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
The visionary Romantic painter John Martin’s Illustrations of the Bible (1831–35) boasts some of the most dramatic mezzotints of the 19th century. This series enthusiastically embraced J. M. W. Turner’s “historical” category from the Liber Studiorum (1807–1819). Yet “Mad” Martin eschewed Turner’s sepia tonality for a deep, velvet black periodically ripped asunder by lightning bolts. He engraved over 100 mezzotints, with special attention paid to the light and dark contrasts of Old Testament miracles and disasters. Although the series remained unfinished, his taste for elaborate destruction was sometimes well remunerated: when his gigantic oil painting Belshazzar’s Feast (1821; private collection) was put on view soon after being made, it attracted 50,000 paying viewers.
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Ruins of an Ancient City
View on the South Downs
The Valley of the Tyne, My Native Country near Henshaw
Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still Upon Gibeon (Joshua
Figures Seated by a Lake in a Wooded Landscape
Text and cover, from Illustrations of the Bible
Fall of Nineveh, from Illustrations of the Bible
Paradise Lost: Adam and Eve Driven out of Paradise
David Lucas — Weymouth Bay, Dorsetshire
David Lucas — Weymouth Bay, Dorsetshire
Joseph Mallord William Turner — Watercress Gatherers, plate
David Lucas — Hadley Castle, Near the Nore
Joseph Mallord William Turner — Solway Moss, plate 52 from L
Joseph Mallord William Turner — The Fifth Plague of Egypt, p
Joseph Mallord William Turner (British, 1775–1851) — Liber S
Joseph Mallord William Turner — The Fifth Plague of Egypt, p
Joseph Mallord William Turner — Solway Moss, plate 52 from L
Joseph Mallord William Turner — Coast of Yorkshire, plate 24
John Constable|David Lucas — Weymouth Bay
Giovanni Battista Piranesi — View of the Port of Ripa Grande