JF Ptak Science Books Post 2531
One of the most highly valued of disciplines to the Renaissance painter and architect and engineer was perspective, and at the end of the 16th century Lorenzo Sirigatti produced a superior example of the field. La pratica di prospettiva del cavaliere Lorenzo Sirigatti was printed in Venice in 1596 and proved to be a valuable source of inspiration and possibility.
The full text is located at the Getty Museum (here) from which came the five images I've used in this post. Part of the acclaim of the Sirigatti work was its fine elegance and non-nonsense line, and the general exclusion of a background brought a particular clarity to the designs. The images themselves follow a development from the introduction of the basic elements of perspective to an increasing complexity in their use, flowing from fundamentals to forms to architectural standards. They are lovely things, works of art in themselves even removed from their context.
One of the principal attractions to me was the quietness of the design, leaving everything outside of the subject to blankness--many other works of this type included scenes into which perspective studies appeared, but this was hardly the case with Sirigatti. For example, a perspective with violin:
Source: Getty Museum
And the facade of a building:
The other aspect of his work that I find so beautiful is his work in geometric forms, and especially those that include a mazzacchio--which was a part of hat/headgear in the Renaissance--and this mainly because Paolo Uccello, the great master and father figure to the study of perspective rendered one so famously in the last quarter of the 15th century:
See also this fine article by Kenneth Brecher, "The Mazzocchio in Perspective", here: http://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2012/bridges2012-433.pdf
Source: Getty Museum
Source: Getty Museum
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