293

An experiment.

ALL COLOURS ARE AT A DISTANCE UNDISTINGUISHABLE AND UNDISCERNIBLE.

All colours at a distance are undistinguishable in shadow, because an object which is not in the highest light is incapable of transmitting its image to the eye through an atmosphere more luminous than itself; since the lesser brightness must be absorbed by the greater. For instance: We, in a house, can see that all the colours on the surface of the walls are clearly and instantly visible when the windows of the house are open; but if we were to go out of the house and look in at the windows from a little distance to see the paintings on those walls, instead of the paintings we should see an uniform deep and colourless shadow.

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

V * VII
Notebooks of Leonoardo da Vinci
VI: ’Prospettiva de’ colri’ (Perspective of Colour)
General rules.
289,
290,
291
An exceptional case.
292
An experiment.
293
The practice of the prospettiva de colori.
294
The rules of aerial perspective.
295,
296,
297
On the relative density of the atmosphere.
298,
299
On the colour of the atmosphere.
300,
301,
302,
303,
304,
305,
306,
307
. . .