Look around you! People and objects look larger when they are nearby
and smaller when they are far away.
How large should a figure be in the scene below if he is standing on
the red line? Look at the other people and buildings for clues.
He should be taller than the man at the back, but shorter than the man at the front of the picture.
Knowing that a person who is further away in a painting should look
smaller is helpful. But it wasn't enough for Leonardo da Vinci. He
wanted to know why distant objects looked smaller and what size to
paint them if he knew exactly how far away they were. In his
notebooks he wrote and sketched his ideas about why distant objects
always look smaller. He also described his experiments for measuring
the apparent sizes of objects at different distances.
The Classroom Activity: How Far? How
Small? describes how to conduct an experiment similar to
Leonardo's with very simple materials. Try it to discover for
yourself the relationship between size and distance.