Francesco Solimena

Seated Allegorical Female Figure

n.d.
Black crayon, with stumping, on tan laid paper, tipped on ivory laid paper, tipped on cream wove paper
30.3 × 22.9 cm (11.9 × 9 in)

SEE IT IN PERSON

Not currently on view

In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026

View at artic.eduPlan a visit ↗

Discussion

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More by Francesco Solimena

Portrait of a GirlPortrait of a GirlJacopo ButeraJacopo ButeraThe Risen Christ Appearing to the VirginThe Risen Christ Appearing to the VirginThe Birth of the VirginThe Birth of the VirginAdam and Eve in ParadiseAdam and Eve in ParadiseDiego Pignatelli d'Aragona (1687–1750) and an Enslaved African ServantDiego Pignatelli d'Aragona (1687–1750) and an Enslaved AfricProfile of Male Head, Crowned with Laurel LeavesProfile of Male Head, Crowned with Laurel LeavesThe Continence of ScipioThe Continence of Scipio

More like this

Standing Magus (recto); Sketch of Stable and Trees (verso)Domenico Fiasella — Standing Magus (recto); Sketch of StableSeated Female Figure Holding a Book and a Scroll (?)Veronese School — Seated Female Figure Holding a Book and a Draped Kneeling Female NudeUnknown artist — Draped Kneeling Female NudeStanding Woman with Laurel WreathBiagio Pupini — Standing Woman with Laurel WreathAllegorical Figure (recto)Anonymous — Allegorical Figure (recto)Young Woman ReadingUnknown — Young Woman ReadingStanding Draped Male FigureUnknown Florentine — Standing Draped Male FigureMoses Striding to the Left, Pointing with Left HandTintoretto — Moses Striding to the Left, Pointing with Left Standing Female Figure with Right Hand RaisedJohn Michael Rysbrack — Standing Female Figure with Right HaBust of a Woman with VeilUnknown — Bust of a Woman with VeilSeated Draped Male Figure with Book (recto); Two Seated Women with Sketch of Left Hand (verso)Domenico Fiasella — Seated Draped Male Figure with Book (recStudy for Figure of 'Idleness - The Romaunt of the RoseSir Edward Burne-Jones — Study for Figure of 'Idleness - The