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
In the early 19th century, industrial approaches to production created a new middle-class market for small-scale bronze statuettes, which were displayed in domestic interiors. This statuette is a reduced version of a larger-than-life composition depicting the ancient Greek poet Anacreon cradling Bacchus and Cupid. As the god of wine and pleasure, the infant Bacchus is wreathed in vine leaves and holds a bunch of grapes. Cupid, god of love, bears feathered wings and presses his cheek to the poet’s. French bronze foundry Barbedienne reproduced this popular work in five different sizes.
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Jean-Louis Lemoyne — The Fear of Love
Frederick William MacMonnies — Bacchante with Infant Faun
Bartolomeo Ammanati — Allegorical Figure
Pierre-Auguste Renoir — Water
Olin Levi Warner — Twilight
German — The Education of the Virgin
Giovanni Gia — Draped Figure
Auguste Rodin — Children Embracing (Enfants s’embrassant)
Francesco Bertos — Allegorical Group of Victory Supported by
Bernt Notke — The Vision of Joseph
Flemish — Virgin and Child
Jean Baptiste Carpeaux — Ugolino and his Children