
Leda and the swan
Andrea del Sarto·1490
Historical Context
This Leda and the Swan, dating to 1490, addresses the classical myth that was treated by many Renaissance masters, most famously Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo. The attribution to Andrea del Sarto and the early date suggest this may be a work from the circle of Andrea's teacher or a later misattribution. Andrea del Sarto, active in Florence from around 1506 until his death in 1530, was among the most accomplished painters of the Italian High Renaissance. His synthesis of the dominant Florentine tradition — Leonardo's atmospheric modeling, Raphael's compositional grace, Michelangelo's figure authority — achieved a quality of technical perfection that earned him Vasari's famous epithet "the faultless painter." Working primarily in Florence, he produced altarpieces, frescoes, and devotional panels for the city's churches, religious confraternities, and private patrons, training in his workshop the painters who would become the founders of Florentine Mannerism.
Technical Analysis
The mythological subject is treated with the characteristic sfumato and warm tonality associated with the Florentine school, blending classical nudity with Renaissance pictorial refinement.
Look Closer
- ◆Leda's posture is elegant and composed — the myth's violent aspect is entirely suppressed in favour of a graceful, harmonious pairing of woman and bird.
- ◆The swan's white feathers are rendered with extraordinary softness against Leda's warm skin — a contrast that was the compositional challenge of this subject.
- ◆A distant landscape is barely visible behind the figures — just enough atmospheric depth to prevent the scene from becoming purely decorative.
- ◆The attribution note in the description suggests this may not be Andrea del Sarto's hand — the handling of anatomy and fabric shows departures from his known style.
- ◆The swan's neck curves around Leda in a formal S-shape that provides compositional elegance regardless of the myth's underlying content.
See It In Person
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