● On view now — Gallery 208
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
The landscape specialist Josse de Momper the Younger painted dramatic panoramas that framed the wildness of nature against grand vistas. On the right, adventurous travelers pause along a road winding through the hilly landscape, which would have been understood by contemporary viewers as a visual metaphor for the journey of life. Similar compositions can be found in earlier Northern landscapes, but De Momper populated his scenes with more figures, especially peasants, than his predecessors—a reflection, perhaps, of the increased popularity of paintings that depicted everyday life.
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Joos de Momper (II) — Landscape
Claude Lorrain — Pastoral Landscape
Jan Both — Italian Landscape with Travelers
Johannes Glauber — Arcadian Landscape Mercury and Io
Simon de Vlieger (Dutch, 1601–1653) — Sleeping Peasants near
Gaspard Dughet — Landscape with a Herdsman and Goats
Pieter Jansz van Asch — Wooded Landscape
Paul Bril — Landscape with Hunters
Jacob van Ruisdael (Dutch, 1628/29–1682) — Wooded and Hilly
Giovanni Maldura — David at the Cave of Adullam
Adrian Ludwig (Ludwig) Richter — The Fountain at Grottaferra
Gaspard Dughet — Landscape