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Chicago Connections

6 artworks from 6 artists across 5 galleries
The tour is ordered to begin from the Michigan Avenue entrance. If you are starting in the Modern Wing, simply do your tour in reverse order.

Take a tour of works intrinsically linked to the Windy City, or made by artists who call or called Chicago home.

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  • The Song of the Lark

    Jules Breton

    This painting by Jules Adolphe Breton was among the first to enter the Art Institute's collection when the museum opened in 1893. It quickly became one of the most popular paintings at the museum. By the 1920s, reproductions were hanging on classroom walls across the United States. In 1934, it was named “America’s Best Loved Picture” in a contest sponsored by the Chicago Daily News.

    "Song of the Lark is a favorite of actor Bill Murray. He claims it saved his life when he was still a struggling young comic in Chicago."

  • Self-Portrait of My Sister

    Gertrude Abercrombie

    At first glance, this painting appears to be a relatively straightforward representation of a young woman. Further examination, however, reveals subtle touches of the artist's dark aesthetic, beginning with the title itself, an enigmatic reference to a sister who did not exist; Abercrombie was an only child. Her reference to a fictitious sister hints at her desire to be a different person, a longing she satisfied through self-portraiture.

    "Chicago artist Abercrombie initially referred to this work as 'Portrait of Artist as Ideal,' a phrase revealing her underlying meaning. Here, she idealized her appearance, depicting herself with a long neck, vivid blue eyes, and sharpened features."

  • This, My Brother

    Charles White

    Charles White believed art could be a force in promoting equality for African Americans. This painting draws its title from a 1936 novel about a rural white miner who experiences a political awakening and joins the proletarian struggle against capitalism. White transformed the protagonist into a Black man who breaks free from a mountain of rubble, a hopeful image of the possibility of social change.

    "Like many artists of his generation, Chicagoan Charles White believed that art could be an influential force in the struggle to promote racial equality for African Americans. He stated, 'paint is the only weapon I have with which to fight what I resent.'"

  • Picture of Dorian Gray

    Ivan Albright

    Chicago artist Ivan Albright executed this horrific work for the 1945 movie adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s 1891 novel The Picture of Dorian Gray. In Wilde’s tale, the youthful and attractive Gray sells his soul in order to stay young. In his stead, a portrait of the young hedonist decays, recording his moral corruption in paint as he leads an increasingly wayward life.

    "When Albright’s canvas was exhibited at the Art Institute after the film's release, the Chicago Tribune reported that the museum 'is having a heck of a time handling the crowds flocking to see his painting.'"

  • Ceres

    John Bradley Storrs

    John Storrs, a native Chicagoan, created this smaller version of the art deco–inspired figure he designed for the top of the Chicago Board of Trade Building. In his efforts to make the sculpture symbolic of the building’s purpose, Storrs turned to the Classical subject of Ceres, the Roman goddess of grain, alluding to the board’s activity as the world’s biggest grain exchange.

    "Though Storrs moved to Paris in 1911 and spent much of his career there, he actually grew up in Chicago and studied at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago."

  • Stamnos (Mixing Jar)

    Chicago Painter

    Among the first objects purchased for the museum's collection, this ancient Greek jar was originally used to mix water and wine. Painted in the red-figure style (so called because the figures remain the natural red of the clay), this vessel portrays the women followers of Dionysos, the Greek god of wine. Remarkably this millennia-old vase retains its original lid.

    "The ancient Greek painter who painted this vase is referred to as the Chicago Painter because this work, long part of the museum's collection, showcases all the hallmarks of his style: calm, elegant figures and a soft, free form."


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