Local NPR for the Cape, Coast & Islands 90.1 91.1 94.3
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

500 Years After Leonardo Da Vinci's Death, France Celebrates His Life And Work

Leonardo da Vinci's "Madonna of the Rocks" (left) and "La belle Ferronnière" or Portrait of an Unknown Woman (right), are both part of the Louvre's exhibition.
RMN-Grand Palais (Musée du Louvre)
/
Michel Urtado
Leonardo da Vinci's "Madonna of the Rocks" (left) and "La belle Ferronnière" or Portrait of an Unknown Woman (right), are both part of the Louvre's exhibition.

The largest-ever collection of works by Leonardo da Vinci is drawing record crowds at the Louvre in Paris this year, the 500th anniversary of the artist's death. The Louvre has brought together more than 100 paintings, drawings and manuscripts for the exhibition, which opened in October and will end in February.

Leonardo was a perfectionist, which is why, experts say, he produced only about 15 paintings. The exhibition includes 11 of them, the most ever brought together in one place. The Louvre keeps five of his paintings in its permanent collection.

Leonardo da Vinci made numerous illustrations and sketches as part of an intensive study of human anatomy.
Eleanor Beardsley / NPR
/
NPR
Leonardo da Vinci made numerous illustrations and sketches as part of an intensive study of human anatomy.

The show also includes more than 80 drawings. Biographer Serge Bramly says the drawings and notebooks give visitors a vivid sense of how Leonardo, who was born near Florence in 1452, worked.

"You can really get into his brain and try to see how he thought," says Bramly. "For example, some of the drawings are really impressive because on the same page, you have geometry, machineries, antiques. There are some clouds in the corner. There is an eye. You can find very small horsemen fighting. Everything on the same page. And that's the way he used to think and work — doing everything at the same time."

Viewing Leonardo da Vinci's sketches, "You can really get into his brain and try to see how he thought," says biographer Serge Bramly.
Eleanor Beardsley / NPR
/
NPR
Viewing Leonardo da Vinci's sketches, "You can really get into his brain and try to see how he thought," says biographer Serge Bramly.

One of Leonardo's most famous drawings, "Vitruvian Man," showing the anatomy of a man's body, almost didn't make it into the exhibition. An Italian cultural heritage group sued to keep the drawing from being transported to Paris from Venice because it is so fragile. It is rarely displayed and spends most of its time locked in a climate-controlled vault at Venice's Gallerie dell'Accademia. An Italian court allowed the loan to go through just a few weeks before the Louvre exhibition opened.

Bramly says lending such rare and fragile works is complicated.

"A drawing that is shown is exposed to light," he explains. "So after a couple months, it goes back into a dark cellar for about five years. That's why no museum wants to lend too often."

One of Leonardo da Vinci's most famous drawings, "Vitruvian Man," is rarely displayed due to its fragility. It is part of the Louvre exhibition, following an unsuccessful, last-minute attempt to stop its transport from Italy to Paris.
Gabriel Bouys / AFP/Getty Images
/
AFP/Getty Images
One of Leonardo da Vinci's most famous drawings, "Vitruvian Man," is rarely displayed due to its fragility. It is part of the Louvre exhibition, following an unsuccessful, last-minute attempt to stop its transport from Italy to Paris.

While Leonardo completed relatively few paintings, Bramly says, "For da Vinci, everything exists in the world to be a painting at the end. But in order to paint the Mona Lisa, you have to know geology, anatomy, how the muscles of the face react. And this you get very well in the show."

But the Mona Lisa is not part of this show. With nearly 30,000 visitors a day, it would have been impossible to include her. So the painting hangs in its usual Louvre gallery.

Leonardo spent his final three years in France, and died in 1519 at age 67 in the Loire Valley. His chateau, the brick-and-marble Clos Lucé, is the artist's only known residence and workplace that is still standing.

France's 16th century King Francis I invited Leonardo to France to help imagine and build a new French capital at Amboise in the Loire Valley. When Leonardo arrived in 1516, he came with three of his own paintings — "Saint John the Baptist," the "Virgin and Child with Saint Anne," and the Mona Lisa, all of which are part of the Louvre collection.

The French king's invitation came at the perfect time, says François Saint Bris, whose family now owns the Clos Lucé. In Leonardo's own country, he was facing competition from younger Renaissance artists Raphael and Michelangelo.

"When he received this royal invitation from this young king of 22 years old, he can't resist," Saint Bris says. "It was a royal mansion given to Leonardo da Vinci, and with a pension of 1,000 golden écus [crowns], which was really a fortune. And he gave him the title of first painter, first engineer and first architect of the king. And also with the tenderness and the love of the royal court. So he was happy."

Saint Bris says Leonardo served as a father figure to the young king. The city of Amboise was the cradle of the French Renaissance, so the court spoke Italian.

This year, half-a-million visitors have come to the Clos Lucé, a 30% increase over its usual annual traffic. One of them, Valerie Chaillou, says Leonardo is special to the French.

"He lived a long time in France and he died here," she says. "And 'La Joconde' is in France. So I think he's a little French. For us, he's a little French."

Leonardo's remains lie in a chapel in Amboise. As for "La Joconde," the French name for the Mona Lisa, she survived a revolution and two world wars after Leonardo brought her to France 503 years ago. He continued to work on her right up until his death.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

François Saint Bris, whose family owns the Clos Lucé chateau in Amboise, France, stands in front of a design by Leonardo da Vinci that has been rebuilt on the grounds. Leonardo spent the last three years of his life in France.
/ Clos Lucé Chateau
/
Clos Lucé Chateau
François Saint Bris, whose family owns the Clos Lucé chateau in Amboise, France, stands in front of a design by Leonardo da Vinci that has been rebuilt on the grounds. Leonardo spent the last three years of his life in France.

Eleanor Beardsley began reporting from France for NPR in 2004 as a freelance journalist, following all aspects of French society, politics, economics, culture and gastronomy. Since then, she has steadily worked her way to becoming an integral part of the NPR Europe reporting team.