● On view now — Gallery 161
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Portraits of Abraham Lincoln—in sculpture, oil, print, and photography—were plentiful during the 16th president’s lifetime and grew in popularity in the decades after his death in 1865. Daniel Chester French was commissioned to create a monumental sculpture of Lincoln for the grounds of the Nebraska State Capitol building, subsequently producing smaller versions in bronze, including this work. French contributed to a powerful and enduring vision of Lincoln as a contemplative, deliberate leader. Here, Lincoln stands apart from the context and complexities that shaped a specific historical moment in the 19th century.
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Thomas Ball — Daniel Webster
Artist unknown — George Washington
Muirhead Bone (British, 1876–1953) — Dr. Eugene A. Noble
Anders Zorn — Colonel Lamont I (Whole length)
James McNeill Whistler — Study: Joseph Pennell
Anders Zorn — Colonel Lamont I (Whole length)
James McNeill Whistler — Count Robert de Montesquiou, No. 2
Charles Haslewood Shannon — Max Beerbohm
Leslie Matthew (Spy) Ward (British, 1851–1922) — Steel
Charles Hasslewood Shannon (British, 1863–1937) — Sir Max Be
Auguste Rodin — Portrait of Balzac
Constantin Emile Meunier — The Hammerman