Leonardo da Vinci’s Surreptitious Scents
A new catalog invites us into the artist’s interest in smell and the role of perfumes during the Renaissance, with bonus recipes for those with a nose for fragrance. by Maya PontoneSubscribe to our newsletter
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Through a combination of artworks, fragrance recipes, and texts by historians and three-dimensional reconstruction experts, the catalog constructs a timeline that not only retraces the development of Renaissance scents but also their impact on Leonardo and his contemporaries. It begins with Vecce’s claim that the polymath’s mother, Caterina, was an enslaved woman who was trafficked from her home in the Caucasus region to Italy during the spice trade, introducing scents like cinnamon, myrrh, and musk.
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The book continues to draw connections between Leonardo’s childhood and his work as an adult, when he diligently copied recipes for perfumes and drew up technological sketches for alembic distillation mechanisms. Quoting his notebook in the foreword, novelist François Saint-Bris points out how Leonardo’s experiments allowed him to develop a deep understanding of the relationship between color and smell. “Note how aqua vitaecollects in itself all the colors and scents of the flowers,” the artist wrote. “If you want to make azure, put cornflowers in it; and wild poppies for red.”
Further teasing out the continuity between Leonardo’s perfume practice and artistic work, Brioist details how the artist’s preoccupation with odors helped influence his technical and architectural designs, from household latrines and horse stables to residential gardens for aristocratic patrons. When Leonardo designed plans for what he perceived as the model city in 1485, he specifically sought to eliminate putrid smells that resulted from overcrowding and poor ventilation.
Leonardo’s obsession with smell may seem a bit intense, but as the essays point out, perfume (and odors) played a significant role in Renaissance society, where hygienic practices were questionable and disease was rampant. One tactic to ward off sickness was the use of scented clothing and accessories like gloves and sachets, frequently donned by French and Milanese nobility. Accordingly, essayist Paula Venturelli sheds light on Leonardo’s “Lady with an Ermine” (c. 1489–1491), whose subject is shown wearing a black necklace exemplifying the period’s fashionable perfumed paternoster beads, for which the book even includes a recipe that consists of freshly ground bread crumbs, wine, and egg yolk. This recipe can also be used to make aromatic knife handles, and for those with a nose for fragrance, there are even directions on how to make “Chypre birdies,” or sculptures made of perfumed paste, and gloves scented with almond oil mixtures and musked rose water. Then again, considering these recipes came before the advent of routine bathing and expiration dates, it may be better to stick to the stuff from the store.
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