Leonardo da Vinci Leonardo da Vinci was conceived on 15 April 1452 by the Tuscan town of Vinci, the ill-conceived child of a neighborhood legal advisor. He was apprenticed to the stone worker and painter Andrea Del Verrocchio in Florence and in 1478 turned into a free ace. In around 1483, he moved to Milan to work for the decision Sforza family as a specialist, stone worker, painter and planner. From 1495 to 1497 he created a wall painting of 'The Last Supper' in the refectory of the Monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan. Leonardo da Vinci was known for his paintings, drawings, sculpting, science, engineering, architecture, and anatomy. In 1478 is when he became an independent master. Leonardo's first huge invention was a helicopter (The Flying Machine) in the 1940s. He also has his own airport called the Leonardo da Vinci–Fiumicino Airport in Rome, Italy. The Leonardo da Vinci–Fiumicino Airport was open on January 15, 1961. Da Vinci was in Milan until the city was attacked by the French in 1499 and the Sforza family compelled to escape. He may have visited Venice before coming back to Florence. During his time in Florence, he painted a few representations, however the one in particular that endures is the acclaimed 'Mona Lisa' (1503-1506). In 1506, da Vinci came back to Milan, staying there until 1513. This was trailed by three years situated in Rome. In 1517, at the greeting of the French lord Francis I, Leonardo moved to the Château of Cloux, close Amboise in France, where he passed on 2 May 1519. The distinction of Da Vinci's enduring works of art has implied that he has been viewed essentially as a craftsman, yet the huge number of enduring pages of his scratch pad uncover the most diverse and splendid of psyches. He composed and drew on subjects including geography, life systems (which he contemplated so as to paint the human structure all the more precisely), flight, gravity and optics, frequently fluttering from subject to subject on a solitary page, and writing in left-gave reflect content. He 'created' the bike, plane, helicopter, and parachute nearly 500 years relatively revolutionary. In the event that this work had been distributed in a comprehensible structure, da Vinci's place as a spearheading researcher would have been past debate. However his actual virtuoso was not as a researcher or a craftsman, yet as a mix of the two: a 'craftsman engineer'. His artistic creation was logical, in view of a profound comprehension of the activities of the human body and the material science of light and shade. His science was communicated through craftsmanship, and his drawings and graphs show what he implied, and how he comprehended the world to function. ...