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
In creating this sculpture, Randolph Rogers was inspired by the Roman author Ovid’s poem Fasti , which recounts the legend of the seven sister stars who lived among the constellations. Merope, the youngest sister, married Sisyphus and hid herself in shame because he was mortal. The sculpture depicts the outcast Merope as she seeks her celestial family. With its unclothed torso, The Lost Pleiade is the closest Rogers came to creating a complete nude. Although a conteporary viewers may not have understood the reference to Fasti , the title nonetheless reassured Victorian audiences that this partially nude woman had literary antecedents and was thus not intended as a sensual form.
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Daniel Chester French — Truth
Manifattura Ginori (Sesto Fiorentino, Italy) — The Abduction
Chauncey Bradley Ives — Jephtha's Daughter
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Lambert Sigisbert Adam — Bust of Amphitrite
Franz Anton Bustelli — Mourning Madonna
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