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
Landseer was an artistic prodigy, drawing animals with great realism by age nine. These included a lion displayed at the London Exeter Exchange menagerie, whose dissected body he may later have viewed in 1820. These sketches (1993.248.1619 and 1993.248.1617) suggest not only the artist’s keen powers of observation, but also provide a contrast to the romanticized works by Delacroix through the depiction of the animal’s sparse, apparently inhumane living quarters. The beloved animal painter of Queen Victoria, Landseer later designed the massive lion sculptures in Trafalgar Square.
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Jean Baptiste Huet — Hound Standing
Sir Edwin Henry Landseer — Study of a Dog
Charles Émile Jacque — Lying Dog
Unknown Artist
English, 19th century — Seated Cat in Profile
Cornelis Ploos van Amstel — Sleeping Dog
Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo — Sitting Dog
Georges Michel — Hondenkop
Antonio Canova|Anonymous — Statue of a recumbent lion
Eugène Delacroix — A Lioness and a Caricature of Ingres
Follower of Luca Cambiaso — Nymph and Satyr
Jan Miel — Study of a Sleeping Dog
William Blake (British, 1757–1827) — Sketch for "The Thought