The Death of Leonardo da Vinci
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| The Death of Leonardo da Vinci | |
|---|---|
| Francis I Receives the Last Breaths of Leonardo da Vinci | |
| Artist | Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres |
| Year | 1818 |
| Medium | oil paint, canvas |
| Dimensions | 40, 40, 72 cm (16, 16, 28 in) × 50.5, 81.5 cm (19.9, 32.1 in) × 8.5 cm (3.3 in) |
| Location | Petit Palais |
| Commissioned by | Pierre Louis Jean Casimir de Blacas |
| Collection | Musée des Beaux-Arts de la ville de Paris |
| Accession no. | PDUT1165 |
The Death of Leonardo da Vinci or Francis I Receives the Last Breaths of Leonardo da Vinci is an 1818 oil painting by the French artist Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, which shows the Italian artist and inventor Leonardo da Vinci on his deathbed on May 2, 1519, with Francis I of France holding his head. It was commissioned by Pierre Louis Jean Casimir de Blacas, the French ambassador in Rome, and is currently housed in the Petit Palais in Paris.[1] Another version of the painting created c. 1851 is held by the Smith College Museum of Art.[2]
The painting depicts the death of the Italian Renaissance polymath Leonardo da Vinci, which took place in the Clos Lucé house, in Amboise, on May 2, 1519. Ingres based his scene on the narrative of the event in Giorgio Vasari's Lives of the Artists.[3] Vasari's account, which was not wholly accurate, contains the sentence: "To show him favour and to soothe his pain, the king held his head."[4] Ingres was inspired by this moment in the text, seeing it as a subtle symbol of the end of a glorious artistic era.[4]

Ingres first conceived of the work in a wash drawing he submitted to Louis-Joseph Coutan in the 1820s.[5] Ingres made several alterations to the original wash drawing, including extending the format horizontally by adding a piece of paper on the left.[5] He also modified the curtain on the right side of the bed and included the figure of a young priest behind it as an afterthought.[5] Additionally, he used a paper cut-out to adjust the hand of the cardinal on the right and made numerous revisions to the figures' contours and the drapery.[5]
This painting serves as a dual tribute, honouring both the great artists of the past and promoting Ultra-Royalist political ideologies.[6]: 121 Much like in Henri IV and The Spanish Ambassador, Ingres emphasizes several key Ultra-Royalist themes in this work: the alliance of the throne and the altar, the significance of royal virtues such as humanity and humility, and the Crown's generosity in supporting the fine arts.[6] : 119