● On view now — Gallery 245
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
The indeterminately mythological figures that populate this peaceful landscape are intended to evoke a poetic conception of the artistic past. The figures in the center personify the three plastic arts: architecture, painting, and sculpture. They are surrounded by the nine muses of Classical antiquity. The scene’s subdued, chalky colors and overall flatness recall Roman wall paintings. Indeed, Pierre Puvis de Chavannes was the leading muralist in France when he first displayed this painting at the 1884 Salon, a state-sponsored art exhibition; this canvas is itself a smaller version of a mural he made for the stairway of the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Lyon, France. That work was one of the inspirations for Georges Seurat’s mural-sized painting A Sunday on la Grande Jatte—1884 .
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Pierre Puvis de Chavannes (French, 1824–1898) — Summer
Sir Edward Burne-Jones — Cupid's Hunting Fields
Will Hicock Low — Lycius, Look Back, and Be Some Pity Shown
Théodore Caruelle d' Aligny (French, 1798–1871) — The Bather
Arthur B. Davies (American, 1862–1928) — Hermes and the Infa
Pierre-Auguste Renoir — Bathers (Baigneuses)
Pierre-Auguste Renoir — Reclining Nude (La Source)
Sir Edward Burne-Jones — The Passing of Venus
Sir Edward Burne-Jones — Bath of Venus
Will Hicock Low — Pale Grew Her Immortality, For Woe of All
Apollonio di Giovanni — The Adventures of Ulysses
Will Hicock Low — And So He Rested on the Lonely Ground