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
Although Anthonie Waterloo made several hundred landscape drawings and etchings, his principal vocation was that of a print dealer. This brought him into contact with works by Dutch landscape artists such as Roelant Roghman and Jacob van Ruisdael, both of whom influenced his own art. The trees in this print, executed with a realism that indicates they were sketched out of doors, foreground a scene from the biblical book 1 Kings. The story tells of an old prophet who tricks a clergyman into doubting God. A lion kills the clergyman, but instead of eating him, the beast guards his body. The old prophet, repentant for the role he played in the man’s death, brings his body back on a donkey and gives the clergyman a proper burial.
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Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Jan Both — The Large Tree, from Upright Italian Landscapes
Roelant Roghman — Plate 5, from Six Views in the Wood of The
Herman Naiwincx (Flemish, c. 1624–after 1651) — Naiwincx Eng
Gaspard Dughet — Fresco in Palazzo Colonna, Rome
Jan Both — The Large Tree from Upright Italian Landscapes
Anthonie Waterloo (Dutch, 1609/10–1690) — Six large upright
Zacharias Blyhooft — Road through Leafy Trees near Stream
William Marshall Craig — Winding Road Beside Lake, with Larg
Roelant Roghman (Dutch, 1627–1692) — Six views in the Wood o
Herman Naiwincx (Flemish, c. 1624–after 1651) — Les deux gra