The use of perspective is to compose a picture as though it was being seen from one position, rather than from different viewpoints. During the pre-Renaissance, perspective wasn’t given much attention in the paintings and therefore reflected a Gothic manner. Alberti’s principle on linear perspective came about in the very early 1400’s. The key to understanding linear perspective lies in realising that the distance of an object from the viewer affects the size of the object. He based his theory on the height of a human figure which he set to 3 braccia, around 1.8m). He starts off with a rectangular picture area, which he imagined as an open window and begins to draw the horizon line; where the sky and land meets, orthogonals; lines that are perpendicular to the picture plane which seems to be converging towards the vanishing point, transversals; lines that are
References: http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/Alberti.html http://www.learn.columbia.edu/monographs/raphmon/pdf/art_hum_reading_09.pdf http://gottliebstudios.com/Chiaroscuro http://colorbay.com/perspective.htm http://www.bu.edu/arion/volume-18-barolsky-narrative-art/ Art History by Chris Grace