When Leonardo da Vinci began laying the first
brushstrokes, in 1494, on the refectory wall of the
convent adjacent to the church of Santa Maria delle
Grazie in Milan, he probably had no idea he was about to
create one of the greatest artistic masterpieces of all
time. Adopting the innovative, and equally unusual, dry
painting technique, the Renaissance genius could not
foresee that he would have condemned his work to a
particular fragility, and put its conservation at risk
in the following centuries. This same technique,
however, was what allowed an improved chromatic unity, a
rendering of transparencies and light effects, and an
extreme precision in details, visible only from close
range. Today, thanks to the exclusive magnification
published in this volume—realized by Haltadefinizione,
the special digital photographic archive collecting a
vast number of Italian artistic masterpieces—even the
smallest details of the Last Supper, invisible to the
naked eye, can be observed in all their expressive
splendor. As you leaf through this book you can admire
from up close, as never before possible, the realistic
expressions on the faces of the individual Apostles, the
movements and positions of their hands, and the smallest
details of the outfitted table, thus entering
practically into direct contact with Leonardo’s genius
at work.
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