● On view now — Gallery 207
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Artists in Renaissance Rome not only copied the antique but also parodied it in sometimes sensational ways. Here the mysterious Italian engraver H. F. E. turned Raphael’s Apollo on Parnassus fresco (and Marcantonio’s print, 1919.2554) into a sinuous, sexually charged bacchanal. Like the intertwined foreground couples, the overtly amorous back- ground trees are a far cry from the upright, slender trunks in Raphael’s work. They may reference a travel literature satire by the ancient writer Lucian, in which adventurers copulate with deadly trees. Apollo’s trusty steed, Pegasus, is perhaps the most recognizable mythological figure—here unusually shown from behind—as he hurriedly flies away from the debauched company below.
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Cornelis Cort|Frans Floris I|Adriaen Collaert — Adam and Eve
Giulio Bonasone — The Judgment of Paris
Marcantonio Raimondi — The Judgment of Paris
Marcantonio Raimondi — The Judgment of Paris
Giulio Bonasone — The Judgment of Paris
Étienne Delaune — Lot and His Daughters
Jacob Matham — Perseus and Andromeda
Daniel Hopfer, I — The Bacchanal with a Wine Vat
Battista Franco — The Deluge
Giulio Bonasone — The story of Jason and Medea: at the left
Nicolas Beatrizet — The Sacrifice of Iphigenia
Giorgio Ghisi|Giulio Romano|Antonio Lafreri — The Death of P