首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
He Drew like an Angel A) Throughout his life Leonardo da Vinci was troubled by a sense of failure, in-completion and time was
He Drew like an Angel A) Throughout his life Leonardo da Vinci was troubled by a sense of failure, in-completion and time was
admin
2020-06-21
7
问题
He Drew like an Angel
A) Throughout his life Leonardo da Vinci was troubled by a sense of failure, in-completion and time wasted. His favorite phrase, unconsciously repeated in whole or in part whenever he wrote something to see if a newly cut pen was working, was "Tell me, tell me if anything got finished." And indeed very little did. His big projects for sculpture were never completed—the huge clay model for one of them, meant to commemorate his patron Ludovico Sforza, duke of Milan, ended up a shapeless mound, shot to pieces by occupying French archers. His big wall painting commemorating a Florentine victory, The Battle of Anghiariarson, became a wreck and was painted over. Little survives of his Last Supper in Milan. And so the sad catalog of rain and loss goes on.
B) He never found time to edit the fascinating mass of his writings into books. His engineering and hydraulic projects either failed or were not started. Very few of his machines would have worked either. Probably not even the tanks that he hoped would creep like fatal snails across the battlefields of northern Italy would have harmed anyone, even assuming that their sweating and straining occupants could have got their wheels to go round at all, which is beyond probability.
C) We remember Leonardo as a painter, draftsman, sculptor, architect and scientist. Yet if one is to judge by the self-advertising letter he sent to Sforza in Milan in 1481, he didn’ t estimate his skills that way. Before anything else, he listed his strategic skill: he could design portable bridges, drains, bombard strong holds, design cannons, make fireproof ships, and so on and on. Not until item No. 10, the last on list, did he get around to saying that in painting too he could "do everything possible as well as any other." There may have been a simple reason for this, since being a military engineer was probably more profitable than being a painter, but this image is still vastly unlike the artist we think of today as Leonardo.
D) Three things, however, can be said without hesitation about Leonardo. The first is that he was not a "Renaissance man". He did not typify his time. Many artists in the Renaissance worked, as Leonardo did, in a wide variety of media: drawing, painting, sculpture, architecture and so forth. None, however, not even the great Leon Battista Al-berti, had Leonardo’ s surprising and unsatisfied curiosity about the makeup and governing laws of the physical world or spent so much time and energy thinking about them.
E) The second thing is, obviously, that he could draw like an angel. The idea that he was "the greatest" Italian draftsman of his time (born in 1452, he died at a considerable age in exile in France in 1519) is essentially meaningless, because the late 15th and early 16th centuries were full of amazing performers on paper. But not even contemporaries like Michelangelo were able to exceed, or regularly rival, him as a master of the kind of expressive and descriptive line that one sees in such drawings of his as the studies for equestrian sculpture (骑士雕塑) or in his surprising analyses of human bone and muscle structure—though some of them, of course, were artists with very different aims.
F) The third thing is that Leonardo was one of the least transparent artists and, given the enormous losses and gaps in what we know about him, it is useless to hope that any exhibition could sum him up. He was conflicted, and almost incredibly hard to get at. It is not true, however, that his famous backward writing was an attempt to cover the secrets of his researches from prying eyes. This aspect of the Leonardo "mystery" is not a mystery at all, because he was left-handed, and it was natural for him to write that way. Still, was there ever an artist who was troubled by destruction—and it was a real trouble, not just an "as if interest? Not until Leonardo—and not after him either, one is tempted to add. He thought a lot about chaos and social collapse with great delight: the end of the world was his private horror movie or would have been if the 15th century had had movies.
G) Words had no frame for this, so Leonardo had to content himself with his drawings. Throughout the show one sees an absolute mastery of the processes of drawing: the making of marks but also the making of the instruments with which to make them. In the 15th century one did not walk into a shop and buy a pencil. One had to make the silver-point of charcoal. One had to cut the pen and shape its point. All of this was wound in with the technique of drawing and helped to determine its intensity. That is one of the reasons why small drawings (and most of Leonardo’s drawings were small, in some cases hardly more than thumbnail sketches) can be just like handwriting.
H) There are some amazingly ugly subjects, like the imaginary Bust of Grotesque Man in Profile Facing to the Right. Leonardo delighted in these. The pleasure that he took in human ugliness was almost as intense as the delight afforded him by beauty. Granted, cosmetic considerations were less to the fore in 16th century Europe than they would be four centuries later. Granted, social attitudes toward the repellent aspects of old age were different. And yet it is difficult to look at his numerous drawings of horribly, ugly old people—which would be copied by other artists and would make a final appearance during the Victorian Age in the triumphantly hideous image of the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland—without sensing that Leonardo’s peculiar imagination is at a bit remove from ours.
I) He is saying, "Idealize as much as you want, but avoid denial." The necessary other side of the ideal beauty of Leonardo’s Mona Lisa or Cecilia Gallerani was the ugliness of his grotesqueries (怪诞派作品) — an ugliness that ends all possibility of desire and has something evil, not just medical, about it. To see his grotesques as the mere play of a mind mixed with sadism (虐待) is to misunderstand them. They are an essential part of the impulse that turned Leonardo toward an attachment to beauty as a kind of saving principle.
Nobody had Leonardo’s surprising curiosity about governing laws of the physical world or spent so much time thinking about them.
选项
答案
D
解析
题干:没有人像列奥纳多一样,有对掌控物质世界法则的好奇心或者花那么多时间去考虑他们。题干关键词surprising curiosity,laws of the physical world和thinking about。文中D段最后一句提到,没有人,就算是伟大的莱昂-巴莱斯塔-阿尔贝蒂也没有像莱奥纳多那样,对物质世界的构成及控制法则有如此惊人的好奇心,或者花费那么多时间和精力去考虑它们。与题干意思吻合,故选D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/0ld7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、Hiswife.B、Hisparents.C、Hisfriends.D、Hisprivatenurses.D事实细节题。本题问的是谁把Jackson送去了医院。短文中提到Jackson在家突然生病,他的私人护理人员发现他没有呼吸并把他
Researchershaveidentified1.4millionanimalspeciessofar—andmillionsremaintobediscovered,named,andscientificallyde
Researchershaveidentified1.4millionanimalspeciessofar—andmillionsremaintobediscovered,named,andscientificallyde
ScoresofuniversityhallsofresidencesandlecturetheatresintheUKwerejudged"atseriousriskofmajorfailureorbreakdo
ScoresofuniversityhallsofresidencesandlecturetheatresintheUKwerejudged"atseriousriskofmajorfailureorbreakdo
Costly—sometimesabusive—creditcardsarebleedingmillionsofborrowerswhodidn’tknowwhattheyweregettinginto.Thebo
Costly—sometimesabusive—creditcardsarebleedingmillionsofborrowerswhodidn’tknowwhattheyweregettinginto.Thebo
Costly—sometimesabusive—creditcardsarebleedingmillionsofborrowerswhodidn’tknowwhattheyweregettinginto.Thebo
Throughouthistorythebasicunitofalmosteveryhumansocietyhasbeenthefamily.Membersofafamilylivetogetherunderthe
随机试题
阅读下列两则新闻报道材料,并根据材料后的问题作出解释说明:新闻一、克拉克退出保守党领袖角逐(2005年10月19日)英国前保守党政府财政大臣克拉克已经从保守党领袖角逐中落败,克拉克说他对结果当然很失望。但是他表示,无论谁当选党的领袖,都
抗干扰性最好的传输介质是()
“五四”以来,最擅长用“自叙传”方式写作的是()
积聚的病因有
总分类账户与明细分类账户的主要区别在与( )。
A承建集团将项目工程通过招标的形式交由B建筑公司承建,A集团要求B公司投保履约保证保险。合同保证保险根据工程承包合同()来确定保险责任。
党的领导、人民当家作主和依法治国三者的关系是()。
Thespeechismainlyabouttheorganizationofthecompany.
Whatdoesthemanagreetodowiththesuit?
Whatistheroleofcomputersintheproductionprocess?
最新回复
(
0
)