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
This tumultuous scene shows Adam and Eve, the first man and woman in the Hebrew Bible, being driven out of the Garden of Eden. Benjamin West created it as a preparatory sketch for one of several large paintings intended for a chapel in Windsor Castle, an ancient seat of the British monarchy that was undergoing restoration in the late 18th century. West worked on the project for two decades, but King George III abandoned plans for the chapel’s decoration and the paintings were never installed. One of the earliest American artists to achieve international renown, West spent much of his career in London. There, he served as a teacher and mentor to a generation of younger American artists who trained abroad, including Rembrandt Peale and Thomas Sully .
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Francesco Guardi (Italian, 1712–1793) — The Sacrifice of Isa
Johann Michael Rottmayr — Jove casts his Thunderbolts at the
Peter Paul Rubens — Venus and Adonis
John Faed (Scottish, 1820–1902) — Expulsion of Adam and Eve
Francesco Guardi (Italian, 1712–1793) — The Angels Appearing
Jacob de Wit — Jupiter, Disguised as a Shepherd, Seducing Mn
Moses van Uyttenbroeck — Alpheus and Arethusa
Johann Michael Rottmayr — Mercury rescues the disguised Io a
Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo — The Sacrifice of Isaac
Venus Discovering the Dead Adonis
Francesco Maffei — Hagar and the Angel
Henri Fantin-Latour (French, 1836–1904) — Debut from Paradis