Art Institute of Chicago
Silence
Auguste Préault (French, 1809–1879)
- Date
- 1842–43
- Medium
- Plaster
- Culture
- France
- Department
- Painting and Sculpture of Europe
- Institution
- Art Institute of Chicago
Auguste Préault created this roundel (a composition with a circular format) for the tomb of Jacob Roblès in Père-Lachaise, a Parisian cemetery. Departing from more conventional, comforting funerary imagery of the period—portraits of the deceased or melancholy images of mourning—Préault instead modeled a stark evocation of death. Here, a frail finger is raised to the lips of a deeply shrouded and skeletal face with heavy-lidded eyes, perhaps marking the frontier between life and death. The sculpture met with immediate acclaim upon its first exhibition and became an icon of Romanticism.
The authoritative record is held by Art Institute of Chicago. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Linked open data
Authority identifiers that link this record into the wider web of cultural data — stable references you can follow to the source.
- Object type
- AAT300301253
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Art Institute of Chicago and other institutions.

A Funeral
Cleveland Museum of Art

Study for a Funerary Monument
Minneapolis Institute of Art
La mort a révélé le secret de sa vie.
Musée Carnavalet, Histoire de Paris

Study for "Silence"
Cleveland Museum of Art
Théodore Géricault on His Deathbed
Art Institute of Chicago

Funerary Monument for the Marquis de Tourney (for the Chapel of the Château de la Falaise)
Cleveland Museum of Art
Autel de Volusia Arbuscula
Joconde
La Mort entraînant un vieillard dans un tombeau d'où sort une autre Mort
Petit Palais, musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris
La Mort entraînant un vieillard dans un tombeau d'où sort une autre Mort
Petit Palais, musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris
Portrait of Balzac
Art Institute of Chicago

Sketches of Figures at a Funeral (95.GD.35.4)
Getty Museum

Funeral Procession on the Boulevard de Clichy
Minneapolis Institute of Art