"Leda and the Swan", oil on canvas, surrealist painting, 20th-century era
The painting shown is an oil on canvas in the Surrealist style, entitled "Leda and the Swan."
The subject draws inspiration from the famous Greek myth, reinterpreted in a modern, dreamlike way.
Measurements: H 100 x W 80 cm.
Period: probably mid or second half of the 20th century.
The work depicts an intensely symbolic scene:
A nude female figure, identifiable as Leda, is abandoned in a gesture of ecstasy or surrender, her eyes closed and her arms raised behind her head.
In front of her, a large white swan - a symbol of Zeus, who according to myth transformed himself into this animal to seduce or possess her - approaches her in an ambiguous, almost human embrace.
The pictorial stroke is soft but firm, with a controlled use of light to emphasize the volumes of the bodies and the contrast between the swan's white and the woman's flesh. The forms are plastic, but with a sense of suspension typical of surrealism.