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
Bartholomeus Breenbergh produced a series of 50 small-scale etchings of Roman ruins based on drawings he made in Rome during the 1620s. He worked them into prints after his return to the Netherlands and published them as a set around 1640. His paintings and prints did not yet show the influence of Rembrandt’s experimental effects with the etching needle. As a result, this scene of tiny religious figures huddled under an outcropping of rock is more documentary than emotionally charged.
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Rodolphe Bresdin — L'Escalier (The Staircase)
Johann Caspar Huber — Mountainous Landscape with Ruins of a
Adolph Menzel — View into a Courtyard
Hubert Robert (French, 1733–1808) — The Antique Gallery
Herman Naijwincx — Rocky Landscape
Georg Friedrich Dietzsch — Rocky Landscape with Figures and
Charles Michel Ange Challe — View Within the Colosseum, Rome
Hubert Robert — Plate Ten from Evenings in Rome
Albrecht Altdorfer — Saint Jerome in Penitence, in a Cave
Antoine Benoist — Interior of a Cave
Joseph Pennell — Quarry on Pentelicon
Odilon Redon — Meditation