Da Vinci Marvellous Mechanical Creatures (Original)

Da Vinci Marvellous Mechanical Creatures art by Angus McBride

Da Vinci Marvellous Mechanical Creatures (Original)


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£190.00
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Artist: Angus McBride
Medium: Gouache on Board
Size: 13" x 8" (330mm x 195mm)
Date: 1970
Code: McBrideMechLion

This is the unique original Gouache painting by Angus McBride.

Contemporaneous accounts of Leonardo's mechanical lion, or lions, are somewhat confused but he appears to have designed at least three.

In around 1509, he created a robot lion for the triumphal entry to Milan of the previous French king, Louis XII. This could rear on its hind legs and present lilies – the French royal symbol – but it could not walk.

The second lion, designed just before Da Vinci moved to Clos Lucé, could walk under is own power and move its head. It was presented to François I when he visited Lyons in 1515. When the king stepped forward and tapped the lion with his sword, its body opened and presented him with lilies.

In the left panel Da Vinci appears to be having a mischievous time with a mechanical lizard.
  • Artist Biography
    Angus McBride (11 May 1931 - 15 May 2007; London, UK & South Africa)
    Angus McBride is one of the world's most respected historical and fantasy illustrators, and contributed to numerous books, magazines and articles, including the classic Look & Learn, JRR Tolkein's Lord of the Rings, and more than 70 Osprey Military uniform and history titles in the past three decades.

    Born in London to Highland Scottish parents, Angus McBride was orphaned as a child, his mother dying when he was five years old, and his father in World War Two when he was 12. He was educated at the Canterbury Cathedral Choir School. He served his National Service in the Royal Fusiliers, and afterward got a job as an advertising artist.

    He worked in advertising agencies from 1947, and after National Service, emigrated to South Africa where he lived for several years, before relocating to Ireland before his sad demise in 2007.

    Due to Britain's poor economic state immediately following World War II, after National Service McBride found it necessary to leave for South Africa. In Cape Town, he became a fairly well known and successful artist. However, he felt that he could not expand on his artistic plans in South Africa's small publishing industry.

    Consequently, in 1961, McBride moved back to England. He made his first works in educational magazines such as Finding Out and Look and Learn, World of Wonder and Bible Story. In 1975, he began to work with Osprey Publishing's Men-at-Arms series.

    As England's economy again suffered in the 1970s, McBride moved with his family back to Cape Town, and continued to work with British and American publishers. He continued to do realistic, historical illustrations for Osprey Publishing, as well as other such work for other military-history publishers (Concord publications, Blandford Press, etc.). A series of miniatures were produced by Citadel Miniatures based on his illustrations within Medieval Warlords by Blandford Press.

    In fantasy circles, McBride was well known for his illustrations for Iron Crown Enterprises' game Middle-earth Role Playing (MERP) based on J. R. R. Tolkien's writings.

    Although a few of his paintings are in oils, McBride mostly preferred to work in gouache colours on illustration boards, making numerous detailed sketches of the composition before starting to paint.

    In 2006, McBride moved to Ireland, where he continued to work. He died from a heart attack on 15 May 2007.
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£0.00
£190.00
In Stock