Leonardo Da Vinci online.

October 28, 2007

Do you know that now if you want to look at Leonardo Da Vinci’s masterpiece The Last Supper or to show it to your kids you dont need to get Milan. Because henceforth everyone has got great chance to see the work of a genius online. The new high resolution image allows viewers to see the finer details of the wall-painting. At 16 billion pixels, the image is 1,600 times stronger than those produced by a typical 10 million pixel digital camera. “You can see how Leonardo made the cups transparent, something you can’t ordinarily see,” said curator Alberto Artioli. “You can also note the state of degradation the painting is in.” Besides allowing experts and art-lovers to study the masterpiece from home, Artioli said the project provides an historical document of how the painting appears in 2007, which will be valuable to future generations of art historians.

Although there appeared to be problems with the Web site late Saturday, it was accessible earlier in day.

The work, in Milan’s Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie, was restored in a painstaking effort that wrapped up in 1999 — a project aimed at reversing half a millennium of damage to the famed artwork. Leonard painted the “Last Supper” dry, so the painting did not cleave to the surface in the fresco style, meaning it is more delicate and subject to wear.

“Over the years it has been subjected to bombardments; it was used as a stall by Napoleon,” Artioli said. The restoration removed 500 years of dirt while also removing previous restoration works that masked Leonardo’s own work.

Even those who get to Milan have a hard time gaining admission to see the “Last Supper.” Visits have been made more difficult by measures to protect it. Twenty-five visitors are admitted every 15 minutes to see the painting for a total of about 320,000 visitors a year. Visitors must pass through a filtration system to help reduce the work’s exposure to dust and pollutants.

“The demand is three or four times higher, but we can’t accommodate it because of efforts to preserve the painting,” Artioli said.
So see it on the Net now: http://www.haltadefinizione.com

Entry Filed under: Art, Education, Kids and Parents. .

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