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More to da Vinci than meets the eye
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OREM -- It appears Leonardo da Vinci never slept.
Or, at the very least, he kept very, very busy during his waking
hours.
In his 67 years, he created art masterpieces that still have
scholars in the art world studying his work and designed war
machines, buildings and transportation devices that carried forward
into today's society.
And he was a fun guy despite having to struggle daily to make a
living.
"Besides being an artist, an architect and an inventor, he was a...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Leonardo da Vinci: Anatomist and physiologist
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; ALMOST 500 YEARS after his death Leonardo da Vinci is still known first and foremost as an artist. However even though he is considered one of the greatest artists in history, not to acknowledge his other accomplishments is to miss his true genius. This is the person for whom the descriptor
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'Da Vinci Coda;' New Haven Symphony Orchestra's clever homage to the hit novel reveals some mysteries of its own
New Haven Register
; What started as a clever marketing idea to tie its season finale with the May release of the movie version of "The Da Vinci Code" novel turned into a similar journey of mystery, intrigue and discovery for the New Haven Symphony Orchestra's Thursday concert - "Da Vinci Coda" - where two pieces will
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With a best-selling thriller and play at Berkeley Rep, da Vinci is in renaissance
Oakland Tribune
; EONARDO da Vinci, the original Renaissance man, was many things -- artist, scientist, inventor, philosopher -- but until the publication of Dan Brown's novel "The Da Vinci Code," Leonardo had yet to be an action-adventure hero. Sharing this summer's must-read list with the likes of Harry Potter,
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The Drawings Of a Master; A fascinating show at the Victoria and Albert Museum leads a re-examination of the beautiful mind of the true Renaissance man, Leonardo da Vinci.
Newsweek International
; Byline: Tara Pepper For half a millennium, scores of writers have struggled to make sense of the mystery that was Leonardo da Vinci. Was the man who made the Mona Lisa smile an artist? Was he a wacky inventor or a scientist? A visionary--or simply the product of a traumatic childhood? Intellectual
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Audience 'hungry for a taste' of Da Vinci
Winnipeg Free Press
; Brad Oswald - Watching TV When the smoke clears and the numbers are tallied, it won't take an investigator with Dominic Da Vinci's forensic skills to determine the fate that befell one of Canadian TV's most storied drama series. It's pretty much as simple as this: if The Quality of Life (which airs
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