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
This early example of a lithographic print was produced shortly after the medium was invented. Alois Senefelder, a German playwright and composer, created lithography in 1798 while trying to develop an affordable process for printing his plays. Within a decade, artists were exploring the potentials of the medium. Here, Franz Joseph Leopold has composed his quiet scene in a precise, linear style. Tiny lines rendered in lithographic ink with a fine-tipped pen compose the dense foliage, jagged rock faces, flowing water, and sunlit clouds of the landscape.
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Johann Samuel Bach — Forest Scene with Waterfall and Two Fig
Johann Christian Reinhart — A Subiaco, from Malerisch Radier
Gaspard Dughet — Mountain Landscape with Two Figures in Fore
Johann Christian Reinhart — A Civita Castellana, from Maleri
Sébastien Bourdon — Landscape with a Dead Man and Two Priest
Joseph Mallord William Turner — Mill near the Grand Chartreu
Alexandre Calame — Alpine Landscape
Albert Christoph Dies — Cascades of Tivoli
Joseph Mallord William Turner — Mill near the Grand Chartreu
Alexandre Calame — Alpine Landscape
Johann Wilhelm Schirmer — The Large Italian Landscape
Pierre Antoine Mongin — Landscape with Man Carrying Staff