A Treatise on Painting/Chapter 259

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4013230A Treatise on Painting — Of the Colour of FacesJohn Francis RigaudLeonardo da Vinci

Chap. CCLIX.Of the Colour of Faces.

The colour of any object will appear more or less distinct in proportion to the extent of its surface. This proportion is proved, by observing that a face appears dark at a small distance, because, being composed of many small parts, it produces a great number of shadows; and the lights being the smallest part of it, are soonest lost to the sight, leaving only the shadows, which being in a greater quantity, the whole of the face appears dark, and the more so if that face has on the head, or at the back, something whiter.