ReneZ > 29-01-2026, 11:57 PM
(29-01-2026, 09:16 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I also frequently argued against the notion (maybe introduced by Nick Pelling?) that the parallel hatching in the MS showed familiarity with renaissance techniques. While it's still not the subtle cross-hatching we get in later artists, there may have been more truth to that idea than I thought. It does seem to be mimicking drawing techniques straight from a renaissance source.
Bernd > 30-01-2026, 12:23 AM
Wikipedia Wrote:While his subject matter is already that of later Renaissance artist-engineers, his method of representation still owes much to medieval manuscript illustration. Due to the political rivalry between Siena and Florence, Taccola was never exposed to linear perspective, a growing graphical style in Florence. Moreover, Taccola drew his machines based on what looked proper to him, not based on geometrical considerations.For someone like me who struggles with the most basic drawings, it's baffling how such an advanced artist could not understand perspective. But I guess it' something that does not come naturally?
Wikipedia Wrote:Overall, Taccola's goal of his treatises was to shed light on old Greco-Roman machines, as opposed to principally writing about his own designs.[13] On a case-to-case basis, Taccola would cite the earlier designs imagined by Vegetius and Kyeser.You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. wrote Bellifortis around 1405, a book about war machines and military technology which clearly influenced Taccola. It contains a number of interesting illustrations including pipes.
Jorge_Stolfi > 30-01-2026, 04:09 AM
(30-01-2026, 12:23 AM)Bernd Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.it's baffling how such an advanced artist could not understand perspective
Koen G > 30-01-2026, 01:21 PM
(29-01-2026, 11:57 PM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The influence of Renaissance in Siena MS may be a complicated issue...
Quote:Taccola's drawings show him to be a man of transition: While his subject matter is already that of later Renaissance artist-engineers, his method of representation still owes much to medieval manuscript illustration.[18] Due to the political rivalry between Siena and Florence, Taccola was never exposed to linear perspective, a growing graphical style in Florence.[19] Moreover, Taccola drew his machines based on what looked proper to him, not based on geometrical considerations.[20] Despite these graphic inconsistencies, Taccola's style has been described as being forceful, authentic and usually to be relied upon to capture the essential.[21]
Jorge_Stolfi > 30-01-2026, 02:51 PM
(30-01-2026, 01:21 PM)Koen G Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Sometimes [taccola's] application of this cast shadow is not very elegant, and that's where it gets interesting. He will follow the outside border of the object that's casting the shadow, almost drawing like parallel hairs on it. This is a very specific technique (or misuse of one) that people would not use spontaneously.... See the pillar held by the ship: it is "hairy" all around.
Koen G > 30-01-2026, 10:59 PM
Bluetoes101 > 30-01-2026, 11:20 PM
(you started it!) Koen G > 30-01-2026, 11:57 PM
ReneZ > Yesterday, 12:21 AM