The fable has been a favourite with artists and sculptors. The Flemish painters
Peter Paul Rubens and
Frans Snyders were responsible for
at least two paintings of the scene. One of these used to hang in the Great Hall at
Chequers, the country house of the British prime minister, and was supposedly retouched by
Winston Churchill so as to highlight the barely visible mouse, though the veracity of the story is in doubt. The fable was also the subject of a painting by the French artist Vincent Chevilliard (1841–1904) and exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1881. The Austrian artist
Gustav Klimt incorporated a reference to the beginning of the story on the left hand side of his painting "The Fable" in 1883. There a lion sleeps beneath a shrub, on the leafless twigs of which mice are at play. Sculptors turned to the fable in the 20th century. One of them was the maker of church furniture,
Robert (Mouseman) Thompson, who came by his name for incorporating a mouse into most of his carvings. He did this legitimately in the Church of Our Lady and St Michael in
Workington, Cumbria, where the underside of one of the seats in the choir stalls, installed in 1926, depicts the fable of the lion and the mouse. at the
Beelden aan Zee museum A
Marshall Fredericks statue of 1957 seeks to make the lion less threatening to children. The sculpture was commissioned for the
Eastland Center in Harper Woods, Michigan. The lion is carved from limestone and has a large round head with stylized, uniformly coiled ringlets. Reclining on its back, it grins at the little mouse perched on its paw. This was cast from gilt bronze and gold plated, which led to its being stolen numerous times. One was returned 50 years after its theft and exhibited at the
Detroit Historical Museum in 2007. A copy of the whole statue is on exhibition in the sculpture garden of the
Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum. Another American sculptor,
Tom Otterness, has made the fable the subject of an equally child-friendly sculpture among the 23 he installed on the outdoor terrace of the seaside
Beelden aan Zee museum in
Scheveningen, The Netherlands, in 2004. In this the lion is lying trussed up on its side, contemplated by the mouse that stands upright with its hands clasped behind its back. A similar piece of public art by German sculptor Peter Fritzsche (b. 1938) is in
Eisenhüttenstadt. His lion lies on its back with its legs bound and is perched on a plinth round the sides of which is carved a translation of
Ivan Krylov's version of the fable. This dates the work back to the days of the Communist administration. Among French musical settings of La Fontaine's version of the fable,
Le lion et le rat, have been Jacques Magner's of 1886 and that of 1905 by Jacques Soulacroix (1863-1937). Other treatments of different versions have included Mabel Wood Hill's in her ''Aesop's Fables Interpreted Through Music'' (New York, 1920) for high voice and piano and
Werner Egk's
Der Löwe und die Maus for small orchestra and children's choir, performed in 1931. The fable was also included in Edward Hughes' ''Songs from Aesop's fables'' for children's voices and piano (1965), as the second of
Anthony Plog's set for narrator, piano and horn (1989/93) and among the fables set by Yvonne Gillespie for narrator and full orchestra (2001). In addition,
Julie Giroux made it the first movement in her
A Symphony of Fables (2006) and David Edgar Walther included it in his 2009 opera cycle ''Aesop's Fables''. In 2012 it was one of the ten on David P. Shortland's Australian recording,
Aesop Go HipHop, where the sung chorus after the
hip hop narration advised against discrimination: "Little friends are great friends, don't think short or tall". ==Popular applications==