● On view now — Gallery 208
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Born and trained in Antwerp at the height of Peter Paul Rubens’s influence, Gerard van Opstal settled in Paris, where he contributed to the decoration of important private residences and royal projects like the Louvre. Adapting Rubens’s heroic figures and penchant for mythological themes to a smaller scale for private collectors, he excelled at carving delicate, playful reliefs showing the followers of Bacchus, the Roman god of wine, in marble and in ivory. Here, Silenus, the portly and permanently drunk companion of Bacchus, is the center of a noisy procession in which lively children imitate the behavior of their elders.
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Flemish — Bacchic Scene
John Deare — Bacchus Feeding a Panther
Ancient Roman — Panel from a Sarcophagus Depicting the Abduc
Unknown artist — Satyr, Faun and Nymphs
Circle of Giovanni Antonio da Pordenone — Frieze with Satyr,
Enea Vico — Battle of the Lapiths and Centaurs
Unknown artist — Bacchus in His Chariot with Attendants
Louis Félix de La Rue (French, 1731–1777) — Venus at the For
Giovanni Battista Costantini|Guido Reni — A Bacchanal: a sat
Domenico Antonio Vaccaro — Prometheus and Mercury
Leandro Ricci — Bas Relief with Triumph of Bacchus and Ariad
René Boyvin|Pierre Milan — The Nymph of Fontainebleau