Veneza, Vista do Canal Giudecca, Hospital dos Incuráveis e da Igreja do Espírito Santo, Veneza, Itália (Venice, A Capriccio View of the Giudecca Canal, The Ospedale degli Incurabili and the Chies adi Spirito Santo) - Johann Richter
Veneza - Itália
Coleção privada
OST - 84x136
This luminous and beautifully preserved capriccio is among Johann
Richter’s largest and most impressive Venetian views, exemplary for its
refinement, balance, and colouring. A follower of Luca Carlevarijs and a
forerunner to Canaletto and Bellotto, Richter was a Swedish artist who spent
much of his career in Venice. Although an accomplished painter of landscapes
and decorations in his early career in Stockholm, it was in Venice that
he established himself as one of the pioneers of Venetian view painting, with
his earliest known examples of this subject dating to 1717. In addition to
faithful representations of Venice, he also often painted scenes that included
recognizable Venetian architecture rendered in fanciful settings. Such is the
case with the present example, which places buildings on the Fondamenta delle
Zattere—including the Chiesa di
Santo Spirito and the Ospedale
degli Incurabili (a 16th-century
hospital building)—in an imaginary environment.
The present painting is wholly characteristic of Richter’s Venetian repertoire. An expansive scene is set beneath a clear blue sky defined by clouds with soft pink undertones. The restrained yet crisp palette of the setting, which lacks harsh shadows, contrasts pleasingly with the vibrant costumes of the various figures that animate the central foreground. The placement of the boat that holds these figures, as well as a nearby vessel with an imposing mast in the immediate foreground was a technique that Richter often employed to increase the sense of depth and space within his paintings. Such a technique has been expertly employed in the present work, which, despite being an imaginary scene, seems to fully engross audiences in the beauty of 18th-century Venice.
The present painting is wholly characteristic of Richter’s Venetian repertoire. An expansive scene is set beneath a clear blue sky defined by clouds with soft pink undertones. The restrained yet crisp palette of the setting, which lacks harsh shadows, contrasts pleasingly with the vibrant costumes of the various figures that animate the central foreground. The placement of the boat that holds these figures, as well as a nearby vessel with an imposing mast in the immediate foreground was a technique that Richter often employed to increase the sense of depth and space within his paintings. Such a technique has been expertly employed in the present work, which, despite being an imaginary scene, seems to fully engross audiences in the beauty of 18th-century Venice.


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