

Two Heads of Damned Souls from Dante's "Inferno" (recto and verso)
Henry Fuseli (Swiss, active in England, 1741–1825)
1770–78
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Materials & printing
Archival matte paper, 189 g/m² (10.3 mil), sourced from Japan, printed with multicolor water-based inkjet so every brushstroke stays crisp. Framed prints arrive ready to hang in a .75″ ayous-wood frame with an acrylite front.
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About this work
Henry Fuseli created the expressive head studies on each side of this unprimed canvas using strategically placed highlights and deep shadows built up of thin washes. The artist probably painted these oil sketches while living in Italy between 1770 and 1778. Both images were engraved as illustrations for Johann Caspar Lavater’s influential book on physiognomy, a popular pseudoscience that assessed an individual’s character based on their outward appearance. According to that text, the heads were inspired by the damned souls in Italian poet Dante Alighieri’s epic Inferno.
- Artist
- Henry Fuseli (Swiss, active in England, 1741–1825)
- Date
- 1770–78
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Origin
- England
- Style
- 18th Century
- Collection
- Painting and Sculpture of Europe
- Reference
- 1992.1531 · Art Institute of Chicago