The Imagination of Leonardo da Vinci

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  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • Walter Isaacson is fascinated by innovators - the kinds of geniuses whose ideas have transformed industry, science, and society. Albert Einstein, Steve Jobs, and Benjamin Franklin each grabbed his attention in ways that allow us, as readers, to discover the depth and breadth of their brilliant thinking and creative sensibilities. Now comes Leonardo da Vinci, whose boundless curiosity renders him perhaps the greatest creative genius of all time. Isaacson explains what he can teach us?
    Featuring:
    Walter Isaacson
    David Rubenstein

Komentáře • 29

  • @kindcounselor
    @kindcounselor Před 2 lety +5

    This man is a genius and a gift to our world. I'm reading his biography of Ben Franklin...and im thoroughly enjoying it.

  • @irishelk3
    @irishelk3 Před 6 lety +13

    Da Vinci was a genius with a beginner's mind. Unlike his educated peers who had their foot firmly in the door. He had to pick up all the pieces himself.

  • @hypermap
    @hypermap Před 7 lety +5

    Very interesting interview. It appears to me that Walter Issacson has got to grips with the complex character of Leonardo just as he managed to do with Steve Jobs - he's clearly interested in people and in particular geniuses whose work crosses the artist - engineer - scientist artificial boundaries. I am very much looking forward to reading his biography of Leonardo when it comes out in October - so glad he chose to write it :)

  • @paigepohlersmeek7003
    @paigepohlersmeek7003 Před 6 lety +2

    Isaacson illuminated Leonardo da Vinci as the person brilliantly! I would love to know more about what he did in his "off" time if he ever had it.

  • @ravishingravi
    @ravishingravi Před 6 lety +8

    Steve jobs being put in same breadth as Einstein and Leonardo.

  • @glencochrane901
    @glencochrane901 Před 6 měsíci

    Creative people have a hard finishing things because they're onto the next creative thing.

  • @realcountry2054
    @realcountry2054 Před 5 lety +1

    8:00 because painting was the universe for Leonardo to live on. there is no reason to leave (or finish) it. He said "I will continue...." when he was dying.

  • @dr.reidsheftalltruthinscie2007

    I don't want to be too hard on Walter Isaacson because none of the art critics or art journalists noticed this either but Leonardo did NOT paint the Salvator Mundi. I'll stake my life on it. Here's proof: @

  • @susydyson1750
    @susydyson1750 Před rokem +1

    l thought Leonardo also loved food cutlery and accessories such as the napkin as well as orgavizing banquets which was mentioned briefly

  • @lilbigman777
    @lilbigman777 Před 3 lety +1

    21:41

  • @ivancruz5228
    @ivancruz5228 Před 2 lety +1

    salvator mundi.this particular painting has been floating around for many years. I believe it was made by Bernardino Luini. he was a student of leonardo and never used halos to distinguish between saint and sinner.
    Leonardo was an art instructor. there was no paper but lamb skin, which is difficult to draw on so they used a slab of poplar wood. maybe a foot in diameter. give or take an inch. if you look at the salvator mundi(latin for the christ one) you first notice the person is wearing a dress?! in those days women wore hoods, long sleeve, dress that draged on floor and a straight collar so as not to show clevage. long hair dainty hands. no beard. the painting on wood is student size. when the student mastered painting they would go on to paint on large canvas, frescos.murals. etc.If this painting was made by leonardo it would have also had a Halo. christies and sotherbys are crooks.they brought this painting for 1,000 and paid off all fake authenticators. the mona lisa was not painted by leonardo, student size!

  • @raginald7mars408
    @raginald7mars408 Před rokem +1

    this is
    in Vitro
    in retro Spect
    in situ
    in the moment
    when the WORK is done
    it is excruciating
    and NO WAY to pre Dict anything
    easy for the smart guys 100 years later

  •  Před 5 lety +2

    DaVinci wrote everything in a mirror image.

  • @DJSTOEK
    @DJSTOEK Před 2 lety

    🖤

  • @ginabadeaux9319
    @ginabadeaux9319 Před 3 lety

    come on what is his real last name

  • @jackkomisar458
    @jackkomisar458 Před 4 lety +2

    Leonardo did not use tempura (37:37), which is a Japanese dish consisting of vegetables and seafood. He used tempera, which is paint mixed with a glutinous binder such as egg yolk. The French culture minister, Andre Malraux, did not resign in protest against the loan of the Mona Lisa to the United States (43:00). According to an article by Leonardo scholar Frank Zöllner, Malraux was the one who brought up the subject of the loan to Jacqueline Kennedy (see John F. Kennedy and Leonardo's Mona Lisa: Art as the continuation of politics, 1979). The 1963 trip to the U.S. was not the last trip of the Mona Lisa outside of France. In 1974 it was exhibited in Moscow and Tokyo.

    • @JadeLeaf1980
      @JadeLeaf1980 Před 2 lety

      Lol. Tempura. I imagined battered prawns glued to a canvas.

    • @randyklinger7649
      @randyklinger7649 Před rokem

      The man's a jerk. Asserting, definitively that Leonardo was gay, for example - no scholars know that.

  • @chaztruog5448
    @chaztruog5448 Před 2 lety

    The interviewer keeps interrupting-

  • @terryoneil2000
    @terryoneil2000 Před 2 lety

    .

  • @harlhequim
    @harlhequim Před 11 měsíci

    In the realm of consistent negotiation between conceptual thought and practical execution, ELON MUSK has no rival.
    Not even a distant second.

  • @bjorkstrand7773
    @bjorkstrand7773 Před 6 lety +1

    leo was just a great copier, that's all.

    • @MrMachoman47
      @MrMachoman47 Před 6 lety +13

      bjorkstrand777 I have no idea what you mean by that.