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 grand scale of Titian’s twelve-sheet woodcut (see 1957.12.1–12) mimics history paintings and large wall hangings. The assembled composition would fit only on a massive wall, a use confirmed by the total lack of early impressions. Only this 1549 state is known, printed from woodblocks studded with wormholes, which appear in the image as tiny white dots. The inscription at lower center of The Submersion describes the Israelites’ persecution under the Egyptian pharaoh and his army’s fate when they followed Moses into the Red Sea. The publisher opportunistically refers to the “great and immortal hand” of Titian in this legend, though the artist was still very much alive.
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Marco Dente|Giovanni Giacomo De Rossi — The Abduction of Hel
Niccolò Vicentino|Maturino da Firenze — Cloelia the Roman he
Luca Penni|Jean Mignon — Christ Carrying of the Cross
Maarten de Vos — The Reconciliation of Jacob and Esau
Marcantonio Raimondi|Ugo da Carpi|Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio
Giulio Bonasone (Italian, c. 1510–after 1576) — Jupiter Suck
Laurent de La Hyre — Conversion of St. Paul
Titian (Italian, c. 1488–1576) — The Submersion of Pharaoh's
Léonard Limosin — The Betrayal of Christ
Agostino Veneziano (Agostino dei Musi)|Raphael (Raffaello Sa
Anonymous, French, 16th century — Abduction of Helen
Hendrick Goltzius — Christ Taken Captive, from The Passion