The Other Vitruvian Man
Was Leonardo da Vinci's famous anatomical chart actually a collaborative effort?
- By Toby Lester
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
After years of study, Sgarbi thinks he has the answer. In a volume of academic papers to be published this winter by the Italian publisher Marsilio, he proposes that the author was a young architect named Giacomo Andrea da Ferrara.
What little is known about Giacomo Andrea derives primarily from a remark made in On Divine Proportion (1498), by Luca Pacioli, who described him as both a dear friend of Leonardo’s and an expert on Vitruvius. Leonardo himself records in his notes having had dinner with Giacomo Andrea in 1490, the year Leonardo is thought to have drawn Vitruvian Man. And elsewhere Leonardo mentions “Giacomo Andrea’s Vitruvius”—a direct reference, Sgarbi believes, to the Ferrara manuscript. “Everything started to fit perfectly, like in a puzzle,” he told me.
Sgarbi’s hunch is that Leonardo and Giacomo Andrea collaborated on their drawings, but few traces of Giacomo Andrea survive, and unearthing more, enough to make Sgarbi’s case definitively, may take years. Still, scholars already find it intriguing. The French historian Pierre Gros, one of the world’s foremost authorities on Vitruvius, says he considers the idea “seductive and convincing.”
One of the few other known references to Giacomo Andrea concerns his death. In 1499 the French occupied Milan, where he and Leonardo had lived since the 1480s. Already admired internationally, Leonardo established cordial relations with the French and safely fled the city. But Giacomo Andrea wasn’t so lucky. He apparently stayed on as a kind of resistance fighter, and the French captured, hanged and quartered him the following year. “Because of his loyalty to the Duke of Milan,” Sgarbi says, “Giacomo Andrea was erased from history”—as was his Vitruvian Man.
Toby Lester’s new book, Da Vinci’s Ghost, is about the history behind Leonardo’s Vitruvian Man. You can read more of his work at tobylester.com.
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Comments (7)
this is a hoax right?
Posted by jay dee on December 13,2012 | 11:55 PM
Its a pity Giacomo had to be erased alongside his works, Goverments in contemporary times and the future should learn from this fact that works of art and creative ingenuity are priceless and should be considered same irrespective of their progenators political or religious affiliations. In my mind Giacomo is a hero.
Posted by anande jean-pascal on February 22,2012 | 03:18 AM
Leonardo and others of his era seem to be following exactly the architectural metaphor defined in the Nile Valley in Pharaonic times. R. A. Schwaller de Lubicz ("The Temple in Man") demonstrates that not only human proportion, but related associations of various astral concepts, were completely integrated into the construction of the temple at Luxor. For me, if Leonardo wasn't the first European to diagram this concept, then the the grand puzzle is to find traces of the "brain trust" that perpetuated and communicated these very complex and subtle ideas for more than 2000 years.
Posted by Daniel Kelley on February 16,2012 | 03:09 PM
@David, Could you please elaborate on your statement further. It sounds very esoteric, and Leonardo was surely contemplating more than just proportions. I am not too familiar with the Riddle of the Sphinx, and to me, "Squaring the Circle" is a question of how man can recreate Heaven/the infinite on Earth/material form.
My brain is spinning but not really seeing a conclusion that I'd like to understand...
Posted by Katie Mueller on February 6,2012 | 10:05 PM
I found your article pleasantly stimulating to my interests in arthistory, mathematics and spirituality. I am a student at MetroState Univ. in St.Paul, MN, taking courses in literature, and informations studies this semester, as well as completing an internship at the Cathedral of St.Paul. I am required to follow a blog as part of a course requirement. I hope there are more blogs on this or related topics. It is no suprise to me that DaVinci would have collaborated with another theoretically inclined artist of his time. Truly, most efforts are not originals, but come from the flow of action-reaction, building on a foundation and making some new discoveries along the way, and mostly by plenty of trial and error in the process. And what gifted mind would stay within the confinds of his own talents, when a fresh outlook is required to solve a problem or stimulate an idea and who has mentors and peers of equal or complementing talent? However, discovery of ancient artifacts is always exciting, and I hope a museum display for the portfolio is in the works. Nola
Posted by Nola Burbeck on February 1,2012 | 12:19 PM
It seems clear that the so-called "Vitruvian Man" is the Sphinx-like answer to the ancient problem of "squaring the circle." Like the Sphinx's riddle, the answer is "Man."
Posted by David Saltman on January 26,2012 | 01:39 PM