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Perspective

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Perspective
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Perspective

Piero della Francesca. Ideal City (1475). Oil on canvas.

What is Linear Perspective?

• a system for

representing three-

dimensional space on

a two-dimensional flat

surface

• developed in Florence

in the early 15th

century by Filippo

Brunelleschi and

Leon Batista Alberti

The Invention of Linear Perspective

Development of Linear Perspective

• Filippo Brunelleschi

(1377-1446) was the

sculptor and architect

who demonstrated the

principles of perspective

through mathematics

• In 1415, Brunelleschi

painted his picture of the

Baptistery on the surface

of a small mirror, right on The Baptistery in Florence

top of its own reflection.

Brunelleschi’s “Peep Show”

• To demonstrate the fact that

his painting was indeed an

exact replica that could fool the

eye, Brunelleschi drilled a

small hole in the mirror and

then stood directly in front of

the Baptistery, looking through

the peephole to see the real

building.



• He then held up a second,

clean mirror in front of his

painted panel. The second

mirror blocked the view of the

real building, but now reflected

his painted version on the

original mirror.

Brunelleschi’s “Peep Show”

• By holding up the panel

and pressing the hole to

one eye while holding a

mirror with the other

hand, the viewer could

see the painting’s

reflection.

• A viewer standing in the

cathedral doorway could

check the painted illusion

against the real view.

Leon Battista Alberti (1404-72)

• architect and writer who was the first to

formulate rules that artists could follow

• imagined the picture surface as an “open

window” through which a painted world is seen

• showed how a perspective “checkerboard

pavement” is created within the picture space—

in which the receding parallel lines represent the

visual rays connecting the spectator’s eye to a

spot in the distance

Leon Batista Alberti









• based his system on the height of the human figure, being 3 braccia tall

• drew a rectangular picture area, imagined as an open window

• divided the ground line into scaled braccia

• fixed the central vanishing point by drawing a vertical line three braccia high

from the center of the ground line

• drew diagonals—orthogonals—joining the ground line to the vanishing point

Application of Linear Perspective

• Brunelleschi devised the method of

perspective for architectural purposes.

• He is said by Manetti to have made a

ground plan for the Church of Santo

Spirito on the basis of which he produced

a perspective drawing to show his clients

how it would look after it was built.

• We can compare this drawing with a

modern photo of the actual church.

Application of Linear Perspective









Brunelleschi's proposal drawing of the Interior of Brunelleschi's Santo Spirito

interior of Santo Spirito (1543)

Early Approaches



Prior to the Renaissance, artists were

less concerned with the illusion of

reality and more concerned with the

content and symbolism of their work.

Ancient Egyptian

• only the front planes

of objects are shown

• figures assembled

from separate views

• depth suggested by

overlapping forms

Byzantine/Medieval









Duccio di Buoninsegna. The Virgin and Child with Saints (c.1315).

Egg tempera on poplar.

• the gold backgrounds suggest majesty and internal light

• denies any sense of depth, allowing figures to inhabit a spiritual space

• figures, however, modeled in light and shade

Defining Space Before the

Renaissance

The size of each element in the image

related much more to its importance,

rather than it's placement in a space.

Judging by the Eye

• Giotto introduced a

new kind of realism

by creating

convincing spatial

arrangements.

• He angles the

building, removing

side walls to reveal

the cubic interior.



Giotto. Birth of the Virgin Mary (1320s).

Fresco.

Judging by the Eye

• The sense of depth is

partly achieved in this

painting by the

diminishing size of the

floor tiles.

• The receding lines of the

floor converge toward a

single focus (vanishing

point), although the other

receding diagonals

converge toward points

higher up in the picture.



Ambrogio Lorenzetti. The Presentation

in the Temple (1342). Tempera on wood.

Judging by the Eye

• Dutch master van Eyck

created highly convincing

interiors and landscapes

by relying on his own

observations rather than

theoretical rules.

• In this painting, an

intimate interior is created

by the sloping lines of the

boarded floor and

beamed ceiling, the

relative size of objects,

and the use of light.

Jan van Eyck. The Arnolfini Marriage (1434).

Oil on oak.

A convex mirror, like the one in the

painting, may have been used by

van Eyck as a compositional aid.

The Renaissance

Masaccio: a “hole in the wall”

• Ten years after the

invention of linear

perspective, Masaccio

applied the new method

of mathematical

perspective even more

spectacularly.

• This fresco’s painted

architectural framework is

so carefully constructed

that it could almost have

been translated from an

architectural plan.



Masaccio. The Trinity (1427). Fresco.

A “hole in the wall”









The barrel vaulted ceiling is incredible in

its complex, mathematical use of

These lines eventually perspective.

meet at a distance point

on the horizon line.

Paolo Uccello: Playful

Measurement

• explored the

geometry of nature

and objects

• studied how to solve

perspective problems

• combined scientific

probing with the love

of pattern and

splendor



Chalice

Perspective in Wood



• trompe l’oeil wood

inlay panels

• The private study of

Federico da

Montefeltro, the Duke

of Urbino

Perspective in Wood

Perspective: Eye Levels

Normal Viewpoint

Paolo Uccello. The Hunt in the Forest (1460s). Oil on canvas.

High Viewpoint

Low Viewpoint

Bramantino. Adoration of the Kings (1498). Oil on panel.

Piero della Francesca: Divine

Measurement









Piero dell Francesca. The Flagellation (1460). Tempera on wood.

Piero della Francesca: Divine

Measurement

• perspective so logical

and precise that

scholars have been

able to reconstruct

the room as if it were

real architecture

• architectural

proportions and

dimensions reflect the

divine order of things

Andrea Mantegna: Eyewitness Art

• perspective of the

oculus constructed

according to the

upward gaze of an

observer standing

directly below









Andrea Mantegna. From The Painted

Room (1465-74). Fresco.

Andrea Mantegna: Eyewitness Art

• Christ shown in a

dramatically

foreshortened pose

• heavy head propped

on a pillow so that his

features can be seen

• feet projected out of

the picture so viewer

can focus on gaping

wounds

Andrea Mantegna. Lamentation Over the

Dead Christ (1480). Distemper on canvas.

Perspective Foreshortening

• Foreshortening is based

on studies from life as

well as perspective

principles.

• Figure is encased in a

gridlike “box” divided into

equal units.

• When box is laid on the

ground, the units diminish

as they recede.

Leonardo da Vinci’s Explorations









The Last Supper (1497). Fresco.

Leonardo da Vinci’s Explorations









The Last Supper (1497). Fresco.

Leonardo da Vinci’s Explorations









The Last Supper (1497). Fresco.

Leonardo da Vinci’s Explorations









• To seem like an extension of the refectory,

the vanishing point—which is on Christ’s right

eye—should be lower, at the spectator’s level.

• Instead, it is about 15 feet above the floor

level.

• The strong pull of the perspective, however,

“lifts” the viewer from the floor to the correct

viewpoint—a strangely spiritual phenomenon.



Convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan

Aerial Perspective



Leonardo da Vinci

Aerial Perspective









Leonardo da Vinci. The Virgin of the

Rocks (1508). Oil on wood.

Atmospheric Perspective





• a coloristic device used to accentuate the

perception of distance

• based on the optical effect caused by light

being absorbed and reflected by the

“atmosphere”: a mist of dust and moisture

• first used by Leonardo da Vinci

Albrecht Dürer



Perspective, Human Anatomy,

and Proportions

Albrecht Dürer

• He traveled to Italy to

learn about

perspective.

• Besides his great

studies of

perspective, he was

also interested in

human anatomy and

proportion.



Melancholia (1514). Copper engraving.

Dürer’s Perspective Aid

• frame consisted of

wooden

stand

• grid threads probably

made of

silk









The Draftsman’s Net

Dürer’s Perspective Aid









• The grid is used by the artist to copy the outline of the model’s form

onto a squared drawing surface

• An eyepiece, fixing the artist’s viewpoint, is positioned at a specific

distance—twice the frame’s height—from the device.

• The closer the net is placed to the object, the more foreshortened

the perspective.

Anamorphic Art



Hidden Messages

Anamorphosis

• refers to a deliberately distorted image,

which, when viewed head on, is almost

unrecognizable

• only when the image is viewed from a

certain angle does it appear

First Anamorph









Erhard Schon. Vexierbild or Puzzle Picture (1535)



When this fantastic landscape (on the left) is viewed at a low angle from the left four portraits emerge of

Charles V, Ferdinand I Pope Paul III and Francis I (shown at the right).

Anamorphic Art









Hans Hoblein, the Younger. The Ambassadors

(1533). Oil on wood.

Anamorphic Art



• An anamorphic image

is an extreme case of

perspective, where

the viewpoint is at the

side, and near the

plane, of the picture

itself.

Drawing the Distorted Grid







1. A square grid is placed over a

scale drawing.

2. The artist then draws a distorted

grid onto which the design is

transferred—a side view in which

the proportions are drastically

altered but the points of the grid

fall on the same place of the

design.

Anamorphic Art

• This portrait

superimposes the long-

nosed, compressed head

of a young boy on a

panoramic landscape.

• When the picture is

viewed from the right-

hand edge, the portrait is

transformed into a living

likeness of Edward VI.



William Scrots. Portrait of Edward

VI (1546). Oil on wood.


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