Magnet da Vinci - Study for the Head of Leda

IS201360
Magnet "The Study for Leda's Head" by Leonardo da Vinci.

Exhibited at the Louvre Museum for the "Leonardo da Vinci" exhibition from October 24th 2019 to February 24th 2020.
-{{ Math.floor(lowestprice.prices.user.percent) }}%
-{{ Math.floor(selectedVariant.prices.user.percent) }}%
From {{ lowestprice.prices.user.price_tax_display }} {{ lowestprice.prices.user.price_strike_tax_display }} {{ lowestprice.prices.user.label }}
{{ price.price_tax_display }} {{ price.label }}
Public price {{ lowestprice.prices.suggested.price_tax_display }} {{ lowestprice.prices.suggested.price_strike_tax_display }}
excl. taxes
{{ selectedVariant.prices.user.price_tax_display }} {{ selectedVariant.prices.user.price_strike_tax_display }} {{ selectedVariant.prices.user.label }}
{{ price.price_tax_display }} {{ price.label }}
Public price {{ selectedVariant.prices.suggested.price_tax_display }} {{ selectedVariant.prices.suggested.price_strike_tax_display }}
excl. taxes
Last available items
Sold by Réunion des Musées Nationaux

Characteristics

Dimensions
7,9 x 5,4 cm
Artist
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519)
Art movement
Renaissance
Museum
Musée du Louvre
Themes
Portrait, Women
Reference
IS201360
EAN
3336729127542
Matière de l'article
Metal alloys
Conservation museum
Paris - Musée du Louvre

Our selection

Magnets

Client Reviews

The work and its artist

Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519)

Painter, sculptor, architect, scientist, musician and humanist of his time (XV-XVI centuries), initiator of the second Renaissance, Leonardo da Vinci is the very figure of the universal genius. After the completion of The Virgin with the Rocks, for the chapel San Francesco Grande, and that of the Equestrian Statue of Francesco Sforza, he found glory throughout Italy. The Last Supper, the ceiling of the Sforza Palace, the Mona Lisa and the Battle of Anghiari are a few of his great artworks. Leonardo also carried out a large amount of studies on zoology, botany, anatomy, geology. In 1516, he joined the court of Francis I, where he participated in urban planning projects. He is taken by an illness on May 2, 1519.