Leonardo da Vinci - Collected Works (12 books)
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* Leonardo da Vinci - Collected Works (12 books)
LEONARDO DA VINCI (1452–1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect who seamlessly bridged the worlds of fine art and empirical science. He is widely regarded as a genius who epitomised the Renaissance humanist ideal, and his collective works contributed to the development of European art to an extent rivalled only by that of his younger contemporary Michelangelo.
While his fame initially rested on his achievements as a painter, Leonardo also left behind a sprawling intellectual legacy bound within dozens of personal notebooks, collectively known as his codices, in which he made drawings and notes on a wide variety of subjects. Written in his signature left-handed mirror-writing, these private journals served as a chaotic blueprint of a mind centuries ahead of its time, capturing an endless stream of consciousness where art, science, and engineering collide. Across thousands of loose pages, meticulous anatomical studies and fluid dynamic sketches share space with visionary designs for flying machines, advanced weaponry, and automated machinery.
For English-speaking audiences trying to digest these vast musings, three essential modern compilations shape our contemporary understanding of his inner mind. The large-format compendium LEONARDO'S NOTEBOOKS (2005), edited by art historian H. Anna Suh, is designed as a highly visual, illustration-heavy gallery guide. Rather than prioritizing an exhaustive textual synthesis, Suh treats Leonardo's sketches, anatomical studies, and architectural drawings as equal partners to his written words, keying nearly every passage directly to the piece of artwork it describes. In contrast, THE DA VINCI NOTEBOOKS (2005), compiled by Emma Dickens, serves as an accessible, narrative-driven gateway tailored for the broader public. Capitalizing on a massive renewal of public fascination with Renaissance mysteries, Dickens structured her selection as a fast-paced reader that highlights the astonishing breadth of Leonardo's foresight.
The Oxford World's Classics edition of the NOTEBOOKS (2008), selected by Irma Richter and updated by Thereza Wells, approaches Leonardo's staggering archive as a balanced and mathematically organized philosophical narrative. Richter places an intense focus on Leonardo’s overarching scientific-philosophical systems and art theories, making it the superior version for readers seeking structural logic and conceptual depth over casual browsing. This text values organizational logic above all else, making it the superior version for readers who want to understand Leonardo’s overarching scientific-philosophical system rather than browse through isolated sketches.
Finally, Leonardo's famous PARAGONE (1651) is a series of conceptual passages in which he fiercely champions painting as the supreme art form, arguing it is superior to poetry, music, and sculpture because it relies on the eye—the noblest organ—to combine scientific mathematics with the divine ability to replicate the entire visible universe. Taken as a whole, all these works testify to Leonardo's unquenchable curiosity and restless, acute intelligence.
The following books are in ePUB and/or PDF format as indicated:
* A Treatise on Painting [tr. Rigaud] (Dover, 2005) – ePUB
* Complete Works (Delphi Classics, 2014) – ePUB
* Da Vinci Notebooks [ed. Dickens] (Profile, 2005) – ePUB
* Leonardo on the Human Body [tr. O'Malley & Saunders] (Dover, 1983) – ePUB
* Leonardo's Anatomical Drawings (Dover, 2012) – ePUB
* Leonardo's Notebooks [ed. Suh] (Black Dog & Leventhal, 2013) – ePUB / PDF
* Notebooks [ed. Wells] (Oxford, 2008) – ePUB / PDF
* Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci (Dover, 1970) – ePUB
* Paragone: A Critical Interpretation [ed. Claire Farago] (Brill, 1992) – PDF
* Prophecies [tr. Nichols] (Alma Books, 2018) – ePUB
== BIOGRAPHIES ==
* Stephen J. Campbell – Leonardo da Vinci: An Untraceable Life (Princeton, 2024) – ePUB
* Walter Isaacson – Leonardo da Vinci (Simon & Schuster, 2017) – ePUB
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