
Everyone knows the Mona Lisa. But do you know the man who painted it? Leonardo da Vinci was more than an artist; he was a scientist, an engineer, an anatomist, and a visionary who saw the world in a way no one else did. He believed that to paint the world, you first had to understand it, from the muscles in a human body to the mechanics of a bird's wing.
Join us on
The Curious Machine as we journey into the mind of perhaps the most curious person in history. We'll uncover how his unconventional childhood and lack of formal education fueled a lifelong passion for observation and questioning.
In this deep dive, you will discover:
The Terrifying Shield: How a young Leonardo used real lizards and snakes to create a monster so realistic it terrified his own father.
The Ultimate Job Application: The audacious letter he wrote to a duke, pitching himself as a military engineer of terrifying war machines and only mentioning his painting skills as an afterthought.
Art Born from Science: How he pioneered revolutionary techniques like sfumato and chiaroscuro not just as artistic choices, but as a direct result of his deep study of optics and light.
Forbidden Knowledge: His secret and dangerous dissections of over 20 human corpses to create anatomical drawings that were centuries ahead of their time.
The $450 Million Ghost: The incredible story of Salvator Mundi, a lost masterpiece that was once sold for about $100 and, after its rediscovery, became the most expensive painting ever auctioned at over $450 million.
This episode reveals a man who saw no boundaries between art and science. His story is a powerful reminder that the greatest innovations often come from a relentless curiosity and the courage to connect ideas that others see as separate.