Art Institute of Chicago
Interior with Two Pairs of Lovers and a Fool
Johann Liss
- Date
- 1625/29
- Medium
- Etching on ivory laid paper
- Culture
- Germany
- Department
- Prints and Drawings
- Institution
- Art Institute of Chicago
As the prominent curtains imply, this boisterous genre scene by the itinerant German artist Johann Liss likely takes place in the cosy interior of a brothel. In a gesture typical of northern European sensitivities, the crouching fool covers much of his face with his hand, yet fixes the viewer in his gaze. By enjoying the sensory delights on display—music and lovemaking— the viewer is implicated as part of the scene. Liss may have produced this print in Venice at the end of his career; the print’s lightly moralistic tone is equally at home in southern Europe.
The authoritative record is held by Art Institute of Chicago. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Art Institute of Chicago and other institutions.

A Scene in a Forge
Getty Museum

Violin Player Seated in the Inn
Cleveland Museum of Art

Brothel Scene
Getty Museum
The Lovers
Art Institute of Chicago

The Pleasures of the Seasons: Winter
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Brothel Scene
Getty Museum

Design for a Quatrefoil with a Castle, Two Lovers, a Maiden Tempted by a Fool, a Couple Seated by a Trough, and a Knight and His Lover Mounted on a Horse
Getty Museum

The Holy Family in an Interior
Cleveland Museum of Art

Brothel Scene
Getty Museum

At the Window II
Cleveland Museum of Art

Brothel Scene
Getty Museum

Het bordeel
Rijksmuseum