Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Edward Kemeys produced both large- and small-scale bronze sculptures—perhaps most notably, the famous lions that flank the Art Institute’s Michigan Avenue entrance ( 1893.1a and 1893.1b ), which were created for the museum’s opening during the World’s Columbian Exposition in 1893. The artist’s subjects were partially informed by his western travels and studies of animals in their natural habitats. Unlike his Locked in Death , however—which shows animals as predatory— Soul of Contentment is a sentimental study of nature at its most domesticated.
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William Rimmer — Dying Centaur
Antoine Louis Barye — Lion Fighting a Serpent
Staffordshire, England — Fox
Jean-Joseph Carriès — Le Grenouillard (Frog-Man)
Artist unknown — Doorstop
Antoine Louis Barye — Python and a Gnu
Pierre-Auguste Renoir — Water
East Liverpool Pottery — Inkstand
Paduan — Deer
Pierre-Jules Mêne — Figure of a Retriever
Workshop of Girolamo Campagna — Aphrodite
Dom Faberzhe — Miniature Leopard