The influence of Leonardo da Vinci on Paul Klee's teaching at the Bauhaus is examined. The writer examines the Leonardo sources that were actually accessible to Klee to demonstrate how he applied them to his theory of art and his Bauhaus teaching. Through sketches and drawings, she then shows how he translated Leonardo's suggestions in practice. In addition, she seeks to understand his interest in Leonardo within the context of his own studies and the efforts of Leonardo research in the period before 1900. Finally, she addresses the reasons why an artist such as Klee, whose work is so completely different from Leonardo's, absorbed so many ideas of the Renaissance theoretician in his Bauhaus teaching.
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