Gallerie dell’Accademia Venezia
The Vitruvian Man drawing from Leonardo da Vinci’s notebooks is housed in the Galleria dell’Accademia in Venice, Italy. It is only occasionally revealed to the public, as “prolonged exposure to light would cause it to fade,” (Isaacson 153). Most recently, it was on display at the Louvre in Paris, France.
The Gallery houses many Venetian paintings from up to its founding in the mid-1700s. Among the works are those by Giovanni Bellini, Gigiorgone, Tintoretto, Titian, and Paolo Veronese. Most of the artwork represents Renaissance artistic ideals such as depth, perspective, focus of the human form, and realism.
Paintings housed there that we have observed in class include Madonna and Child with Saint Catherine and Saint Mary Magdalene by Giovanni Bellini and The Tempest by Giorgone.
Sources:
“The Gallerie Dell'Accademia: the Great Masters of Venetian Art.” Venezia Da Vivere, 30 July 2018, www.veneziadavivere.com/en/gallerie-accademia-art-venice/.
Isaacson, Walter. “Chapter 8 Vitruvian Man.” Leonardo Da Vinci: The Biography, Simon & Schuster, 2018.
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Coordinates
Longitude: 12.328139400000