Becoming Da Vinci

Notes (by Natasha D.,"aged" and reflected) from our visit to the DaVinci Exhibit.

Working models of Leonardo Da Vinci’s devices, and video of his sketchbook, so inspired one student that she emulated Da Vinci’s style as she took her notes during our visit to the Da Vinci Machines Exhibition. While I’d asked them to bring their notebooks, I’d not said anything about taking notes (nor is there to be a quiz afterward) so it was very nice to see this student’s efforts. The exhibition is in St. Louis at the moment, until the end of the year.

Scan of a page of the Codex de Leicester by Leonardo DaVinci. (Image via Wikimedia Commons).
Flywheel using spherical weights. Constructed based on Leonardo da Vinci's drawings. Photo by Erik Möller via Wikimedia Commons.

What I liked most about the exhibit is that you can operate some of the reconstructions of flywheels, gears, pulleys, catapults, and other machines that came out of DaVinci’s notebooks.

Da Vinci did a lot with gears, inclined planes, pulleys and other combination of simple machines, so the exhibit is a nice introduction to mechanics in physics. The exhibition provides a teacher’s guide that’s useful in this regard.

It’s an excellent exhibition, especially if you spend some time playing with the machines.