LEONARDO DA VINCI (VINCI 1452-AMBOISE 1519)
Notes and sketches on a deluge
c.1517-18RCIN 912665
Recto: a sheet of instructions in Leonardo's handwriting describing how to paint a Deluge, illustrated by seven slight sketches. Verso: a description of a Deluge in Leonardo's handwriting, illustrated by three slight sketches. Melzi's number 178 (verso).
A cataclysmic storm overwhelming the earth was one of Leonardo’s favourite subjects during the last years of his life, in both his drawings and his writings. Several long passages recount the futile struggles of man and animal against the overwhelming forces of nature – tempests, floods, a mountain collapsing on a city, and finally the storm sweeping away all matter. But Leonardo’s descriptions of the deluge, far from being chaotic, are objective and detached, emphasising the attitudes of the figures, the appearance of the landscape, the optical qualities of cloud, rain, water, debris, dust and smoke, and thus of a piece with his notes throughout his life towards a treatise on painting, with every effect of interest to the painter now amplified and thrown together.
One of these long passages can be seen in RCIN 912665, running to almost 1,000 words on each side of the sheet, and laid out like a scientific treatise with marginal illustrations – a coastal view with rainfall, a plan of a dam with water flooding through a breach, a cloud formation with a downpour, a whirlpool sucking boats to its centre, a wave striking a block and curling back on itself, a wave breaking, and water flowing down a sluice. Not all the text can be quoted here, but a couple of passages give the flavour:
Description of the deluge:
Let there first be shown the summit of a rugged
mountain surrounded by valleys. From its sides
the soil slides together with the roots of bushes,
denuding great areas of rock. And descending from
these precipices, ruinous in its boisterous course, it
lays bare the twisted and gnarled roots of large trees,
throwing their roots upwards; and the mountains,
scoured bare, reveal deep fissures made by ancient
earthquakes. The bases of the mountains are covered
with ruins of trees hurled down from their lofty
peaks, mixed with mud, roots, branches and leaves
thrust into the mud and earth and stones.
And into the depths of a valley the fragments of
a mountain have fallen, forming a shore to the
swollen waters of its river, which has burst its banks
and rushes on in monstrous waves, striking and
destroying the walls of the towns and farmhouses
in the valley. The ruin of these buildings throws up
a great dust, rising like smoke or wreathed clouds
against the falling rain. The swollen waters sweep
round them, striking these obstacles in eddying
whirlpools, and leaping into the air as muddy
foam. And the whirling waves fly from the place of
concussion, and their impetus moves them across
other eddies in a contrary direction [...]
The rain as it falls from the clouds is of the same
colour as those clouds, in its shaded side, unless the
sun’s rays break through them, in which case the
rain will appear less dark than the clouds. And if the
heavy masses of ruined mountains or buildings fall
into the vast pools of water, a great quantity will
be flung into the air, and its movement will be in a
contrary direction to that of the object which struck
the water; that is to say, the angle of reflection will
be equal to the angle of incidence.
Text adapted from Leonardo da Vinci: A life in drawing, London, 2018
A cataclysmic storm overwhelming the earth was one of Leonardo’s favourite subjects during the last years of his life, in both his drawings and his writings. Several long passages recount the futile struggles of man and animal against the overwhelming forces of nature – tempests, floods, a mountain collapsing on a city, and finally the storm sweeping away all matter. But Leonardo’s descriptions of the deluge, far from being chaotic, are objective and detached, emphasising the attitudes of the figures, the appearance of the landscape, the optical qualities of cloud, rain, water, debris, dust and smoke, and thus of a piece with his notes throughout his life towards a treatise on painting, with every effect of interest to the painter now amplified and thrown together.
One of these long passages can be seen in RCIN 912665, running to almost 1,000 words on each side of the sheet, and laid out like a scientific treatise with marginal illustrations – a coastal view with rainfall, a plan of a dam with water flooding through a breach, a cloud formation with a downpour, a whirlpool sucking boats to its centre, a wave striking a block and curling back on itself, a wave breaking, and water flowing down a sluice. Not all the text can be quoted here, but a couple of passages give the flavour:
Description of the deluge:
Let there first be shown the summit of a rugged
mountain surrounded by valleys. From its sides
the soil slides together with the roots of bushes,
denuding great areas of rock. And descending from
these precipices, ruinous in its boisterous course, it
lays bare the twisted and gnarled roots of large trees,
throwing their roots upwards; and the mountains,
scoured bare, reveal deep fissures made by ancient
earthquakes. The bases of the mountains are covered
with ruins of trees hurled down from their lofty
peaks, mixed with mud, roots, branches and leaves
thrust into the mud and earth and stones.
And into the depths of a valley the fragments of
a mountain have fallen, forming a shore to the
swollen waters of its river, which has burst its banks
and rushes on in monstrous waves, striking and
destroying the walls of the towns and farmhouses
in the valley. The ruin of these buildings throws up
a great dust, rising like smoke or wreathed clouds
against the falling rain. The swollen waters sweep
round them, striking these obstacles in eddying
whirlpools, and leaping into the air as muddy
foam. And the whirling waves fly from the place of
concussion, and their impetus moves them across
other eddies in a contrary direction [...]
The rain as it falls from the clouds is of the same
colour as those clouds, in its shaded side, unless the
sun’s rays break through them, in which case the
rain will appear less dark than the clouds. And if the
heavy masses of ruined mountains or buildings fall
into the vast pools of water, a great quantity will
be flung into the air, and its movement will be in a
contrary direction to that of the object which struck
the water; that is to say, the angle of reflection will
be equal to the angle of incidence.
Text adapted from Leonardo da Vinci: A life in drawing, London, 2018