

This is Saturn, as photographed (yes, it’s a composite photo, not a drawing) by Cassini as it passed in front of the Sun. Our Earth is visible, barely, if you zoom in and look “above the left extremity of the main set of rings.” You might have to use the full-resolution version of the image available here, in the NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory Photojournal. That page also shares some of why this image – assembled from 165 wide-angle photos – was so dramatic from a scientific perspective:
The mosaic images were acquired as the spacecraft drifted in the darkness of Saturn’s shadow for about 12 hours, allowing a multitude of unique observations of the microscopic particles that compose Saturn’s faint rings.
Ring structures containing these tiny particles brighten substantially at high phase angles: i.e., viewing angles where the sun is almost directly behind the objects being imaged.
During this period of observation Cassini detected two new faint rings: one coincident with the shared orbit of the moons Janus and Epimetheus, and another coincident with Pallene’s orbit.
I found the image on Wikimedia Commons, but it’s really a product of NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute.