











About Leonardo da Vinci
paintings he rarely finished, notebooks he wrote backwards, and a restless curiosity that moved from anatomy to engineering to flight

Where to see Leonardo da Vinci
Ranked by works you can see in person.
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0 works
Royal Collection
London, United Kingdom
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0 worksBritish Museum
London, United Kingdom
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6 worksLouvre
Paris, France
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0 worksGallerie dell'Accademia
Venice, Italy
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5 worksUffizi Gallery
Florence, Italy
Also here (6)
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0 worksGabinetto dei disegni e delle stampe
Florence, Italy
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0 worksMetropolitan Museum of Art
New York City, United States
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0 works
Bibliothèque de l'Institut de France
Paris, France
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0 worksChrist Church Picture Gallery
Oxford, United Kingdom
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0 worksSchloss Weimar
Weimar, Germany
Own a piece of it
Leonardo da Vinci prints
Hand-finished archival prints from Leonardo da Vinci's body of work.
The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne - Leonardo da Vinci
From £28.00
Virgin and Child - Leonardo da Vinci
From £28.00
Madonna with a Flower (Madonna Benois) - Leonardo da Vinci
From £28.00
The Madonna of the Carnation - Leonardo da Vinci
From £28.00
Saint Jerome in the Wilderness - Leonardo da Vinci
From £28.00
Mona Lisa - Leonardo da Vinci
From £28.00
The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne - Leonardo da Vinci
From £28.00
The Lady with an Ermine (Cecilia Gallerani) - Leonardo da Vinci
From £28.00
View all 39 museums
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1 worksPinacoteca di Brera
Milan, Italy
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2 worksNational Gallery of Art
Washington D.C., United States
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0 works
Musée Bonnat-Helleu
Bayonne, France
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1 worksAshmolean Museum
Oxford, United Kingdom
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2 worksHermitage Museum
Saint Petersburg, Russia
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0 worksBeaux-Arts de Paris
Paris, France
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0 works
Hamburger Kunsthalle
Hamburg, Germany
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0 worksFitzwilliam Museum
Cambridge, United Kingdom
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2 works
Snta Maria delle Grazie
Milan, Italy
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1 worksCourtauld Gallery
London, United Kingdom
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0 works
Städel Museum
Frankfurt, Germany
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1 works
National Galleries Scotland
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
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1 worksPalace of Fontainebleau
Fontainebleau, France
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0 worksKupferstichkabinett Berlin
Berlin, Germany
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1 worksMuseum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Rotterdam, Netherlands
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1 works
National Gallery
London, United Kingdom
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1 works
Bavarian State Painting Collections
Munich, Germany
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1 works
Biblioteca Ambrosiana
Milan, Italy
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1 worksMuseo de Arte de Worcester
Worcester, United States
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0 worksArt Institute of Chicago
Chicago, United States
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1 worksVictoria and Albert Museum
London, United Kingdom
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1 works
Christ Church
Oxford, United Kingdom
Also here (2)
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1 works
Harris Manchester College
Oxford, United Kingdom
Also here (1)
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0 works
Museum of Fine Arts of Rennes
Rennes, France
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0 works
Royal Library of Turin
Turin, Italy
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0 works
British Library
London, United Kingdom
Also here (3)
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0 works
Institut de France
Paris, France
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0 works
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest
Budapest, Hungary
Can't travel? Bring Leonardo da Vinci home.
See all Leonardo da Vinci prints →Frequently Asked Questions
Where can I see Leonardo da Vinci paintings?
Leonardo da Vinci's works can be seen at Royal Collection, Royal Library of Turin, Bibliothèque de l'Institut de France, and 2 other museums worldwide.Where can I see Leonardo da Vinci's last supper?
Leonardo da Vinci's works can be seen at Royal Collection, Royal Library of Turin, Bibliothèque de l'Institut de France, and 2 other museums worldwide.Why did Leonardo da Vinci write backwards?
Leonardo da Vinci wrote backwards, in mirror script, because he was left-handed and had no formal education. Nobody corrected the habit, so he continued to write this way in his notebooks.Was Leonardo da Vinci a christian?
Leonardo da Vinci painted The Last Supper, which has been the world's most revered religious painting for five centuries. In it, he aimed to paint the 'man and the intention of his soul'.When did Leonardo da Vinci live?
Leonardo da Vinci lived from 1452 to 1519. In 1499, the invasion of Milan by the French drove him from the city.Leonardo da Vinci art style technique?
Leonardo wrote a series of papers between 1473 and 1518 that were collected as his Treatise on Painting. One section, written in 1492, discusses linear perspective and demonstrates his technique for transferring a figure onto a curved vault, prefiguring the later style known as trompe l'oeil.Why did Leonardo da Vinci paint the mona lisa?
Leonardo da Vinci never gave the painting to Lisa or her husband; he kept it with him until he died. Though it is regarded as a masterpiece today, he may have considered it to be unfinished, as he completed comparatively few of the paintings he started.What is Leonardo da Vinci famous for painting?
Leonardo da Vinci is famous for painting the Mona Lisa, his most famous portrait, and The Last Supper. The Last Supper has been the world's most revered religious painting for five centuries.
Sources
Where to See guide aggregates verified holdings of Leonardo da Vinci's works across the following collections.
- [1] museum Courtauld Gallery Used for: museum holdings.
- [2] museum Städel Museum Used for: museum holdings.
- [3] museum National Galleries Scotland Used for: museum holdings.
- [4] museum Palace of Fontainebleau Used for: museum holdings.
- [5] museum Christ Church Picture Gallery Used for: museum holdings.
- [6] museum Kupferstichkabinett Berlin Used for: museum holdings.
- [7] book Susie Hodge, Art Used for: biography.
- [8] book Susie Hodge, Art: Everything You Need to Know About the Greatest Artists and Their Work Used for: biography.
- [9] book Beard, Lee, 1973- author, Butler, Adam, author; Van Cleave, Claire, author; Fortenberry, Diane, author; Stirling, Susan, author, Beard, Lee, 1973- author, Butler, Adam, author; Van Cleave, Claire, author; Fortenberry, Diane, author; Stirling, Susan, author - The Art Book_ New Edition, Mini Format Used for: biography.
Editorial overseen by Solis Prints. Sources verified 2026-07-15. Click a source for details, or hover over [N] in the page above to preview.
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