Londres, Vista do Rio Tâmisa com a Catedral de St. Paul, Londres, Inglaterra (London, A View from River Thames, with St. Paul's Cathedral) - Antonio Joli
Londres - Inglaterra
Coleção privada
OST - 38x71
This beautiful view of St Paul's Cathedral,
painted by Joli in the 1740 or 1750s, shows the newly restored and rebuilt
London, with its breathtaking new cathedral and unparalleled skyline of Wren
churches. The artist has deliberately taken a high viewpoint, thus being able
to include a formidable amount of topographical detail. Clustered around
St Paul's, completed in 1710, are a myriad church towers, and further to the
right the Monument is clearly visible, followed on the right by the Tower of
London. To the right of the composition is Old London Bridge, by the date of
this picture already over six hundred years old, and providing a link with
London before the Great Fire.
Joli arrived in London in 1744, several years before his celebrated
kinsman and rival, Canaletto. He was clearly inspired by the freshness and air
of optimism he found, and produced a number of ravishing views of London
showing the Thames bustling with activity, and bearing elaborate and ornamental
barges, lending a distinctly Venetian feeling to this most quintessential
English view. Joli's English patrons included Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl of
Chesterfield, for Chesterfield House, and John Lord Brudenell, for whom he
painted a large set of views of towns which he had visited on the Grand Tour.
Both Joli and Canaletto enjoyed the patronage of Charles, 2nd Duke of Richmond,
who commissioned from Joli a 'View of St Paul's.... a beautiful picture
and veramente di buon gusto'
in 1744, prior to Canaletto's superb painting of the same view.
This painting came from the celebrated collection at Hendon Hall, an
early Georgian house which was sold by the executors of William, Marquis of
Powis, in 1756. The buyer was James Clutterbuck, a financier, who acquired the
house for his friend David Garrick. Though his memorial was erected at Hendon,
Garrick apparently never lived there, but he did arrange for his nephew the
Rev. Carrington Garrick to occupy the house at Hendon, and Hendon Hall and its
estate was left on trust for him upon Garrick's death. It is tempting to
suggest that this view by Joli was commissioned or acquired by Garrick but it
is more likely that the substantial collection of pictures at Hendon Hall was
collected in the early nineteenth century by Charles Cumberlege-Warre, nephew
of a later owner, Samuel Ware. An 1850 manuscript catalogue of the
collection listed over two hundred paintings and sculptures, including the
present work, and Frederick Earp supplied watercolour illustrations of
most items. Probably the most celebrated painting in the collection was a
ceiling by Tiepolo which was acquired from the Wrightson collection by the
National Gallery in Washington. The collection covered a wide range of artists
including Veronese, Reni, Hals, Giordano, Guardi, Vernet, and another work by
Joli depicting Paestum.


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