A Treatise on Painting
by Leonardo da Vinci, translated by John Francis Rigaud
What the young Student in Painting ought in the first Place to learn
3995495A Treatise on Painting — What the young Student in Painting ought in the first Place to learnJohn Francis RigaudLeonardo da Vinci

A

TREATISE,

&c.

DRAWING.



PROPORTION.

Chap. I.What the young Student in Painting ought in the first Place to learn.

The young student should, in the first place, acquire a knowledge of perspective, to enable him to give to every object its proper dimensions: after which, it is requisite that he be under the care of an able master, to accustom him, by degrees, to a good style of drawing the parts. Next, he must study Nature, in order to confirm and fix in his mind the reason of those precepts which he has learnt. He must also bestow some time in viewing the works of various old masters, to form his eye and judgment, in order that he may be able to put in practice all that he has been taught[1].

  1. This passage has been by some persons much misunderstood and supposed to require, that the student should be a deep proficient in perspective, before he commences the study of painting; but it is a knowledge of the leading principles only of perspective that the author here means, and without such a knowledge, which is easily to be acquired, the student will inevitably fall into errors, as gross as those humorously pointed out by Hogarth, in his Frontispiece to Kirby's Perspective.