• Art & Culture
    • Leonardo

Milan, following Leonardo’s footsteps

Milan, ruled by the magnificent and powerful House of Sforza, played a pivotal role in the creative, entrepreneurial and financial scene of the last two decades of the 1400s.

Thirty year old Leonardo da Vinci could not resist its charm. He arrived in Milan in spring 1482, strangely as a musician. He amazed the Court of Ludovico Sforza “The Moor” by playing a horse head-shaped silver lyre which he had designed himself. He played as nobody had ever done before.

It was only a taste of what Leonardo’s inventive genius was to show them during his stay in Milan and Lombardy. Even today, it is fascinating to define an itinerary following the footsteps of the great genius from Florence. The journey has to commence from the capital city of Lombardy, precisely from the refectory of the convent of the Church of S. Maria delle Grazie, where one of the most famous works in the universal history of painting, “The Last Supper”, is displayed.

With its faint and mysterious persistence of shapes and hues, despite the damage wrought by both time and humans - it was miraculously saved by the friars during World War 2 bombings - it is Leonardo’s only dry mural painting performed without the fresco technique. It still fascinates hundreds of thousands of visitors.

When he was about to complete “The Last Supper” in 1498, Leonardo received a vineyard as a gift from the Duke. Its pergolas survived until the 1943 bombings, a short distance from S. Maria delle Grazie, behind the façade of what used to be the Atellani House. Recent agronomic studies have recovered the roots of that 15th century vineyard, restoring one of the city’s most suggestive sites associated with the artist, “Leonardo’s Vineyard”.

A short distance away, in the ancient Monastery of S. Vittore al Corpo, the “Leonardo da Vinci” National Science and Technology Museum presents a gallery displaying faithful reconstructions of Leonardo’s machines.

From the Museum, it is possible to continue the walk through the city – using the new app LeonardoAround - towards another crucial site, the Sforza Castle that was converted into one of the most sumptuous Renaissance palaces in Europe in 1494-1499 due to Leonardo’s engineering and artistic contributions.

In addition to the memory of luxurious parties at Court, such as the memorable Feast of Paradise organised under Leonardo’s scenic direction to celebrate the nuptials of Gian Galeazzo Maria Sforza and Isabella of Aragon in 1490, today we have Leonardo’s oil mural paintings that adorn the vault and a wall of Sala delle Asse (room of the wooden boards), on the ground floor of the north-eastern tower called “the Falconer”.

Another part of the Castle, the Biblioteca Trivulziana Library, houses the Trivulziano Codex. Written in 1478-1490, it contains architectural studies and caricatures. Another precious autographed manuscript is the Codex Atlanticus comprising over 1,110 written sheets and drawings by Leonardo, preserved at the Ambrosian Library. Leonardo was amazing even after he left the city.

An impressive scholar in the field of hydraulics, he carried out complex studies of canals and lock gates that, to date, characterise the Navigli landscape, from the Naviglio Grande, towards Ticino and Lake Maggiore, to the Naviglio della Martesana, that links Milan to the Adda River running north east. Along the Adda, in the provinces of Milan, Bergamo and Lecco, you can visit the Ecomuseo Adda di Leonardo. Its outdoor path combines nature, landscape and technological sites. In Imbersago, on the Brianza shores, a ferry still connects the two sides of the river running on the dynamic principle of ropes and currents.

During his stay in Lombardy, Leonardo is believed to have provided advice for construction works of the Pavia Cathedral’s dome, which was built only in the 1800s, and for the Doge’s Square in Vigevano, a jewel with its adjacent castle. Today, its halls host the new museum “Leonardiana” on the life and works of the Maestro from Florence.

In conclusion, to get an idea of the shape and proportions of the largest equestrian statue in the world – which was designed and planned by Leonardo in memory of Duke Francesco Sforza – visitors can go to the San Siro Racetrack to admire a copy of it.

 

 

Take me here: Milan, following Leonardo’s footsteps

On the same topic

Cremona drone effect

Booked a weekend in Cremona? Then you can’t afford to miss piazza del Comune, the stunning heart of the city’s historic centre.
  • Art & Culture
Cremona vista dall'alto

Milan and Lake Como

Milan, city of a thousand histories. Plus, a trip to Lake Como
  • Art & Culture
Milano_Como

Lorenzo Lotto Itinerary

In Bergamo on the trail of Lorenzo Lotto, one of the leading exponents of the Italian Renaissance
  • Art & Culture
Lorenzo Lotto Itinerary, following his trails

Cremona, le Botteghe di liuteria

Maestri del legno e del violino. Botteghe storiche e collezioni. La liuteria a Cremona è patrimonio culturale immateriale Unesco dal 2012
  • Art & Culture
Cremona, le Botteghe di liuteria

The historic houses of Bergamo

Gardens, art, culture and beauty: the historic homes of the noble families of Bergamo are well worth a visit.
  • Art & Culture
The historic houses of Bergamo

The festival of Saint Bassianus in Lodi

Head to the centre of Lodi to celebrate the city's patron saint and discover a variety of traditions and handicrafts
  • Art & Culture
Fiera di San Bassiano_Lodi

Palazzo d'Arco in Mantua

Everyday life of a noble family in the 18th and 19th Century
  • Art & Culture
Palazzo d'Arco in Mantua - ph: Federica Bottoli

Museums Cremona

The museums, a meeting with the culture and with the history of Cremona
  • Art & Culture
Museums Cremona, discovering Lombardy

Museums Bergamo

Bergamo is a city that wants to be discovered: rich in art and culture counts among its excellences important museums
  • Art & Culture
Museums Bergamo, field guide in Lombardy

11 addresses for villas and parks

Relive the charm of the past between villas, parks and castles in Lombardy
  • Art & Culture
Magical places in Lombardy

Tempio dell’Incoronata

A visit to the Tempio dell’Incoronata and the Museo del Tesoro
  • Art & Culture
Tempio dell’Incoronata

Another weekend at home: here's something to do

Ideas and activities for the whole family
  • Art & Culture
Credits photo_ Compagnia Marionettistica Carlo Colla e Figli

What to Do in Mantua and surroundings

Discovering the wonders of Mantua and surroundings
  • Art & Culture
What to do in Mantua

Monuments Mantua

The Gonzagas have made Mantua a jewel of the Italian Renaissance visible in its palaces, monuments, churches, culture and traditions
  • Art & Culture
Monuments Mantua, ideas for visiting

Spring in Varese

Varese: walks, picnics, secret beaches. In the spring, spend a day outdoors in the land of the lakes.
  • Art & Culture
Plenty of culture and fresh air at the Villa Della Porta Bozzolo

Theatre: what’s on stage in Lombardy 

In Lombardy, theatres are opening up safely: here are some of the must-see shows and festivals
  • Art & Culture
Teatro: chi è di scena in Lombardia

Castles and fortifications around Lake Como

Several testimonies of a past rich in history, all to discover
  • Art & Culture
@primalavaltellina.it

Theaters Pavia

Opera, prose, dance and theatrical review .... the theater in Pavia and the province is staged
  • Art & Culture
Theaters Pavia, cultural vacations in Lombardy

Seriate, and its charming historic villas

  • Art & Culture
Seriate, and its charming historic villas

Varese UNESCO

4 siti UNESCO, indissolubilmente legati al paesaggio: Monte San Giorgio, Isolino Virginia, Monastero di Torba, Sacro Monte di Varese.
  • Art & Culture
Quinta cappella al Sacro Monte di Varese