Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Da Vinci asked you to go to Tsinghua to watch The Last Supper.

Da Vinci asked you to go to Tsinghua to watch The Last Supper.

At school, I vaguely remember the teacher saying, "Da Vinci was not only a painter, but also a mathematician and inventor ..." I made up my sleep in my art class. Sorry, art teacher, I fell asleep in the back.

Until I went to Tsinghua to see the Da Vinci theme exhibition—

Oh, my God, my God, my God ~ ~ ~ Da Vinci is actually a human being. Being a painter is just a hobby. His job is to be an engineer in military architecture. However, in order to become a qualified engineer, he is proficient in mathematics, physics, astronomy and geography. In his spare time, he can also make specimens, write novels, and occasionally open his brain and design an "automatic mechanical knight" and an "automatic rotating roast turkey fork". Play it now. Draw a knife.

This exhibition in Tsinghua mainly shows some manuscripts of Leonardo da Vinci's notes and the most familiar famous painting-The Last Supper.

Leonardo da Vinci designed many practical and impractical machines/buildings/weapons ... which may be very enlightening to related majors. When I visited, I saw some students studying the principle. Even if they don't understand, they can look at the brain hole of a genius.

The exhibition also produced some design models and short films showing the use effect. The design of some automatic mechanisms reminds me of the exquisite mechanism box in the game Room 3. If it is a master of Leonardo da Vinci, it may really turn the complicated things in this game into reality.

There is also the most important "Last Supper", because the original is a mural, and it is very old, and it has gradually weathered and peeled off with the passage of time. What is on display is a copy of the later generations (also the version printed in the art book). Although it is copied, it is somewhat different from the original. When you really see this painting, it's just shocking. It's simply a 3D version, which is a masterpiece. If you can't see this painting with your own eyes, it will be a lifelong regret. There is a popular science short film on the scene, which introduces the history and composition of this painting, which is intuitive and interesting.

The security of the exhibition site is not strict, and visitors are very conscious. No one tried to touch the real thing, and no one took pictures of the precious manuscript oil painting.

The exhibition also shows some other exhibits, all of which are very interesting. As a student majoring in chemistry, I like Planck's World best. The combination of familiar microscopic data charts shows the feeling of the universe, which is both familiar and novel.

If it's rare that the weather is fine and there is no smog, then stop by the Tsinghua campus!