The Venus de Milo sculpture is believed to have been created between 130 and 100 BCE, during the Hellenistic period in ancient Greece. The sculpture is currently housed at the Louvre Museum in Paris, France.
It is not accurate to refer to the Venus de Milo as a sculpture by Leonardo da Vinci, as da Vinci was an Italian artist and inventor who lived during the Renaissance period, more than 1,400 years after the creation of the Venus de Milo. The Venus de Milo is a classical Greek sculpture, not a work from the Renaissance period.
While the Venus de Milo is considered an original ancient Greek sculpture, it is possible that the sculpture was damaged or altered over time, and some experts believe that the arms of the statue may have been restored or replaced at some point. Additionally, there are some scholars who argue that the Venus de Milo may be a Roman copy of an earlier Greek original, although this is a matter of ongoing debate and interpretation among art historians and archaeologists.