These da Vinci style drawings were likely created using the SketchUp models from sometime ago, which you can download from the page below to play with:
This is amazingly beautiful. If it were drawn as isometric projection instead of perspective projection, it would be more in the style of Leonardo da Vinci.
which makes one wonder if there are instances of his having used other perspectives in his drawings (cabinet for drawings for furniture for his home or workshop for a cabinetmaker, or cavalier for a map/diagram for military planning), and wish that the entirety of his oeuvre were available in a digital format like to the Corbis CD-ROM Leonardo's rendering of the Codex Leceister:
These da Vinci style drawings were likely created using the SketchUp models from sometime ago, which you can download from the page below to play with:
https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/CMSPublic/SketchUpCMS
Related article: https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/513/2/022032
This is amazingly beautiful. If it were drawn as isometric projection instead of perspective projection, it would be more in the style of Leonardo da Vinci.
Interestingly, Leonardo may have experimented with binocular vs. monocular perspective for at least one alternative version of his _Mona Lisa_:
https://monalisa.org/2013/12/15/genius-leonardo-da-vinci-per...
which makes one wonder if there are instances of his having used other perspectives in his drawings (cabinet for drawings for furniture for his home or workshop for a cabinetmaker, or cavalier for a map/diagram for military planning), and wish that the entirety of his oeuvre were available in a digital format like to the Corbis CD-ROM Leonardo's rendering of the Codex Leceister:
https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/mi...
Maybe they're original, found buried in some obscure monastery in the mountains of Umbria.
Perhaps Leonardo invented the LHC!
Some of the drawings feature what appears to be flying spiders and other similar shapes. Is this supposed to represent particle collisions?
I can't see who drew them?
Credited as the photographer on the record
Background: https://www.symmetrymagazine.org/sites/default/files/legacy/...
Thank you. Excellent link you've shared.
I noted the photographer credit but should have just googled
Cool art, awful mobile experience