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
Dido, Queen of Carthage, was deserted by her lover Aeneas, a prince of Troy and a hero of the Trojan War. Devastated, she built a pyre to burn his possessions. Upon ascending the pyre and lamenting her cruel fate, Dido took her life with the sword she had given to Aeneas. In this preparatory sketch for a painting, Fuseli hews closely to the story as recounted in the ancient Roman poet Virgil’s epic poem about Rome’s founding, the Aeneid . Dido’s sister Anna weeps at the dead queen’s feet, while Iris, sent by Juno, cuts a lock of her hair to free her soul from her body.
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The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches
Two Heads of Damned Souls from Dante's "Inferno" (front and
Milton Dictating to His Daughter
Perseus Starting from the Cave of the Gorgons
Study for Inquisition, Illustration to Columbiad
Hagen and the Nymphs of the Danube
Prospero, Miranda, Caliban and Ariel
Ugolino and His Sons Starving to Death in the Tower
Johann Carl Loth — Danae and the Shower of Gold
James McNeill Whistler — Nude Model, Reclining
James McNeill Whistler — Nude Model, Reclining (Nude Model R
Unknown artist
Italian or French, 18th century — Fountain wi
Gabriel Jacques de Saint-Aubin — Pandora
James McNeill Whistler — Reclining Draped Figure
Studio of François Boucher — A Study for Two Nymphs
James McNeill Whistler (American, 1834–1903) — The Draped Fi
Jacques Louis David — Paris and Helen
Thomas Rowlandson — Woman Talking to a Seated Male Nude
Gustave Pellet|Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec — Collapsed on the
Jean Baptiste Carpeaux — Reclining Woman with a Mirror