
The Discovery (recto), Two Sketches of Standing Male Figures (verso)
<p>This powerful drawing—a bravura exercise in virtuoso line and tonal washes—illustrates a story from Swiss theologian Ludwig Lavater’s book <em>De Spectris</em> (“On Ghosts”), published in 1569. It describes a priest who, dressed in a sheet, haunts his wealthy niece who is living in his house, in an attempt to rape her and cheat her of her fortune. Terrified, the niece enlists the aid of a friend who exposes the repentant priest.<br>The curious badminton match visible in the background—not in the story, but added by Fuseli as a critical commentary—is a reference to a proverb composed in Latin by the Dutch poet Jacob Cats (1577–1660): <em>Amor ut pila vices exiget</em>, “Love, like a ball, demands reciprocation.”</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1767
- Dimensions
- 52.9 × 65.8 cm (20 7/8 × 25 15/16 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Henry Fuseli
Artist

Painting
Henry Fuseli was a Swiss painter, draughtsman, and writer on art who spent much of his career in Britain.
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More by Henry Fuseli
Aided by Eeriboia, Hermes Carries Off the Exhausted Ares from the Sleeping Sons of Aloeus (recto); Sketch of One of the Sleeping Sons of Aloeus (verso)
1819 · Graphite and brush and black wash, with touches of charcoal (recto), and graphite (verso), on cream wove paper
Sheet of Studies: Three Female Heads, an Arm and a Hand. Verso: Heroic Male Nude and a Face in Profile
1817 · Graphite and chalk on paper. Verso: graphite on paper
An Intimate Concert
1814 · graphite on laid paper
Dante Swoons before the Soaring Souls of Paolo and Francesca, Virgil at his Side
1813 · Etching and aquatint on ivory wove paper
Lady Macbeth Seizing the Daggers
1812 · Oil paint on canvas
Perseus Starting from the Cave of the Gorgons
1810 · Oil and oil wash, over graphite and with touches of pen and black ink, on tan laid paper, laid down on off-white Japanese paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Henry Fuseli
- Year
- 1767
- Dimensions
- 52.9 × 65.8 cm (20 7/8 × 25 15/16 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1767-100677
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





