Fables by
Jean Grandville, showing the tortoise running bipedally. The fable has a Greek version but no early Latin version. For this reason, it did not begin to appear in printed editions of Aesop's fables until the 16th century, one of the earliest being Bernard Salomon's ''Les Fables d'Esope Phrygien, mises en Ryme Francoise'' (1547). Versions followed from the Netherlands (in Dutch, 1567) and Flanders (in French, 1578) but none in English before
Francis Barlow's edition of 1667. Among the many illustrations of the fable, that by the French caricaturist
Jean Grandville is novel in portraying the tortoise as running upright. This is also how he is shown in the
Walt Disney cartoon version of "The Tortoise and the Hare" (1935). Another departure from the ordinary in Grandville's etching is the choice of a mole (complete with dark glasses) rather than, as usual, a fox as the judge at the finishing line. Auguste Delierre makes the judge a monkey in the 1883 edition of La Fontaine's fables that he illustrated. La Fontaine says in his rhyme that it does not matter "who it was that judged the race"; his interpreters have obviously taken him at his word. Outside of book production, in the early 17th-century, the Flemish landscape artist
Jan Wildens created an oil painting of the fable. The hare enters on the left, racing over an upland road as dawn breaks; the tortoise is nowhere in sight. In the mid-19th century, the French animal painter
Philibert Léon Couturier also devoted an oil painting to the fable in which, as in Grandville's illustration, the tortoise is shown racing upright. In
Edward Bawden's composite design of 1970, the hare is depicted racing and lying down at various stages of the race while, in contrast to his sprightly rival, the tortoise keeps going. Two pieces of popular sculpture were aimed at children.
Nancy Schön's was made to commemorate the centenary of the
Boston Marathon in 1996 and is sited in
Copley Square, the finishing line for the race. The tortoise is shown determinedly stumping forward while the hare has paused to scratch behind its ear. In 1997, the following year, a painted steel sculpture by Michael Browne and Stuart Smith was set up near the cross-country finish line at
Van Cortlandt Park in
the Bronx. The hare is mounted on the tortoise's shell and appears to be trying to leap over him.
Philately The fable has also appeared on
postage stamps from various countries: •
Cyprus, in which cartoon characters are depicted on a set of five €0.34 stamps (2011) •
Dahomey, on a 1972 set commemorating 350 years since La Fontaine's birth, in which it figures on the 10 franc stamp •
Dominica, on a 2 cent stamp for Easter 1984, picturing a Disney tortoise carrying Easter eggs as it overtakes the sleeping hare •
France issued surcharged
Red Cross stamps in 1978 on which the fable appeared on the 1 franc + 0.25 denomination. It was also included in the 1995 strip of six 2.80 franc stamps commemorating the third centenary of the author's death. •
Greece issued a 1987 set illustrating Aesop's fables, including the tortoise and the hare on the 130 drachma stamp •
Hungary issued a set in 1980 with the fable on the 4 forint stamp • The
Maldives issued a 1990 set in which Disney characters act out the fables; the tortoise and the hare appear on the 15 laree stamp •
Monaco issued a composite 50 centime stamp on the 350th anniversary of La Fontaine's birth in 1971, with this fable included •
Sri Lanka issued a 5 rupee stamp for Child's broadcasting day 2007 that shows the contestants at the starting line ==Musical versions==