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
The Roman goddess Venus reclines languidly in the center of the composition. Cupid serves her a cup of wine; Ceres, the goddess of crops, appears behind her holding a sheaf of wheat, while an inebriated Bacchus leans against a wine barrel at right. The traditional title for this scene—a quotation from a play by the Roman comedian Terence—became a popular proverb in the Renaissance, inspiring numerous visual depictions in the period. The adage wryly suggests that sensual desire (represented by Venus) is stimulated by food (Ceres) and wine (Bacchus). While Abraham Bloemaert probably made this drawing as an independent work, he also produced numerous designs for prints.
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Sebastiano Galeotti — Bacchus and Ceres Attended by Putti an
Bacchanaal
Giuseppe Diamantini — Five muses and a seated river god
Adriaen de Weerdt — Venus and Cupid with a Satyr
The Judgment of Paris
Fabrizio Chiari|Giovanni Giacomo De Rossi|Nicolas Poussin —
Paolo de Matteis — Crowning of Hercules
Pietro da Cortona (Italian, 1596–1669) — Bacchanal
Giovanni Larciani ("Master of the Kress Landscapes") — Polyp
Jacob Matham|Hendrick Goltzius — The Alliance of Venus with
Giuseppe Diamantini — Diana and Endymion
Carlo Maratti — Study for the Origin of the Rose