● On view now — Gallery 273
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Julius Gari Melchers specialized in naturalistic depictions of peasant life, including this compassionate rendering of a Dutch woman and her child. After studying in Düsseldorf and Paris, the artist settled in Holland, where he was inspired by contemporary Dutch painters of the Hague School, which focused on local landscapes and rural communities. Melchers portrayed the pair with vivid intensity, contrasting the mother’s direct gaze with the charming appeal of the baby’s chubby face. The rapid brushwork used to describe the clothing and the swaddling blanket contributes to the freshness of his depiction. In 1906 Mother and Child was exhibited at both the Paris Salon and the Art Institute.
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Albert Neuhuys (1844-1914) — A Mother with her Child
Cecilia Beaux — Dorothea and Francesca
Albert Neuhuys (1844-1914) — Noordse madonna
David Adolph Constant Artz — Lulled to Sleep
John Copley (British, 1875–1950) — Study No. 15: Vespers
George Hendrik Breitner — The Wooden Shoes
Robert Henri — Herself
Charles W. Hawthorne (American, 1872–1930) — The Offering
Octave Tassaert (French, 1800–1874) — Destitute Mother and C
Muirhead Bone (British, 1876–1953) — Gertrude and Stephen, N
Mary Cassatt — Mother's Goodnight Kiss