The Spirit of Knowledge

Description

One of the most original and probing artists of the late 18th century, Fuseli worked principally in London but went to Rome for eight years beginning in 1770. The influence of Michelangelo’s prophets and sibyls is tangible in this allegorical figure, probably drawn in London a decade after he left Rome; at this time Fuseli had recently met William Blake, who treated a similar subject in his Book of Job.

Provenance

Private collection, England, by 1930 [a letter from Lowell Libson of Spink-Leger Pictures dated Sept. 15, 1998 in curatorial file]. Trevor Roberts, England, to 1948 [Libson letter]; Ian Phillips, England, from 1948-1998 [London 1998 exh. cat.]; Leger Galleries, London; given to the Art Institute, 1998.

The Spirit of Knowledge

Henry Fuseli

1798

Accession Number

150038

Medium

Black chalk and brush and gray wash on ivory laid paper

Dimensions

18.2 × 22.3 cm (7 3/16 × 8 13/16 in.)

Classification

chalk and wash

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Given in honor of Dorothy Braude Edinburg by Lowell Libson and the Directors of Spink-Leger