● On view now — Gallery 206
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Mary Magdalene turns to cast a melancholy glance back at the viewer with the gravity and directness typical of Moretto da Brescia’s approach to religious subjects. This painting has been linked to other tall, slender canvases by the artist depicting Saint John the Evangelist, the Samian Sibyl, and King Solomon, in the Biblioteca Ambrosiana in Milan. These works may have been segments of an altarpiece or, more likely, part of a series with a decorative rather than liturgical function. The artist effectively combined characteristics of Italian painting from different regions: the realism of his native Lombardy, Venetian color and atmosphere, and the monumentality of Roman models.
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Master of the Holy Blood (Netherlandish) — Saint Catherine
Carlo Crivelli — Maria Magdalena
Italian (Umbrian) Painter — The Theological Virtues: Faith,
Jan van Scorel — Maria Magdalena
Martin Schongauer — The First Wise Virgin
Lucas Cranach (German, 1472–1553) — St. Barbara
Sandro Botticelli — Judith with the Head of Holofernes
Martin Schongauer (German, c. 1450–1491) — The Fifth Wise Vi
Martin Schongauer — The Third Wise Virgin
Hans Baldung (called Hans Baldung Grien) — St. Barbara with
Martin Schongauer — St. John
Master of the Holy Blood (Netherlandish) — Saint Barbara