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 this double-sided study, Fuseli cleverly traced the same figure on opposite sides of the sheet, as if thinking in three dimensions. His nudes are mostly inspired by ancient sources, as in the hanging satyr with his arms raised (based on a famous Hellenistic sculpture of the flayed Marsyas), but Fuseli activates them with his dynamic line. Drawing the human figure dominated artistic training in Fuseli’s day. While sketching from a live model was part of conventional practice, copying ancient Roman sculpture was equally important. Fuseli’s exposure to an abundance of ancient sculpture during his years in Rome (1770–78) became a visual catalogue he drew upon throughout his life.
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The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches
Two Heads of Damned Souls from Dante's "Inferno" (front and
Milton Dictating to His Daughter
Perseus Starting from the Cave of the Gorgons
Sketch for 'Dido on the Funeral Pyre' (recto); Erotic Sketch
Study for Inquisition, Illustration to Columbiad
Hagen and the Nymphs of the Danube
Prospero, Miranda, Caliban and Ariel
Luzio Romano (Italian, active 1528–75) — Sketches of Five Ar
Antonio Canova|Anonymous, Italian, early 19th century — Nude
Pietro Testa — Studies for Thieves on the Cross (recto), Ske
Central Italian — Studies of the Leg of a Man and a Horse's
Auguste Rodin (French, 1840–1917) — The Genius of the Sculpt
Antonio Canova|Anonymous, Italian, early 19th century — Nude
Domenico Fiasella — Standing Male Nude (recto); Two Half Len
Anonymous, Italian, 16th to early 17th century — Study of An
Follower of Michelangelo Buonarroti — Male Figure Study, wit
Sir Edward Burne-Jones — Study for Cupid
Edgar Degas — Youth with Arms Upraised
Jacques Louis David — Study for "The Distribution of the Eag