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
René Boyvin’s Jupiter and Antiope is one of his anatomically ambitious reproductive prints based on the work of Luca Penni. It illustrates a story from Greek mythology. Boyvin depicted Antiope resting in a classical pose, with her arm overhead, as Jupiter, in the form of a satyr, stands over her, gesturing to the putto at Antiope’s side not to wake her. The figures are characterized by their accentuated muscles and distorted anatomy, a style typical to the School of Fontainebleau, whose artists were known for their attenuation of the body to create graceful, expressive forms.
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Agostino Carracci — Love Conquers All
Bartholomeus Spranger|Hendrick Goltzius — Mars and Venus
Agostino Carracci — Love Conquers All (Omnia vincit Amor), i
Francesco Primaticcio|Master FG — Jupiter and Antiope
Bartholomeus Spranger|Johann Sadeler I — Phyllis and Aristot
Hendrick Goltzius — Tarquinius and Lucretia, from The Story
Agostino Carracci — Omnia Vincit Amor
Bartholomeus Spranger|Hendrick Goltzius — Mars and Venus
Hendrick Goltzius — Mars and Venus
Luca Penni|Léon Davent — Venus Finding Mars Asleep
Agostino Carracci|Annibale Carracci|Jacques Belly — Jupiter
Master of the Die|Ugo da Carpi|Philippe Thomassin|Baldassare