The Codices of Leonardo
The person file behind the workshop — mirror-script notebooks, anatomies, and designs written centuries out of sequence.
Expedition Briefing // EXP-11
Florence, 1503 — oil, ink, and the sound of ideas being tested. One working day inside the room where a portrait, an anatomy, and a flying machine share the same bench.
DEPARTURE ON REQUEST // STATUS BOARDINGBriefing 01 // Mission Dossier
Expedition File
EXP-11The workshop stands a short walk from the Palazzo Vecchio, and in the spring of 1503 it is the busiest room in the continuum’s Renaissance file. A Florentine merchant’s wife has begun sitting for a portrait that will outlast every empire on the map; the panel rests on its easel between sessions, half-resolved, the famous expression still being negotiated in thin veils of oil. Expedition members will observe two of the early sittings from the back of the room, where apprentices grind pigment and pretend not to listen.
Around the portrait, the day’s other work continues without pause. Anatomical studies — folios of tendons, valves, and the architecture of the human shoulder — are corrected against notes taken in the dissection rooms of Santa Maria Nuova, and the master annotates them right to left in his reversed hand. Volunteers who read mirror-script will be given time at the drawing tables; those who do not will find that watching it written is enough.
In the far corner, under canvas, hangs the model the archive classifies with unusual care: the aerial screw, a helix of linen and wire that argues with gravity two centuries before anyone else thinks to. It does not fly. It does not need to. The briefing’s purpose is to record the arguments — the testing, discarding, and re-drawing by which one mind moved further out of sequence than any other in the record.
Briefing 02 // Itinerary
Five timed observations, dawn to dusk. All times are local to the coordinate.
Dawn — Arrival via the Threshold
Passage opens in a courtyard off the Via Ghibellina. Volunteers enter the workshop with the first apprentices, before the city is fully awake.
Morning — The Drawing Tables
Anatomical folios, machine studies, and preparatory cartoons under revision. Observation positions at the rear benches.
Midday — Mirror-Script Observation
The master annotates the morning’s work in reversed hand. Recording permitted by memory and sanctioned notebook only.
Afternoon — Machines and Models
The aerial screw, gear studies, and canal mechanisms examined under canvas in the far workroom. No contact with any surface.
Dusk — Departure
Candles are trimmed, the workshop closes, and the threshold reopens in the courtyard. All volunteers accounted for before the last light.
Briefing 03 // Standing Orders
Acceptance of the briefing is acceptance of the conditions. There are no exceptions on record.
Nothing is touched, moved, or spoken into the record. The coordinate must close exactly as it opened.
Every observation is logged with its full provenance and surrendered to the archive on return. Private souvenirs, in memory or otherwise, are a breach of charter.
The threshold closes at the appointed minute whether or not the day feels finished. No volunteer has ever been left behind, because no volunteer has ever been late twice.
Briefing 04 // Related Records
The person file behind the workshop — mirror-script notebooks, anatomies, and designs written centuries out of sequence.
The era file for this coordinate. Invention becomes method; the workshop becomes a laboratory.
EXP-11 // Boarding
Departure is arranged on request while the coordinate holds. Submit your name, or return to the manifest and choose another doorway.