● On view now — Gallery 150
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This statuette depicts Venus, the Roman goddess of love, sexuality, and maternity, with her hair in an elegant updo and wearing nothing but the diadem (crown) atop her head. Earlier images of Venus often represented the goddess modestly clothed, reinforcing her role as exemplary matron and mother of the Roman people. By the first century, Venus was regularly shown fully nude, reflecting body types associated with her Greek counterpart, Aphrodite, whose domain leaned more toward the pleasures of erotic love and seduction. In their respective cultures, both goddesses served as models for brides and matrons: nude forms such as this guided women to cultivate their sexual appeal, thereby fostering the production of children who would carry on society
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Pierino da Vinci — Lucretia (?)
Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas — Dancer Ready to Dance, Right F
Olin Levi Warner — Twilight
Venetian — Cupid Carrying a Swan
Workshop of Severo da Ravenna (Severo Calzetta) — Satyr Moth
Workshop of Girolamo Campagna — Aphrodite
Giovanni Gia — Draped Figure
Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas — Spanish Dance
Vietnam — A Goddess, possibly Uma
Auguste Rodin — Eve after the Fall
Frederick William MacMonnies — Diana
Ancient Egyptian — Statuette of Horus the Child (Harpokrates