Master of the Antwerp Adoration Group
● On view now — Gallery 207
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This scene and that of King David Receiving the Cistern Water are particularly fine examples of the decorative style practiced in Antwerp by a group of largely anonymous artists now dubbed Antwerp Mannerists. The paintings originally formed the interior of the wings of a folding triptych with the Adoration of the Magi as its center. Both show gifts being presented to a ruler on his throne and would have been understood as Old Testament prefigurations of the submission of the nations to Christ as king, the theme of the lost Adoration panel. They also provided an excuse for the artist to depict exotic costumes, architecture, and luxury goods—the hallmarks of the Antwerp Mannerist style.
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anonymous — Left Wing of an Altarpiece with the Meeting of A
anonymous — Four scenes from the legend of St Elizabeth of H
Lucas Cranach the Elder — The Martyrdom of Saint Barbara
Master of the St Elizabeth Panels — Wedding Feast of Saint E
Master of Alkmaar — De zeven werken van barmhartigheid
Spanish (Catalan) Painter — The Beheading of Saint John the
Bernard van Orley — The Martyrdom of Saint John the Baptist
Jean Bellegambe — Saint Catherine
Bartel Bruyn, the elder — Virgin and Child with Saint Anne,
Lucas van Leyden — Solomon's Idolatry
Master of Alkmaar — De zeven werken van barmhartigheid
Salome with the Head of John the Baptist