da Vinci and the Renaissance 2019 (Italy) Dashboard
Description
Led by Prof. Dino Franco Felluga ([email protected]), da Vinci and the Renaissance is a fully cross-disciplinary study-abroad program that explores the transition from the medieval period to the Renaissance across multiple subjects (art, architecture, engineering, science), thus laying out how much of what we take for granted today about technology or about the human subject were implemented in this rich period, especially in Italy. The focus for the course will be that most famous “Renaissance man,” Leonardo da Vinci. The course’s interdisciplinary approach asks students to think about the constructed nature of the things we take for granted as “natural” (e.g., time, space, human subjectivity, meaning, sight, knowledge, and law), thus opening our eyes to the significance of cultural differences.
We finish in the last days of the course by flash-forwarding to our present century so we can consider not only how Renaissance thinking made possible a number of present-day developments (robotics and computing, for example), but also the myriad ways that we are now seeing a cultural, ontological, and epistemological shift that is as far-reaching as the one between the medieval period and the Renaissance. The Peggy Guggenheim Museum and the Venice Biennale will provide us with our artistic examples of so-called “postmodernism.”
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Individual Entries
Cesare Borgia, the son of Pope Alexander VI, was born in and lived in Rome. Borgia was the comander in chief of the papal army at the peak of his power. Leonardo da Vinci was a patron of Borgia from 1502 to 1503, being given the title "senior military architect, and general engineer". It was Borgia who commissioned da Vinci to create military weaponry/machinery, and da Vinci's design for the machine gun thus was born.
Heydenreich, Ludwig Heinrich. “Leonardo Da Vinci.” Encyclopædia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., 28 Apr. 2019, www.britannica.com/biography/Leonardo-da-Vinci.