Famous Artworks – Leda and the Swan analysis by Nicole Sara

Published by

on

Hi everyone, it’s Robbie Cheadle bringing you Nicole Sara’s thoughtful and interesting analysis of Leda and the Swan by Giovanni Antonio Bazzi.

Picture caption: Leda and the Swan, copy of a painting by Leonardo da Vinci (displayed at Galleria Borghese, Rome) by Nicole Sara

Leda and the Swan, displayed at Galleria Borghese in Rome, is a copy after Leonardo da Vinci attributed to the Italian Renaissance painter Giovanni Antonio Bazzi (Il Sodoma), c. 1510–1515. The painting, in tempera on wood, is in fact one of the most significant copies of the lost Leda, cited in sources in France in 1625, and the nine currently known copies of the work are a reflection of the popularity of the theme.

Leonardo is one of the best-known artists from the period known as the Italian Renaissance – a term used to describe the culture, art and politics of Italy during the 15th and 16th centuries. He is widely regarded as the ultimate ‘Renaissance Man’; that is to say, he had skills that ranged across multiple subjects including art, science, engineering and music.

Greatly admired in its time, Leda and the Swan revisits the ancient myth of Jupiter (Zeus) who transformed himself into a swan out of love for Leda. The painting was a reflection by Leonardo on the theme of the forces of Nature, the intertwining bodies reflecting Renaissance ideas about nature, fertility, and transformation. The symbolic centre of the Borghese composition is the egg, almost hidden by the grass, with the figure of Leda, still enclosed in the embrace of her lover, acting as a counterpoint.

Nowadays, this might not be a subject we can easily identify, however, during the Renaisssance, this story was well known. Jupiter, King of the Gods and therefore immortal, often disguised himself in order to seduce anyone he took a fancy to. Here, disguised as a swan, he seduces Leda, who was human, not divine.

In the painting, a completely naked woman is caught in an embrace with a swan; she caresses the swan’s long curved neck as it appears to be nestling into her hair or ear with its beak. Curiously, the woman’s pose is very like that of the swan. By blending the forms of Leda with the surrounding botanical studies, Leonardo combines his fascination with nature and classical myth and in particular a story linked to fertility and the cyclical power of nature.

The babies hatching from the eggs to which Leda gestures are her children. Most accepted versions of the story describe Pollux and Helen hatching from one egg, and Castor and Clytemnestra from the other. The storyline suggests that Jupiter was the father of two of the babies and that Leda’s husband, Tyndareus, was the father of the other two. Castor and Pollux are better known as Gemini (meaning twins, although technically they were not). Clytemnestra and Helen were Spartan princesses who married kings and were both implicated in one way or another in the Trojan War. 

In poetry, «Leda and the Swan» is a sonnet by William Butler Yeats composed in 1923, combining psychological realism with a mystic vision, also alluding to the Trojan War, which will be provoked by the abduction of Helen (who will be begotten by Zeus on Leda, along with Castor and Pollux, in some versions of the myth). Clytaemnestra, who killed her husband, Agamemnon, leader of the Greeks at Troy, was also supposed to have hatched from one of Leda’s eggs. The poem is regularly praised as one of Yeats’s masterpieces.

There is also the beautiful poem by Nicaraguan poet Rubén Darío’s, «Leda» written in 1892, which contains an oblique description of Leda and the swan, watched over by the god Pan. Here are the first two stazas of this beautiful poem,

El cisne en la sombra parece de nieve;
su pico es de ámbar, del alba al trasluz;
el suave crepúsculo que pasa tan breve
las cándidas alas sonrosa de luz.

Y luego en las ondas del lago azulado,
después que la aurora perdió su arrebol,
las alas tendidas y el cuello enarcado,
el cisne es de plata bañado de sol.

English translation:

The swan composed of snow floats in shadow,
amber beak translucent in the last light.
The white and innocent wings in the glow
of the short-lived dusk are rose-tipped and bright.

And then, on ripples of the clear blue lake,
when the crimson dawn is over and done,
the swan spreads his wings and lets his neck make
an arch, silver and burnished by the sun.

It has been also proposed that Leonardo’s Chatsworth sketch for Leda and the Swan may have been inspired by the Laocoön Group, the ancient sculpture discovered in 1506 which has been called «the prototypical icon of human agony». There is a similar twist to the subject’s body, the curve of the swan’s neck recalls the snake’s lithe body in Laocoön’s hand and Leda’s twisted body resembles the forceful attack of the serpents.

Picture caption: The Laocoön and His Sons, origin uncertain (unearthed in February 1506; on display in Museo Pio-Clementino, part of the Vatican Museums) 

It was impressive to be able to admire and take photos of this painting in the Borghese Gallery in Rome, having read about and studied the myth before, both in art and poetry. What has always felt baffling to me is Leda’s calm, almost serene pose contrasting with the myth’s underlying tension, which seems to suggest the complex interplay between vulnerability and authority, and the blurring lines between force and seduction.

Lastly, it may be that at a deeper level, the work ultimately explores how divine forces subtly and mysteriously intrude upon the human world, reshaping entire destinies through intimate, sometimes unsettling encounters. Swans too, have often been seen as a symbol of wisdom and of the awakening of the power of self, also of balance and purity, inner beauty and outer grace, and even spiritual understanding and evolution. What do you think?

Sources:

https://www.collezionegalleriaborghese.it/en/opere/leda-3

https://www.chatsworth.org/visit-chatsworth/chatsworth-estate/art-archives/old-master-drawings-up-close/leda-and-the-swan/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leda_and_the_Swan_(Leonardo)

About Nicole Sara

Picture caption: Author image of Nicole Sara

Nicole Sara is an inspirational poet, writer and blogger with a Master’s Degree in Philology and American Studies from the “Al.I.Cuza” University in Iași. She loves languages and performing magic with words and ideas in both playful and dreamy, insightful ways.

For Nicole, writing, and especially writing in verse, is a delight! She writes in order to fly away without too many restrictions and to rejoice in every beautiful thing around. When writing, she feels she leaves the “much too real” routine behind, and she soars freely with each and every line and piece of imagery, dreaming away and fluttering restlessly among words, thoughts and rhymes.. and of course, lovely nature photos.

Aside from writing, photography is Nicole’s other great love. When she is not writing, she can be found clicking away, taking lots of flower and sunset photos, exploring the outdoors with her Nikon cameras and her phone, capturing pictures which she enjoys sharing on her blogs.

A little drop of orange and pink, her two favorite colors, and a couple of strawberries can also be added to the mix, a little more love of travelling, and a huge deal of sea, sky, sun and sand… there, the picture is almost done! The rest is to be discovered and enjoyed between the lines and photos dreamily dancing along the pages.

«Rhyming Dreams», Nicole’s debut collection, is for anyone who dreams a lot, loves deeply, going through both good and less good moments… like steps on a pathway, continuously winding but tirelessly searching for happiness and hope in the enjoyment of small but sweet things all around.

Blog: https://starrysteps.wordpress.com/ 

Bilingual blog: https://doarnicol.wordpress.com/ 

Fine Art America: https://fineartamerica.com/profiles/nicole-sara
Pixels: https://nicole-sara.pixels.com/ 

Etsy Shop: http://www.etsy.com/shop/starrystepsshop  

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nicoles.steps/
Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/NicoleSaraArt/

About Robbie Cheadle

Picture caption: Robbie Cheadle author photograph

South African author, photographer, and artist, Robbie Cheadle, has written and illustrated seventeen children’s books, illustrated a further three children’s books, written and illustrated four poetry books and written and illustrated one celebration of cake and fondant art book with recipes. Her work has also appeared in poetry and short story anthologies.

Robbie also has two novels and a collection of short stories published under the name of Roberta Eaton Cheadle and has horror, paranormal, and fantasy short stories featured in several anthologies under this name.

You can find Robbie Cheadle’s artwork, fondant and cake artwork, and all her books on her website here: https://www.robbiecheadle.co.za/

Social Media Links

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/robbiecheadle.bsky.social
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVyFo_OJLPqFa9ZhHnCfHUA
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15584446.Robbie_Cheadle
TSL Publications: https://tslbooks.uk/product-tag/robbie-cheadle/
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Robbie-Cheadle/author/B01N9J62GQ
Unsplash profile: https://unsplash.com/@r_cheadle

45 respuestas a “Famous Artworks – Leda and the Swan analysis by Nicole Sara”

  1. Avatar de thomasstigwikman

    Robbie and Nicole. Thank you for the very interesting information about this painting, which I definitely have seen before, but I don’t remember where. I also thought it was interesting that Pollux and Helen are hatching from one egg, and Castor and Clytemnestra from the other. Currently Pollux and Castor are very close to Jupiter in the night sky and are putting on a beautiful show in the clear night sky even here in Dallas, despite all the light pollution. Pollux is an orange giant star and Castor is actually six hot blue stars, or rather three binary stars close together. It is very easy to spot them if you can find Jupiter (use your phone and google sky map).

    Le gusta a 2 personas

    1. Avatar de robbiesinspiration

      Hi Thomas, thank you for this interesting information. I’ll take a look as you suggest 🧡

      Le gusta a 2 personas

      1. Avatar de thomasstigwikman

        Thank you so much Robbie

        Le gusta a 1 persona

      2. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        My pleasure.

        Me gusta

    2. Avatar de Nicole Sara

      That is very interesting, thank you, Thomas! I have always been fascinated by the stars, constellations… and Castor and Pollux, those are the brightest stars in the Gemini constellation, Gemini also being my zodiac sign 😊 But I have never looked for them in the night sky, maybe it’s time I did too ✨😀

      Le gusta a 1 persona

      1. Avatar de thomasstigwikman

        Thank you, Nicole. If you look towards East after sunset, you’ll see a very bright star-looking object rising and it will slowly move across the sky until it is above your head after midnight. That is Jupiter. It is currently the brightest object in the night sky, except for the moon, because Venus is not up and Jupiter is in opposition, meaning it is the closest to Earth. The two bright stars close to Jupiter are Pollux and Castor. They form a triangle with Jupiter. If you have the Google Sky Map app on your phone, you can verify it. Dallas has a lot of light pollution, and you can see about 14 stars here, but I can still see this trio so you should be able to as well, unless it is cloudy where you are you are, or you are in the middle of New York or some really bright big city.

        Le gusta a 1 persona

      2. Avatar de Nicole Sara

        I will install the app, thank you, that seems easy to do, yes. I have sometimes tried to see a couple of things in the sky, but except the Big Dipper and the North Star, I think, I was never too sure if I was looking at the right things up there 😊 Probably the app will prove helpful, besides your quite clear and simple explanation, thanks again!

        Le gusta a 1 persona

      3. Avatar de thomasstigwikman

        When you hold the phone, make sure it is parallel to what you are looking at. For example, if the object is right above your head the phone needs to be horizontal. In any case, Jupiter should be easy to find with or without the app since it is the brightest star-looking-object right now.

        Le gusta a 1 persona

      4. Avatar de Nicole Sara

        Thank you, Thomas, I will. Tomorrow evening after sunset I will try to find Jupiter, and then Pollux and Castor. Interesting thing, and a bit funny, that you have mentioned you live in Dallas… and I am watching reruns of «Dallas», the series, on TV these months every night at 10. 😊 I watched the series a while back, years ago, and now very happy about the reruns. It’s for one hour every evening, to rest my eyes a bit from the pc and enjoy the air back in the 80’s, feels quite nice… no smartphones, no fast life or so, an elegant and peaceful tempo, and always just looking forward to the next episode, no risk of any binge watching like on Netflix, that is. 😊

        Le gusta a 1 persona

      5. Avatar de thomasstigwikman

        I grew up in Sweden and I was watching Dallas on TV. It was always a few years behind American TV. One of the first things we did when we moved to Dallas in 2000 was visiting South Fork Ranch. It is still open for visits after all these years.

        Me gusta

      6. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        Hi Thomas, I remember watching a bit of Dallas too. How nice you have visited South Fork Ranch.

        Me gusta

      7. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        Hi Nicole, I also watched a bit of Dallas when I was young (at school). I also enjoyed it back then.

        Me gusta

      8. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        I can see it with the naked eye. Thanks, Thomas.

        Me gusta

  2. Avatar de Esther Chilton

    It’s great to see Nicole here, Robbie. Thank you. Very interesting too 😊

    Le gusta a 2 personas

    1. Avatar de robbiesinspiration

      Hi Esther, I’m delighted you enjoyed.

      Le gusta a 2 personas

    2. Avatar de Nicole Sara

      Thank you very much, Esther! 😊 Happy you enjoyed reading! 💖

      Le gusta a 1 persona

  3. Avatar de beetleypete

    This is my first time seeing that Da Vici painting, and I appreciated the detailed analysis that came with the experience. Shared on Twitter.

    Best wishes, Pete.

    Le gusta a 1 persona

    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Pete, thank you for your comment. It was my first time seeing this painting too. Thanks also for the share.

      Le gusta a 2 personas

    2. Avatar de Nicole Sara

      I am glad you enjoyed it, Pete, thank you!

      Le gusta a 1 persona

  4. Avatar de T. W. Dittmer

    It’s great to see the lovely Leda and the Swan image and read Nicole’s fascinating analysis, Robbie. The Laocoön and His Sons is captivating. Thank you for this wonderful post.

    Le gusta a 1 persona

    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Tim, I’m so pleased you enjoyed Nicole’s analysis. I also found it fascinating.

      Le gusta a 2 personas

      1. Avatar de T. W. Dittmer

        😊

        Me gusta

    2. Avatar de Nicole Sara

      Thank you very much, Tim! I am happy you found it both interesting and enjoyable!

      Le gusta a 1 persona

      1. Avatar de T. W. Dittmer

        😍

        Me gusta

  5. Avatar de D.L. Finn, Author
    D.L. Finn, Author

    Great post, I always love learning more about art and the artists!

    Le gusta a 1 persona

    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Denise, I also enjoy learning about art and artworks, both Old Masters and artists from within our community.

      Le gusta a 2 personas

  6. Avatar de John W. Howell

    I enjoyed the discussion of Leda and the Swan. I. studied mythology in college, so it was nice to pare that information with da Vinci’s painting. Thank you, Nicole and Robbie.

    Le gusta a 1 persona

    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      HI John, how nice that you studied mythology in college. I had all commercial subjects and nothing in the arts line. I would have liked to have something like mythology in my courses. I’m delighted you enjoyed this post.

      Le gusta a 1 persona

      1. Avatar de John W. Howell

        I studied the Arts. Go figure. I then did a commercial catch up in Grad school. The arts served me well since General Management was enhanced with an overall view of human behavior.

        Me gusta

      2. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        Studying the arts is wonderful and is helpful in management as you learn about people, history and many other things.

        Le gusta a 1 persona

      3. Avatar de John W. Howell

        I agree. 😊

        Me gusta

    2. Avatar de Nicole Sara

      Thank you very much, John!

      Le gusta a 1 persona

      1. Avatar de John W. Howell

        😊

        Le gusta a 1 persona

  7. Avatar de Nicole Sara

    Thank you very much, Robbie, for sharing my photo and the information I put together about this wonderful piece of art! I have always wished to have studied Arts much more, formally I mean, to have enrolled in a course or so, in order to be more aware of all the currents and trends, know more details… well. Anyway, I am happy I could share here at least a little about this fascinating painting, very grateful for it. 😊

    Me gusta

    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Nicole, thank you for this detailed analysis. I also have no formal education in art or literature. I do my own research and learning.

      Le gusta a 1 persona

  8. Avatar de Cindy Georgakas

    Thanks for sharing this wonderful art and analysis~!

    I’ll dive back into this more later!!! xx

    Me gusta

    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Thank you, Cindy 💚

      Le gusta a 1 persona

      1. Avatar de Cindy Georgakas

        You’re so welcome, Robbie! ♥️

        Me gusta

  9. Avatar de Liz Gauffreau

    Very interesting art history discussion! I studied the W.B. Yeats poem in college, but I’d never seen a photograph of the painting.

    Me gusta

    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Liz, thank you. I also thought this comprehensive analysis was amazing.

      Me gusta

  10. Avatar de Miriam Hurdle

    The painting Leda and the Swan is beautiful. Just looking at the painting, I wouldn’t have thought of the swan was Jupiter, King of the Gods, in disguise. Nicole’s analysis is interesting and fascinating. Thank you for this post, Robbie and Nicole.

    Me gusta

    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Miriam, I am delighted you enjoyed this detailed analysis. It’s a fascinating painting.

      Me gusta

  11. Avatar de derrickjknight

    A fine, closely observed, analysis

    Me gusta

    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Derrick, I agree. It’s a great post. Thank you.

      Me gusta

Replica a T. W. Dittmer Cancelar la respuesta