, copy by
Cesare da Sesto after a lost original by
Leonardo, 1515–1520, Oil on canvas,
Wilton House, England. A fresco depicting the Greek myth of Leda and the Swan was unearthed at the Pompeii archaeological site in 2018. Another fresco commonly attributed to the Leda and the Swan motif was found in the
House of the Citarist (I.4.5/25), and is now housed in the Naples Archaeological Museum (MANN inv. 120034). It dates to the first century CE.
Leonardo da Vinci began making studies in 1504 for a painting, apparently never executed, of Leda seated on the ground with her children. In 1508, he painted a
different composition of the subject, with a nude standing Leda cuddling the Swan, with the two sets of infant twins (also nude), and their huge broken egg-shells. The original of this is lost, possibly deliberately destroyed, and was last recorded in the French royal
Château de Fontainebleau in 1625 by
Cassiano dal Pozzo. However it is known from many copies, of which the earliest are probably the
Spiridon Leda, perhaps by a studio assistant and now in the
Uffizi, and the one at
Wilton House in the United Kingdom (illustrated). Also lost, and probably deliberately destroyed, is
Michelangelo's tempera
painting of the pair making love, commissioned in 1529 by
Alfonso d'Este for his palazzo in
Ferrara, and taken to France for the royal collection in 1532; it was at
Fontainebleau in 1536. Michelangelo's
cartoon for the work—given to his assistant Antonio Mini, who used it for several copies for French patrons before his death in 1533—survived for over a century. This composition is known from many copies, including an
ambitious engraving by
Cornelis Bos, c. 1563; the marble sculpture by
Bartolomeo Ammanati in the Bargello, Florence; two copies by the young
Rubens on his Italian voyage, and the painting after Michelangelo, ca. 1530, in the
National Gallery, London. The Michelangelo composition, of about 1530, shows
Mannerist tendencies of elongation and twisted pose (the
figura serpentinata) that were popular at the time. In addition, a sculptural group, similar to the Prado Roman group illustrated, was believed until at least the 19th century to be by Michelangelo. '' by
Correggio The last very famous Renaissance painting of the subject is
Correggio's elaborate composition of c. 1530 (Berlin); this too was damaged whilst in the
collection of Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, the Regent of France in the minority of
Louis XV. His son
Louis, though a great lover of painting, had periodic crises of conscience about his way of life, in one of which he attacked the figure of Leda with a knife. The damage has been repaired, though full restoration to the original condition was not possible. Both the Leonardo and Michelangelo paintings also disappeared when in the collection of the French Royal Family, and are believed to have been destroyed by more moralistic widows or successors of their owners. There were many other depictions in the Renaissance, including cycles of book illustrations to Ovid, but most were derivative of the compositions mentioned above. The subject remained largely confined to Italy, and sometimes France—Northern versions are rare. After something of a hiatus in the 18th and early 19th centuries (apart from a very sensuous
Boucher), Leda and the Swan became again a popular motif in the later 19th and 20th centuries, with many
Symbolist and
Expressionist treatments.
Gustav Klimt painted the subject of Leda with the Swan in 1917, however this work was destroyed in the fire at
Schloss Immendorf in 1945. 's
Leda and the Swan, Ukraine Also from that era were sculptures of the theme by
Antonin Mercié and
Max Klinger. 's
Leda and the Swan ==In modern and contemporary art==