● On view now — Gallery 220
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
One of Delacroix's early lithographs, this image has become an icon of French romanticism. Theodore Géricault, Baron Gros, and even earlier, Jacques Louis David, had depicted the horse as a noble and trustworthy creature, but, for Delacroix, the horse epitomized a wilder spirit. In this brilliant impression, the primal fear of a threatened wild beast is expressed with particular drama. Here we see the quintessential Delacroix, who, as the poet Charles Baudelaire wrote, "was passionately in love with passion and coldly determined to seek the means of expressing it.”
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Eugène Delacroix (French, 1798–1863) — The Wild Horse, or Fr
Odilon Redon — The Charger
Louis-Pierre-Marie Courtin — Prancing Horse
Odilon Redon — The Charger
Odilon Redon — The Charger
Odilon Redon — The Charger
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec — Philibert the Pony
Edvard Munch — Galloping Horse
John-Lewis Brown — L'Écurie
Théodore Gericault — Dappled Horse
Odilon Redon — Centaur Aiming at the Clouds
Odilon Redon — Captive Pegasus