Leda and the Swan

Getty Museum

Leda and the Swan

Creator

Massimiliano Soldani-Benzi

Italian Artist · 1656–1740

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Born to an aristocratic cavalry captain from Tuscany, Massimiliano Soldani-Benzi enjoyed Medici patronage. The finest bronze caster in Europe in the late 1600s, he was reported to have made sculptures as a child based on models from the della Robbia workshop. He entered the orbit of the Medicis at nineteen, when he attended their drawing school in Florence. Taken with his work, Grand Duke Cosimo I

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Date
designed 1725; cast about 1725
Medium
Bronze on grey-green marble bases with bronze mounts
Culture
Italian
Department
Sculpture
Institution
Getty Museum

Andromeda & Leda Enamored of the beautiful Leda, the god Jupiter seduced her in the form of a swan. In this bronze version of the mythological scene, Leda and the swan are suggestively posed: the arc of the lovers' embracing arms and wings and the curvature of their bodies, poised before union, increases the erotic suspense. The swath of drapery trapped between Leda's thighs, as well as her movement drawing the swan down towards her, hint at the inevitable moment of union. This tale of seduction, mentioned in Ovid's *Metamorphoses*, was a popular subject for artists from the Renaissance onwards. An unusual aspect of this version, however, is that Castor and Pollux, the fruit of the union, are not shown. Instead, the artist included Cupid, the god of love. Perched on his wings, Cupid encourages the amorous Jupiter. The contrasting textures of Leda's smooth voluptuous skin and the swan's feathers hint at Massimiliano Soldani Benzi's technical virtuosity with bronze casting. He made this *Leda* as a pendant to another bronze group, *Andromeda and the Sea Monster*.

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