martin Kemp on stylistic grounds, and confirmed using the evidence of a fingerprint.[38] Other experts have not agreed with this attribution. As of 2010 the methods used to analyse the fingerprint have come into question.[39] The presence of holes in the page shows it was once part of the Sforziada a manuscript kept in Warsaw, this fact points to its originality.
Shaun Greenhalgh claims he faked the "masterpiece" La Bella Principessa, basing it on a woman called Sally on the tills at the Co-op in Bolton.[40]
Sablon:Hs
Virgin of the Rocks Chéramy
Oil on wood panel, transferred to canvas.
154.5 × 122 cm;
Private collection, Switzerland
Attributed to Leonardo and his workshop by Carlo Pedretti;[41] believed by others to be a copy of the Virgin of the Rocks by Leonardo's student Giampietrino. Mentioned by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres in 1845 and by Pierre Puvis de Chavannes; both were convinced that it was an original work by Leonardo.[forrás?]
Sablon:Circa (Pedretti)
Madonna and Child with St Joseph or Adoration of the Christ Child
Tempera on panel
Diameter 87 cm
Galleria Borghese, Rome
Previously attributed to Fra Bartolomeo. After recent cleaning, the Galleria Borghese sought attribution as a youthful work by Leonardo, based on the presence of a fingerprint similar to one that appears in the Lady with an Ermine. Result of investigation not available.[42]
Mary Magdalene
Private collection, Switzerland
Described as a potential Leonardo by Carlo Pedretti. Previously attributed to Giampietrino, who painted a number of similar Magdalenes.[43] Pedretti's attribution is not accepted by other scholars, e.g. Carlo Bertelli (former director of the Pinacoteca di Brera in Milan), who said this painting is not by Leonardo and that the subject could be a Lucretia with the knife removed.[44]
Portrait of Luca Pacioli
Capodimonte Museum, Naples
The painting has been generally attributed to Jacopo de' Barbari due to the presence of a cartouche with a cryptic inscription resembling his name, but some attribute the painting (at least partially) to Leonardo,[45] who began collaborating with Pacioli when the latter moved to Milan in 1496.[46][47] Leonardo illustrated Archimedean solids, including the rhombicuboctahedron (pictured in the portrait), in Pacioli's Divina proportione (1509).[48] According to one scholar, in the rhombicuboctahedron "we surely see the ineffable left hand of Leonardo da Vinci, who drew the superb pictures for De divina proportione, which, moreover, hang from a string ..."[45]
c. 1495–1500
Christ Carrying the Cross
Oil on poplar
Private collection, San Francisco.
Previously attributed by Sotheby's to Gian Francesco Maineri.[49][50] Attributed to Leonardo by its former owner.[49] Attribution based on the similarity of the tormentors of Christ to drawings made by Rubens of the Battle of Anghiari. According to Forbes magazine, Carlo Pedretti said that he knew of three similar paintings and that "All four paintings, he believed, were likely the work of Leonardo's studio assistants and perhaps even the master himself."[49]
c. 1500
Isleworth Mona Lisa
Private collection, Switzerland
Its proponents claim that this is the earlier of two versions of the Mona Lisa, painted for Francesco del Giocondo (husband of Lisa) in 1503, and that the Louvre version was painted for Giuliano de' Medici in 1517.[51]
Horse and Rider
Sablon:Circa
Private collection, London
Fragmentary wax statuette in a private collection in London, formerly in the Sangiorgi Collection in Rome, said to have come from the Melzi estate at Vaprio d’Adda.[52][53] Described as “by Leonardo himself” by Carlo Pedretti in 1985.[54][55] The attribution has been criticized by various art historians[56][57][58] and publications, citing a lack of hard evidence, a signature, or documentation.[59][60][61]
Sablon:Circa (Pedretti 1985)[62]
Sablon:Circa (Solari 2016)[63]
Lucan portrait of Leonardo da Vinci
tempera grassa on poplar
40 cm × 60 cm
Museo delle Antiche Genti di Lucania, Vaglio Basilicata
A painting discovered in 2008 near Naples, that closely resembles the Uffizi 17th century copy of the "Self portrait of Leonardo da Vinci", is currently undergoing restoration and investigation. Generally rejected as a Leonardo original, but it has been validated by scholars like Peter Hohenstatt (University of Parma), Alessandro Tomei (University of Chieti-Pescara), Jan Royt (University of Prague), David Bershad (University of Calgary) and Orest Kormashov (University of Tallinn).[forrás?]
A date in the late 15th or 16th century has been confirmed by scientific testing. Fingerprints match those found on the Lady with an Ermine. Alternatively attributed to Cristofano dell'Altissimo.[64]
Sablon:Circa
Portrait of a Man in Red Chalk
Red chalk on paper
33.3 cm × 21.6 cm (13.1 in × 8.5 in)
Biblioteca Reale, Turin
Accepted by some scholars, but not universally accepted.[65][66]
c. 1512
&0000000000020355000000 &0000000000000022000000
Bacchus
Oil on walnut panel transferred to canvas
177 × 115 cm
Louvre, Paris
&0000000000000007000000
Disputed
Generally considered to be a workshop copy of a drawing.[1]
Sablon:Circa (Kemp 2011)
Sablon:Circa, later repainted and altered (Marani 2000)
  1. a b c d e f g h i j Forráshivatkozás-hiba: Érvénytelen <ref> címke; nincs megadva szöveg a(z) Chiesa nevű lábjegyzeteknek
  2. Giorgio Vasari, Lives of the Artists, 1568; this edition Penguin Classics, trans. George Bull 1965, ISBN 0-14-044164-6
  3. National Gallery in London accused of altering attribution of Hermitage's 'Leonardo' for 2011 blockbuster show. www.theartnewspaper.com . (Hozzáférés: 2018. augusztus 13.)
  4. M. Kemp, entry for The Lady with an Ermine in the exhibition Circa 1492: Art in the Age of Exploration (Washington-New Haven-London) pp 271f, states "the identification of the sitter in this painting as Cecilia Gallerani is reasonably secure;" Janice Shell and Grazioso Sironi, "Cecilia Gallerani: Leonardo's Lady with an Ermine" Artibus et Historiae 13 No. 25 (1992:47–66) discuss the career of this identification since it was first suggested in 1900.
  5. a b Marani 2000, p. 339
  6. Kemp 2011, 253
  7. Syson 2011, 294
  8. For a partial list of scholars who accept the attribution, see Leonardo's Saviour of the World rediscovered in New York. The Art Newspaper, 2011. október 31. (Hozzáférés: 2012. február 21.)
  9. Syson 2011, 302
  10. Long-lost da Vinci painting fetches $450 million, a world record”, Washington Post, 2017. november 15. (Hozzáférés: 2017. november 16.) 
  11. Rare Da Vinci painting smashes world records with $450 million sale. CNN , 2017. november 16. (Hozzáférés: 2017. november 16.)
  12. Who Really Painted 'Salvator Mundi'? An Oxford Art Historian Says It Was Leonardo's Assistant | artnet News”, artnet News, 2018. augusztus 7. (Hozzáférés: 2018. augusztus 13.) (amerikai angol nyelvű) 
  13. The Forster Codices: Leonardo da Vinci's Notebooks at the V&A. Victoria and Albert Museum. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 4.)
  14. Paris Manuscript B. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  15. Paris Manuscript C. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  16. Paris Manuscript A. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  17. Paris Manuscript H. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  18. Paris Manuscript M. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  19. Paris Manuscript L. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  20. Paris Manuscript K. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  21. Paris Manuscript I. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  22. Paris Manuscript D. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  23. Paris Manuscript F. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  24. Paris Manuscript E. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  25. Paris Manuscript G. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  26. Codex Madrid I. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  27. Codex Madrid II. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. november 3.)
  28. Bambach 2003, 723. o.
  29. Codex Urbinas and lost Libro A. Universal Leonardo. University of the Arts, London. (Hozzáférés: 2012. április 12.)
  30. a b c d e Marani 2000, p. 431
  31. Rubin & Wright 1999, pp. 84 and 118, n. 25
  32. Shearman 1992, 33. o.
  33. Delieuvin 2012, cat. 80
  34. Delieuvin 2012, cat. 81
  35. St John the Baptist. Art UK. (Hozzáférés: 2013. július 15.)
  36. Arasse, Daniel. Leonardo da Vinci. Konecky & Konecky (1997). ISBN 978-1-56852-198-5 
  37. Kemp, Martin. Leonardo. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 251. o. (2004)  The work does not appear in Kemp 2011.
  38. Adams, James. „Montreal art expert identifies da Vinci drawing”, The Globe and Mail, 2005. október 13. (Hozzáférés: 2009. október 14.) 
  39. "The Mark of a Masterpiece" by David Grann, The New Yorker, vol. LXXXVI, no. 20, July 12 & 19, 2010, ISSN 0028-792X
  40. Byrne, Paul. „Portrait hailed as Da Vinci masterpiece is actually grumpy Bolton checkout girl”, mirror, 2015. november 30. (Hozzáférés: 2018. augusztus 13.) 
  41. Pedretti, Carlo. Leonardo da Vinci: the "Virgin of the rocks" in the Cheramy version: its history & critical fortune. Poggio a Caiano: CB edizioni (2017). ISBN 9788897644538 
  42. Arie, Sophie. „Fingerprint puts Leonardo in the frame”, The Guardian, 2005. február 16. (Hozzáférés: 2007. szeptember 27.) 
  43. A lost Leonardo? Top art historian says maybe. Universal Leonardo. (Hozzáférés: 2007. szeptember 27.)
  44. Bertelli, Carlo. „Due allievi non fanno un Leonardo”, Il Corriere della Sera, 2005. november 19. (Hozzáférés: 2007. szeptember 27.) (italian nyelvű) 
  45. a b (1993) „The Portrait of Fra Luca Pacioli”. The Mathematical Gazette 77 (479), 140–43, 146–49, 154, 165, 183, 184, 186–87, 197–205, 214. o. DOI:10.2307/3619717. 
  46. ritratto Pacioli. www.ritrattopacioli.it
  47. Livio, Mario. The Golden Ratio: The Story of Phi, the World's Most Astonishing Number, First trade paperback, New York City: Broadway Books, 130–131, 138. o. [2002] (2003). ISBN 0-7679-0816-3 
  48. Bo, Gianfranco: Il sorriso di Pacioli. utenti.quipo.it
  49. a b c Stephane Fitch DaVinci's Fingerprints, 12.22.03 accessed 7 July 2009. Martin Kemp, the expert on Leonardo's fingerprints, had not examined the painting when the article was written.
  50. A similar image, without the tormentors, is in the Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg. [1][halott link]
  51. 'Early Mona Lisa' painting claim disputed”, BBC News, 2012. szeptember 27. (Hozzáférés: 2013. január 26.) 
  52. Leonardo Da Vinci: Drawings of Horses and Other Animals from the Royal Library at Windsor Castle. London: Harcourt Brace, 185. o. (1987). ISBN 0384-45284-1 „Fig 111 and 112 Unpublished fragmentary wax model of an equestrian portrait of Charles d'Amboise attributed to Leonardo, said to have come from the Melzi estate at Vaprio d'Adda. London, Private collection (formally Sangiorgi collection in Rome).” 
  53. ‘Horse and Rider’ Discovered Leonardo Da Vinci Sculpture”, Huffington Post, 2012. augusztus 14. (Hozzáférés: 2014. január 16.) 
  54. Solari, Ernesto. Leonardo da Vinci Horse and Rider Il "Monumento" a Charles d'Amboise. Milan: Colibri Edizioni, 28. o. (2016). ISBN 978-88-97206-33-0 „Carlo Pedretti: In my opinion, this wax model is by Leonardo himself, and to my knowledge it has not been seen by other scholars.” 
  55. Leonardo da Vinci's ‘Horse and Rider’”, BBC News, 2012. augusztus 28. (Hozzáférés: 2014. január 16.) 
  56. Zerner, Henri (1997. szeptember 25.). „The Vision of Leonardo”. The New York Review of Books 44, 67. o. „no existing sculpture can be attributed to him with any certainty. [... the Bust of Christ as a Youth] was unfortunately placed in the exhibition next to a bizarre object, a wax statuette of a rider on a bucking horse never before seen in public. In the explanatory label, the statuette was said to have belonged to Francesco Melzi, a student and companion of Leonardo, a provenance unfortunately based on hearsay. [...] I fail to see the point of presenting to the uninformed visitor highly debatable hypotheses as if they were confirmed.” 
  57. Holmstrom, David. „Putting Leonardo's Inventions to the test: Boston's Museum of Science looks at the breathtaking scope of Leonardo da Vinci's work, though the authenticity of some objects is in question”, The Christian Science Monitor, 1997. március 24. „CONTROVERSIAL WORK: Whether Leonardo made this small wax figure is a source of contention among experts. Although the piece is unsigned, it is attributed to him in the exhibit.”  Sablon:Subscription
  58. Yemma, John. „Leonardo on tour: the good, the bad ... and the phony? Art historians question attribution of some works headed for Boston show”, The Boston Globe, 1997. február 23., A.1. oldal „at least one of the two sculptures on display in the art gallery at Science Park beginning March 3 have caused grave doubts among some art historians. [...] The labels on the paintings, Ackerman warned museum officials, were simply too generous, linking dubious and contested works from private collections too closely with Leonardo and other Italian masters. [...] after weeks of struggling over wording, museum officials altered some of the labels to introduce more skepticism [... The Wax Horse] is "attributed to Leonardo." Not so fast, said Jack Wasserman, an art historian at Temple University in Philadelphia. "There is no single work of sculpture which Leonardo worked on that survived to today," Wasserman said. "Yes, it could be 'attributed to' Leonardo, but you need to have a compelling reason for doing so. Since nothing survived, there is no way to judge a piece of sculpture like this."”  Sablon:Subscription
  59. Panza, Pierluigi. „La scultura equestre di Leonardo Esposizione tra genio e mistero”, Corriere della Sera, 2016. október 19. (Hozzáférés: 2017. március 1.) (italian nyelvű) 
  60. Gatti, Chiara. „Arriva l'uomo a cavallo di Leonardo Da Vinci che divide i critici”, la Repubblica, 2016. október 19. (Hozzáférés: 2017. február 22.) (italian nyelvű) „Presentata come una rivelazione esclusiva, è contestata da molti esperti. [...] Vittorio Sgarbi non nasconde i suoi dubbi sull'attribuzione al maestro toscano [...] Pietro Marani: Non ci sono evidenze, né si possono fare confronti poiché non esistono dati d'appoggio, esemplari sicuri.” 
  61. The Budapest Horse: Beyond the Leonardo da Vinci Question, Making and Moving Sculpture in Early Modern Italy. Routledge, 27. o. (2017. november 4.). ISBN 978-1-351-55951-5 
  62. Sablon:Cite letter
  63. Solari, Ernesto. Leonardo da Vinci : Horse and rider : il "monumento" a Charles d'Amboise, Leonardo, da Vinci, 1452-1519,, Palazzo delle Stelline, Prima edizione (2016). ISBN 9788897206330. OCLC 962823523 
  64. Self-portrait of Leonardo, Surrentum Online, accessed 2010-11-06
  65. Artwork Analysis self Portrait in Red Chalk by Leonardo Da Vinci. Finearts.com . Helium Inc.. [2014. november 29-i dátummal az eredetiből archiválva]. (Hozzáférés: 2014. november 16.)
  66. Emergency Treatment for Leonardo da Vinci's Self-Portrait. news.universityproducts.com . Archival Products. (Hozzáférés: 2014. november 16.)


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