subject – Death
- Bust of Half Skeleton and Half Woman Anonymous, ca. 1615–1664
- “Death is the line that marks the end of all” Joris Hoefnagel, 1592
- The Raven Gustave Doré, 1884
- Ophelia with a Blue Wimple in the Water Odilon Redon, 1905
- Gnashing its Teeth, and Flashing Fire Harry Clarke, 1919
- They Swarmed Upon Me in Ever-Accumulating Heaps Harry Clarke, 1919
- The Earth Grew Dark, and its Figures Passed By Me Harry Clarke, 1919
- The Lady Madeline of Usher Harry Clarke, 1919
- In His Toilsome Journey to the Water His Fears Redoubled within Him Harry Clarke, 1919
- I Would Call Aloud upon her Name Harry Clarke, 1919
- Deep, Deep, and For Ever, into some Ordinary and Nameless Grave Harry Clarke, 1919
- The Drunkard's Progress E. B. and E. C. Kellogg, ca. 1846
- The Drunkard's Progress: From the First Glass to the Grave Nathan Currier, ca. 1846
- The Life and Age of Woman James Baillie, ca. 1848
- The Wave W. T. Horton, 1898
- The Old Garden of Sorrows Jan Toorop, ca. 1890
- O Grave, Where is Thy Victory Jan Toorop, 1892
- Death: "My Irony Surpasses All Others" Odilon Redon, 1889
- To Edgar Poe (A Mask Sounds the Death Knell) Odilon Redon, 1882
- Calavera of Don Quixote José Guadalupe Posada, ca. 1910
- Calaveras Riding Bicycles José Guadalupe Posada, ca. 1900
- Journalists Racing on Bikes José Guadalupe Posada, ca. 1900
- The Artistic Purgatory José Guadalupe Posada, ca. 1900
- Don Quixote Broadside José Guadalupe Posada, ca. 1910