Sigma Sigma Art Sigma 20mm f/1.4 DG DN Art Lens for Leica L Review

Sigma's 20mm f/1.4 Art lens delivers breathtaking sharpness and bokeh, but its hefty build and lack of stabilization make it a tool for specialists, not everyone.

Focal Length 20mm
Max Aperture f/1.4
Mount L-Mount
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 635 g
AF Type Autofocus
Lens Type Ultra Wide-Angle
Sigma Sigma Art Sigma 20mm f/1.4 DG DN Art Lens for Leica L lens
74.7 Punteggio Complessivo

The 30-Second Version

The Sigma 20mm f/1.4 Art is an optical powerhouse with a serious weakness in features. Its sharpness and bokeh are top-tier, but it lacks stabilization and weather sealing. Worth it only if you need that specific ultra-wide, low-light combo.

Overview

The Sigma 20mm f/1.4 DG DN Art is a specialist's tool. It's a big, bright prime lens designed to do one thing exceptionally well: capture wide, sharp, and beautifully blurred images in low light. Forget about versatility or portability. This lens is about optical performance at a specific focal length, and our data shows it delivers that in spades.

Built for L-mount cameras, it's a chunky 635g piece of glass with an 82mm filter thread. There's no image stabilization and it's not weather-sealed, so it's clearly built for controlled environments or photographers who prioritize pure image quality over convenience. It's a lens that makes a statement before you even take a shot.

Performance

The optical performance is the star here, landing in the 94th percentile. That f/1.4 aperture (88th percentile) lets in a ton of light, and the bokeh quality is stellar at the 95th percentile, thanks in part to an 11-bladed diaphragm. Sharpness wide open is impressive for such a fast ultra-wide. The autofocus, however, is just average, sitting at the 46th percentile. It's a stepping motor that's fine for static scenes but might not keep up with fast action. And with no stabilization, you'll need a steady hand or a tripod in slower light.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.1
Bokeh 95
Build 59.9
Macro 72
Optical 94.6
Aperture 88.3
Versatility 37.5
Social Proof 47.5
Stabilization 37.7

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Stunning optical sharpness and clarity. 95th
  • Beautiful, creamy bokeh for an ultra-wide lens. 95th
  • Massive f/1.4 aperture excels in low light. 88th
  • Solid, durable brass mount construction. 72th

Cons

  • Autofocus is merely adequate, not class-leading.
  • No image stabilization at all.
  • It's heavy and not at all travel-friendly.
  • No weather sealing for outdoor peace of mind.

The Word on the Street

0.0/5 (4 reviews)
👍 Users transitioning from adapted versions are impressed with the native sharpness and low-light capability.
👎 The size and weight are frequently mentioned as significant drawbacks for handheld or travel use.
🤔 Early adopters praise the image quality but note the lack of stabilization requires careful technique.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Ultra Wide-Angle
Focal Length Min 20
Focal Length Max 20
Elements 17
Groups 15

Aperture

Max Aperture f/1.4
Min Aperture f/16
Diaphragm Blades 11

Build

Mount L-Mount
Format Full-Frame
Weight 0.6 kg / 1.4 lbs
Filter Thread 82

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Autofocus
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 230
Max Magnification 1:6.1

Value & Pricing

At $989, this lens isn't cheap, but you're paying for exceptional optical engineering in a niche focal length. You're getting near-perfect bokeh and sharpness scores that rival lenses costing much more. The value really depends on how much you need that specific 20mm f/1.4 combo. If you do, it's a justifiable splurge. If you're just looking for a good wide-angle, there are cheaper and more versatile options.

Price History

975 USD 980 USD 985 USD 990 USD 995 USD 1.000 USD 16 mar18 mar 989 USD

vs Competition

This lens exists in its own niche. Compared to a zoom like the Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8, you lose all versatility but gain over two stops of light and far superior optical performance. Against other primes like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7, you're trading a more standard focal length for a much wider, more specialized field of view. The real competition might be other ultra-wide f/1.4 lenses, where Sigma's Art line often competes on optics while sacrificing features like stabilization that some rivals include.

Common Questions

Q: Is the autofocus fast and quiet?

It uses a stepping motor that's reasonably quiet, but our percentile data places its AF performance in the bottom half, so it's fine for portraits or landscapes but not for fast-moving subjects.

Q: Can I use this for video?

You can, but the lack of image stabilization and just-average autofocus performance make it less ideal for handheld video work compared to stabilized lenses.

Q: How close can it focus?

The minimum focus distance is 230mm (about 9 inches), with a max magnification of 1:6.1. It's not a macro lens, but you can get some decent close-up detail.

Who Should Skip This

If you're a travel photographer or a hybrid shooter who needs a walk-around lens, look elsewhere. The weight, lack of stabilization, and fixed focal length make it a poor fit. Also, if you rely on fast, tracking autofocus for sports or wildlife, this lens will hold you back.

Verdict

Buy this lens if you're an astrophotographer, a real estate shooter, or an event photographer who absolutely needs a 20mm perspective with the ability to shoot in near-darkness and create dreamy background blur. It's a purpose-built optical instrument for the image-quality obsessed who don't mind the weight or missing features.