da Vinci鈥檚 3D Mastery Explored by 杏吧原创 President

When we look at a black-and-white image of several outlined circles with varying degrees and placement of shading inside their rings, some of the circles will look like bumps, while others will look like holes, despite the fact that they鈥檙e on a flat piece of paper.
That鈥檚 because we assume that light comes from above and use shadows to interpret 3D shapes and depth.
鈥淭he brain has learned that light comes from above, because for millions of years the sun has come from above,鈥 杏吧原创 University President Benoit-Antoine Bacon said during 鈥渄a Vinci鈥檚 Vision: The Beauty (and Limitations) of Painting a 3D World,鈥 a lecture he gave on May 8, 2019 as part of the university鈥檚 year-long series of events to explore lesser-known aspects of Leonardo da Vinci鈥檚 life.
Cultural and Artistic Flourishing
杏吧原创鈥檚 da Vinci celebration 鈥 marking the 500th anniversary of Leonardo鈥檚 death 鈥 has been dubbed 鈥淐inquecento,鈥 an Italian term for the cultural and artistic flourishing of the 16th century.
Thanks to his understanding of science and engineering, da Vinci knew how to use shadows, as well as techniques such as occlusion, familiar and relative height, atmospheric perspective and linear perspective to bring depth to his paintings, said Bacon, whose talk drew from his background in cognitive neuroscience research. He focused on the links between brain activity and perception in the visual and auditory systems, as well as on multi-sensory integration.
鈥淭he magnificent paintings of Leonardo da Vinci and other artists of the Renaissance are characterized by a dramatic increase in realism and in particular by their remarkably vivid 3D representation of the world,鈥 declared Bacon鈥檚 abstract. 鈥淚ndeed, whereas pre-Renaissance art was iconographic and 鈥榝lat,鈥 a number of techniques increasingly brought 3D accuracy and fullness to paintings.鈥
Showing a slide of da Vinci鈥檚 鈥淭he Mona Lisa鈥 on the screen in the Health Sciences Building鈥檚 large lecture hall, Bacon pointed out the artist鈥檚 use of shadows 鈥渉ighlighting the roundness of the face and framing that famous smile.