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
Filippo Falciatore was a mid-century master who excelled at an ornamental rococo style with baroque flourishes. This rare sheet juxtaposes violently entwined mythological figures with decorative floral motifs. The subject would have been a familiar part of the landscape of Naples; the famous ancient sculpture known as the Farnese Hercules appears in the the Art Institute’s Neapolitan crèche . Here the tragic hero flings his manservant Lichas into the Aegean Sea. Hercules’s wife, Deianira, had sent Lichas to deliver a cloak dipped in the toxic blood of a centaur who had tried to abduct her, believing the potion would keep Hercules faithful. Instead it drove him mad and eventually killed him.
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Ottaviano Dandini — Scene of Abduction (recto); Allegorical
Marco Marcola — Mercury and Mars
School of Luca Cambiaso — Judith with the Head of Holofernes
Salvator Rosa — Study for a Prometheus Bound (recto); slight
Jean-Honoré Fragonard (French, 1732–1806) — Orpheus and Eury
Jacopo Zucchi — Two Standing Male Figures
Alessandro Maganza — Male Figure Seen from Behind
Annibale Carracci — Drunken Silenus and Decorative Sketches:
Jean Baptiste Carpeaux — Study
Style of Gaspare Diziani — Sketches of Madonna and Child, Fl
Theodor Richard Edward von Holst — Man Holding a Dagger Next
Paolo Farinati — Study for Spandrel Decoration with Satyress