● On view now — Gallery 207
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Dutch painter Jan van Scorel was one of the first Northern European artists to make an extended trip to Italy to study antiquities and the new Renaissance style. This landscape must have been made during his stay in southern Europe as a young artist; the panel is made from poplar, a wood commonly used in Italy. The two aristocratic pastimes depicted, jousting and hunting, were frequent themes of Northern European landscapes, particularly in prints, and Italian patrons were drawn to these extravagant visions of courtly pursuits.
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Adriaen Pietersz van de Venne — Princes Maurice and Frederic
anonymous — Army Camp
Pauwels van Hillegaert — Prince Frederik Hendrik at the Sieg
Sebastiaen Vrancx — Market Day in a Flemish Town
Lambert Doomer — Rebecca and Eliezer at the Well
Gillis Mostaert (I) — Allegory of Abuses by the Authorities
Marketplace, with the Flagellation, the Ecce Homo and the Be
Pieter Snayers — Soldiers Bivouacking
Style of Isaac van Ostade — Travellers Halting at an Inn
Herri met de Bles (Flemish, 1510–1572) — Landscape with Sain
Louis Nicolas van Blarenberghe (French, 1716–1794) — A Party
Jacob Symonsz Pynas — The Meeting of Jacob and Esau