V

V Theory of colours.

Leonardo’s theory of colours is even more intimately connected with his principles of light and shade than his Perspective of Disappearance and is in fact merely an appendix or supplement to those principles, as we gather from the titles to sections 264, 267, and 276, while others again (Nos. 281, 282) are headed Prospettiva.

A very few of these chapters are to be found in the oldest copies and editions of the Treatise on Painting, and although the material they afford is but meager and the connection between them but slight, we must still attribute to them a special theoretical value as well as practical utility—all the more so because our knowledge of the theory and use of colours at the time of the Renaissance is still extremely limited.

Taken from The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci edited by Jean Paul Richter, 1880.

IV * VI
Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci
V - Theory of colours.
other.
263,
264,
265,
266,
267,
268,
269,
270,
Combination of different colours in cast shadows.
The effect of colours in the camera obscura.
273,
On the colours of derived shadows.
275,
On the nature of colours.
277,
On gradations in the depth of colours.
279,
On the reflection of colours.
281,
282,
On the use of dark and light colours in painting.
284,
285,
On the colours of the rainbow.
287,