Leonardo da Vinci: A Life in Drawing
Accompanies the major exhibition in 2019
A rich insight into a searching and restless mind
Christopher Baker, Apollo Magazine
254 x 203 mm, 200 colour illustrations
ISBN 9 781909 741 47 8 (hardback)
ISBN 9 781909 741 66 9 (paperback)
North American, Simplified Chinese, Dutch, German, Italian and Spanish rights sold
Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) practised as a painter, sculptor, architect, engineer, costume designer, anatomist, botanist, map-maker and much more. The activity that unified these interests was drawing. Leonardo drew to develop his artistic and engineering projects, to record his perceptions of the world around him, to explore his own imagination and to think.
The Royal Collection holds by far the most important group of Leonardo’s drawings: more than 500 sheets that have been together since the artist’s death in 1519 and which are among the most diverse and technically accomplished in the entire history of art.
To mark the 500th anniversary of Leonardo’s death in 2019, selections of these drawings were displayed simultaneously at 12 venues across the United Kingdom from February - May 2019, followed by major exhibitions at The Queen’s Galleries in London (May - October 2019) and Edinburgh (November 2019 - March 2020). This publication includes all 200 of the drawings to be shown at each of these venues, and provides an authoritative survey of the richness of Leonardo’s drawings in the Royal Collection.
Martin Clayton is Head of Prints and Drawings, Royal Collection Trust. He has published widely on the Italian drawings in the Royal Collection, with titles including Castiglione: Lost Genius, Canaletto in Venice and Raphael and His Circle. His many works on Leonardo include Leonardo da Vinci: Anatomist, The Mechanics of Man and The Divine and the Grotesque.
Leonardo da Vinci: A Life in Drawing
A nationwide exhibition of drawings to commemorate the 500th anniversary of Leonardo's deathSpecial Royal Collection online price. Every purchase helps us to care for and increase access to the Royal Collection.