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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Lifestyle
Skye Sherwin

Leonardo da Vinci’s A Deluge: apocalypse wow

Leonardo da Vinci’s A Deluge
Leonardo da Vinci’s A Deluge, c1517-18. Photograph: Royal Collection Trust

Apocalypse wow …

We are far from the first generation to worry about weather apocalypse. Civilisation obliterated by a storm was a subject Leonardo returned to again and again in his final years, in France at the court of Francis I. This 1517 work is one of a suite of drawings rendered in black chalk, seemingly made for himself.

Hard rain …

The torrents of rain literally lash, curling violently like whips. They have the geometric precision of the landscape (and suggest a similar degree of analysis) in his Virgin of the Rocks.

Washed out …

In several works, man’s cities are seen tumbling. Here they are all but obliterated, although a wrecked fortress can be made out in the bottom-right corner. The storm is on the point of consuming everything.

Appetite for destruction …

The drawings expand on ideas he was working through in his treatise of painting. Their controlled realisation vies with the wild subject, suggesting competing forces at work: the end-of-days obsessive and the meticulous scientist and artist.

Leonardo da Vinci’s A Deluge
Leonardo da Vinci’s A deluge (c1517-18) Photograph: Royal Collection Trust

Included in Leonardo da Vinci: A Life in Drawing, Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow, to 6 May

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