(Note: This post, its title taken from my beloved "Sunday in the Park with George", was finished and scheduled well before Sondheim's death... a strange and poignant coincidence.)
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Heinrich Lossow, before 1897. |
...And often not so nice. Leda's coupling with that randy Zeus - this go 'round disguised as an elegant but aggressive water fowl - is one of mythology's many weird and decidedly icky stories. Right from the very beginning, though, artists have been inspired to retell the scandalous tale; countless interpretations of the story exist. Many of them are quite graphic, the story itself being a ready excuse. Told in paint and stone and metal. With Ledas tender and confused, ecstatic and traumatized. This is just a tiny selection.
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Odilon Redon, 1910. |
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Unknown artist, third century AD. |
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Veronese, circa 1585. |
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Leonardo da Vinci, circa 1506. |
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Paul Cézanne, circa 1880. |
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Théodore Géricault, circa 1817. |
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Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse, circa 1870. |
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Arturo Michelena, 1887. |
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François Lemoyne, before 1737. |
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Francisco Viera Portuense, circa 1800. |
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Copy of a lost painting by Michelangelo, after 1530. |
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Peter Paul Rubens - obviously based on the same lost Michelangelo - before 1600. |
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Paul Mathias Padua, 1939. |
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Attributed to Gillis Coignet, circa 1592-99. (Unrestored and restored.) |
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Franz Russ the Younger, circa second half of the nineteenth century. |
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François Boucher, 1742. |
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Léon François Comerre, 1908. |
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Étienne-Maurice Falconet, circa 1764-66. |
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Gianbettino Cignaroli, circa second quarter of the eighteenth century. |
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Lelio Orsi, circa 1560. |
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Jean-Léon Gérôme, 1895. |
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Hans Zatzka, before 1945. |
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Correggio, circa 1530-31. |
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Louis Frederick Grell, 1937. |
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François-Édouard Picot, 1832. |
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Antoine Coypel, before 1722. |
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Adolf Ulrik Wertmüller, 1783. |
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Georg Pencz, circa first half of the sixteenth century. |
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Louis Icart, 1934. |
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Cesare da Sesto, after Leonardo da Vinci, circa 1515. |
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Francesco d'Ubertino Verdi, called Bachiacca, circa 1518-20. |
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Henri Paul Motte, 1900. |
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William Shackleton, 1928. |
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Unknown artist, circa third or fourth century AD. |
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Adolf Erbslöh, 1909. |
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Wilfred Gabriel de Glehn, circa first half of the twentieth century. |
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Perhaps understandable considering the subject matter - ? - this appears to have a subject only rarely taken up by women artists. Marie Laurencin - whose work I don't honestly care for - painted a handful of Ledas; sadly, hers were actually the only examples by a female hand that I could find.
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Marie Laurencin, 1923. |
fantastic work;beatifull, interesting; thank you
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