● On view now — Gallery 208
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Dutch-born painter Corneille de Lyon employed a limited selection of colors to great effect in this small painting. The textured, green background accentuates the subject’s velvety black outfit, lace collar, pale skin, and bristly beard. Corneille specialized in this stylized type of small, finely painted precious portraiture, working primarily for the court and bourgeois elite of 16th-century Lyon, France, where he lived most of his life. The sitter’s exaggerated proportions direct the viewer’s attention to his head and thus to his quiet yet self-assured expression. His confident posture and expensive clothes, along with the exceptional reputation of his portraitist, speak to his high social status.
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Portrait of Willem van Lokhorst (1514-64)
Allert Boelisse (1523-59)
Hans Holbein the Younger — Derick Berck of Cologne
Attributed to Corneille de Lyon — Portrait of a Man with His
anonymous — Portrait of a man
School of Anthonis Mor — Portrait of a Man
Martin Schaffner — Portrait of a Man
Jan van Hemessen — Portret van een man
Francesco Salviati (Francesco de' Rossi) — Portrait of a Man
Lucas Cranach the Elder — Johann (1498–1537), Duke of Saxony
Corneille de la Haye named de Lyon — Portrait of Barthé
Hans Holbein the Younger — Portrait of a Man (Sir Ralph Sadl