● On view now — Gallery 220
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This haunting image of a dead man swathed in white sheets was thought to have been painted by Théodore Géricault until a cleaning revealed the signature of his friend and follower Charles Emile Champmartin. More recent research has shown that the painting depicts Géricault himself on his deathbed, having succumbed to chronic tubercular infection at the young age of 32. Géricault’s early death and bold artistry, which sought to challenge classical notions of beauty, made him emblematic of the trope of the tragic Romantic artist. Images depicting his passing circulated throughout the 19th century, and talismanic copies of his death mask populated young artists’ studios.
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Jean Louis André Théodore Géricault — Head of a Guillotined
Henry Fuseli — Two Heads of Damned Souls from Dante's "Infer
Orazio Borgianni — Head of an Old Woman
Jean-Baptiste Greuze — Head of an Old Woman Looking Up
Marco Alvise Pitteri — Saint Andrew, from The Holy Family an
Rembrandt (Rembrandt van Rijn) — The Artist's Mother with He
Francesco Cairo — Herodias
Matthijs Maris — Studie van een oude vrouw
Mariano Fortuny, 1838–1874 — An Arabic man seated on the gro