HN004 Leonardo da Vinci, his musicianship and the Mona Lisa

Blue ladder Treble Clef drawing

We know that Leonardo da Vinci was raised and trained in Florence, within the beating heart of the Renaissance. We also think of him as the painter of the Mona Lisa and as an outstanding researcher into the wonders of nature. He was active for many years at the court of the Dukes of Milan where he painted his famous Last Supper.

 

But, how many of us are aware that, according to his early biographer, Giorgio Vasari, Leonardo da Vinci was initially summoned to Milan due to his reputation as a musician? I quote from A.B. Hinds translation, of Vasari’s lives, ‘On the death of Giovan. Galeazzo, Duke of Milan, and the accession of Ludovico Sforza in the same year, 1493, Lionardo was invited to Milan to play the lyre, in which that prince greatly delighted. Lionardo took his own instrument, made by himself in silver, and shaped like a horse’s head,  a curious and novel idea to render the harmonies more loud and sonorous, so that he surpassed all the musicians who had assembled there.’[1]

 

The relation between Leonardo and music doesn’t stop here though. He wrote many notes in his research and pondering on the nature of sound, and about music and the production of sounds. But as a final interesting fact, and again from Vasari, whilst painting the Mona Lisa, ‘he engaged people to play and sing, and jesters to keep her merry, and remove that melancholy which painting usually gives to portraits.’ [2]

 


[1] VASARI, GIORGIO. THE LIVES OF THE PAINTERS, SCULPTORS AND ARCHITECTS VOLUME 2 TRANSLATED BY A.B. HINDS LONDON 1927, REVISED EDITION, DENT, 1963, P.160

[2] IBID. P.164

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