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
After having a vision in which he was judged before God for his failure to convert to Christianity, Saint Jerome retreated to the Syrian desert to seek penance. Niccolò Boldrini’s large-scale woodcut shows a minute Jerome living in peace with a pride of lions, who are grateful to him for removing a thorn from one of their paws. Boldrini worked closely with Titian, to whom this print has sometimes been credited. Titian controlled the details of the composition; however, Boldrini cut and printed the woodblock.
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Titian (Tiziano Vecellio)|Giovanni Britto|Nicolò Boldrini —
Hans Bol — Plate 11, from Landscapes with Scenes from the Ol
Nicolaes de Bruyn — Samson Killing the Lion
Hieronymus Cock — Landscape with Christ
Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner (German, 1712–1761) — Saint Deic
Jan van Londerseel (Dutch, 1578–1625) — Landscape with Trave
Joseph Anton Koch — Roman landscape with figures near Palian
Pieter Bruegel, the elder — Forest Landscape with Wild Anima
Domenico Campagnola — Landscape with Saint Jerome at left lo
Nicolaes de Bruyn — Jeremiah Prophesying the Destruction of
Crescenzio di Onofrio (Italian, 1632?–after 1712) — River La
Schelte Adamsz. Bolswert — Forest Crossed by a Stream, from