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 elaborate engraving depicts nearly every aspect of courtly love and dates to the late medieval era, when the mating ritual was an accepted part of life among the nobility. The feast table in the walled courtyard boasts musical accompaniment, suggesting music truly is the food of love. Women drive the amorous games equally with men; a woman summarily dismisses a fools- cap-wearing suitor at the gate, while another daringly rides sidesaddle behind her lover on a twisting road. Men and women enjoy skinny-dipping in the moat at right, as if it were a fountain of youth.
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Lucas Cranach the Elder — The Temptation of Saint Anthony
Michel Wolgemut — Moses Found by Pharaoh's Daughter (recto)
Master ES (German, active 1450–67) — The Garden of Love (Lar
Jan Wellens de Cock — The Temptation of St. Anthony
Albrecht Dürer (German, 1471–1528) — The Sea Monster
Master MZ — Two Lovers
Andrea Andreani — Triumph of Caesar
Albrecht Dürer — The Holy Family in Egypt, from The Life of
Matteo di Giovanni (Italian, c. 1435–1495) — The Conversion
Michel Wolgemut — Pharoah and His Host Perishing in the Red
Domenico Campagnola — Landscape with a woman seated next to
Lucas Cranach the Elder — The Judgment of Paris