● On view now — Gallery 202
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Scientific imaging techniques, which can reveal information that lies below or has been removed from the surface layers of a painting, have determined that Saint John the Evangelist and the Mourning Virgin were once part of the same painting, Christ Carrying the Cross . Infrared reflectography revealed drawn strokes of Christ’s curling hair at the lower right of the Saint John panel. X-radiography shows that the top of the cross, still visible in the Saint John panel, occupied the lower left of Mourning Virgin before being scraped away and overpainted. The original work may have been repurposed to create multiple paintings of single, expressive devotional figures.
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Workshop of Dieric Bouts — Mater Dolorosa (Sorrowing Virgin)
Virgin Mary
Lorenzo di Credi (Lorenzo d'Andrea d'Oderigo) — Portrait of
Spanish (Catalan) Painter — The Virgin
Workshop of Jacob Cornelisz. van Oostsanen — The Virgin and
Dieric Bouts — The Mourning Virgin; Christ Crowned with Thor
Master of the Holy Kinship (German) — Portrait of a Woman
anonymous — Portrait of Jacomina Claesdr van Ruyven (died 15
Albrecht Dürer — Virgin and Child with Saint Anne
Filippino Lippi — The Virgin of the Nativity
Juan de Flandes — Christ Appearing to His Mother
Hans Memling — The Annunciation