● On view now — Gallery 206
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
According to Roman myth, Actaeon, a mortal youth, was out hunting when he came upon Diana, the goddess of the moon and the hunt, bathing with her nymphs in a secret grotto. To punish him for his intrusion, Diana transformed Actaeon into a stag, and he was subsequently killed by his own hounds. With its poetic, silvery light and broken, dabbed brushstrokes, this small painting is a rare example of Jacopo Bassano’s hand at the end of his career. Working in the small town of Bassano del Grappa, Jacopo was one of the most influential painters in Venice and the surrounding region. His four sons carried his lively, colorful, and naturalistic style forward into the 17th century.
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Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist
Lazarus and the Rich Man
Bust-Length Study of a Bearded Man with Cap in Three-Quarter
Head of a Pope(?) (recto); Two Studies of Left Hand (verso)
Christ Crowned with Thorns
Studies for a Scourging Soldier and the Head of Christ
Jacob guarding Laban's flock
Half-length Figure Study for Saint Paul
Bartholomeus Spranger — Venus and Adonis
Titian (Tiziano Vecellio) — Venus and Adonis
After Jacopo Bassano — Annunciation to the Shepherds
David Teniers the Younger — The Good Samaritan
Jacques Jordaens — Pan Punished by Nymphs
Lucas Cranach the Elder — The Penitence of Saint John Chryso
Francesco Solimena — Adam and Eve in Paradise
Giulio Bonasone — Saturn in the guise of a horse being suckl
Pietro Testa — Alexander the Great Rescued from the River Cy
Giorgio Vasari — The Temptation of Saint Jerome
David Teniers the Younger — Adam and Eve in Paradise
Fabrizio Chiari|Giovanni Giacomo De Rossi|Nicolas Poussin —