Perspective and Technical Drawing
Perspective and technical drawing use geometric methods to project three-dimensional space and objects onto a flat surface in a measured, systematic way.
Definition
Methods for projecting three-dimensional space onto a two-dimensional surface, including the geometric system of linear perspective developed in the Renaissance and the orthographic and projective conventions of technical drafting.
Scope
This topic covers linear perspective — one-, two-, and three-point construction with horizon line and vanishing points — along with aerial perspective, and the conventions of technical and architectural drawing such as orthographic projection, isometric, and axonometric views used to represent objects and buildings.
Core questions
- How do horizon line and vanishing points construct convincing pictorial depth?
- How does linear perspective differ from aerial (atmospheric) perspective?
- How did the discovery of linear perspective reshape Renaissance art?
- How do orthographic and axonometric projections represent objects for technical purposes?
Key concepts
- Horizon line and vanishing point
- One-, two-, and three-point perspective
- Aerial (atmospheric) perspective
- Orthographic projection
- Isometric and axonometric drawing
- Foreshortening
Key theories
- Linear perspective as projection
- The geometric system, codified by Alberti from Brunelleschi's demonstrations, that treats the picture as a window through which sightlines converge to vanishing points, giving a mathematically consistent representation of space.
- Perspective as symbolic form
- Erwin Panofsky's argument that linear perspective is not a neutral transcription of vision but a historically and culturally specific convention, a 'symbolic form' expressing a particular conception of space.
History
Filippo Brunelleschi is credited with demonstrating linear perspective in early fifteenth-century Florence, and Leon Battista Alberti codified it in De Pictura (1435). The technique spread rapidly and transformed European pictorial space. In the twentieth century Erwin Panofsky reframed perspective as a culturally specific convention rather than a transparent record of sight, while technical drawing developed its own projective conventions for engineering and architecture.
Debates
- Perspective: natural truth or convention
- Whether linear perspective records how the eye actually sees, or is one culturally specific convention among many for depicting space, as argued in the tradition following Panofsky.
Key figures
- Filippo Brunelleschi
- Leon Battista Alberti
- Erwin Panofsky
Related topics
Seminal works
- alberti1972
- kemp1990
- panofsky1991
Frequently asked questions
- Who invented linear perspective?
- Filippo Brunelleschi is credited with demonstrating linear perspective in early fifteenth-century Florence, and Leon Battista Alberti was the first to set out its method in writing in 1435.
- What is the difference between linear and aerial perspective?
- Linear perspective uses converging lines and vanishing points to construct depth geometrically, while aerial or atmospheric perspective suggests distance through the haziness and cooling of color in far objects.