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
Throughout his career, Carl Blechen often returned to the theme of a pilgrim at a shrine in the woods. In this depiction, the religious shrine, trees, and dark landscape loom over the praying pilgrim, producing a melancholic mood. The emotional tenor of the scene is further enhanced by the lithograph’s pale green tint. Blechen used two stones to create this print, one with green ink for the background and the other bearing a drawing of the primary image. Though the landscape is gloomy, the shrine and its surroundings glow with the highlights produced as the artist scraped away passages on the tint stone. Blechen, who was influenced by Caspar David Friedrich, utilized this contrast of light and dark to express the abiding connection between nature and religion.
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Jean Jacques de Boissieu — The Little Ford
Caspar David Friedrich — Scene of a Fire
Hubert Robert — The Statue before the Ruins, plate three fro
Lameau — Landscape in an Oval
Paul Sandby — North West View of St Donat's Castle, plate fo
Louis Chaix — The City of Conti in Frascati
Jean Morin — Les Ruines au Fond
Salomon Gessner — Shepherds and Sheep Resting Under a Bridge
Nicolas Pérignon — Landscape, from Deuxieme Cahier de Paysag
Joseph Anton Koch — Aqueduct Below the Monastery of St. Bona
Sébastien Bourdon — View of a City (Christ with the Good Sam
Mitterer — Landscape with Tree