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 print series uses symbolic imagery to criticize the love and pursuit of worldly and material goods. A well-to-do man in a white neck ruff is repeatedly tempted by bags of gold presented to him by a blindfolded cupid and a horned demon. In the first print, the Devil sits before an easel, painting the man’s heart with images of women and jewels, while a woman ties a cord around the man’s ankle, binding him to the sin of lust. In the second, Cupid has been transformed from a symbol of pure love into one of greed as he points at bags of coins, tempting the man to climb the cliff. In the third plate, the Devil helps the man place a statue representing Hope onto the coins. Only in the final print, when the man is approached by the skeletal figure of Death, does he realize that his horde of treasure will not protect him. The series is based on designs by Maerten van Heemskerck, known for his allegorical compositions that were intended to reinforce moral lessons.
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Last Judgement, plate 13 from Thrones of Justice (Thronus Iu
Jan van Heurn
St Petrus, from Sinners of the Old and New Testament
St Paulus, from Sinners of the Old and New Testament
Zachaeus, from Sinners of the Old and New Testament
Saulus Rex, from Sinners of the Old and New Testament
Portrait of Abraham Bloemaert
Magdalena, from Sinners of the Old and New Testament
Hans Holbein the Younger|Wenceslaus Hollar — Rich Man, from
Wenceslaus Hollar — The Abbott and Death
Wenceslaus Hollar — The Old Man and Death
Wenceslaus Hollar — The Count from the Dance of Death
Werner van den Valckert — Old Couple and Death with Bagpipes
Wenceslaus Hollar|Hans Holbein the Younger — Abbot, from the
Hans Holbein the Younger|Wenceslaus Hollar — The Miser, from
Hans Holbein the Younger|Hans Lützelburger — The Old Man, fr
Joseph Anton Koch — Battle of Satan with St. Francis for the
Giorgio Ghisi — The Vision of Ezekiel
Hans Burgkmair, the elder — Lovers Surprised by Death
Wenceslaus Hollar|Hans Holbein the Younger — The Advocate an