Louvre - Geological Sketches
The image on the sketch does not have a known location as it was most likely a place Leonardo da Vinci imagined, but the sketch is now available for all of the public to see on display the Louvre Museum in Paris. The research that Leonardo did to discover more about the Earths geological formations can be translated directly into his paintings that now hang in the Louvre. With the shift in art styles from the Byzantine era to the Renaissance, there was a shift to have a lot more focus in the background of paintings which Leonardo studied extensively in sketches such as this one. In a large amount of Leonardo's paintings there is a beautiful backdrop of rock formations and otherwise, but there is not many sketches such as these found from his notebooks.
Works Cited:
“Leonardo Da Vinci (Vinci 1452-Amboise 1519) - A Ravine.” Royal Collection Trust, www.rct.uk/collection/912395/a-ravine
Rosenberg, Gary D. The Revolution in Geology from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment.
Parent Map
Coordinates
Longitude: 2.337644000000