Uma Vista Capriccio Veneziana de Igreja Oval ao Lado de Lagoa, Veneza, Itália (A Venetian Capriccio View of an Oval Church Beside the Lagoon) - Giovanni Antonio Canal "Canaletto"
Veneza - Itália
Coleção privada
OST - 58x90
Canaletto is a name synonymous with Venice
- a city that has perennially inspired artists. Giovanni Antonio Canal, known
as Canaletto, the son of a stage set decorator, was the first major proponent
of view paintings of Venice, producing some of the most famous images of her
iconic landmarks, and inspiring generations of painters to come. He established
the market for vedute,
recognizing the demand for such works from foreign visitors and locals alike.
The present painting demonstrates how Canaletto’s commercial success was not
only limited to topographical, if often manipulated, compositions
however. Capricci -
fictitious views, which nevertheless often include one or more elements from
reality - were highly prized for their artistic invention. Indeed, it is
notable that the painting Canaletto presented after his election to the
Accademia di Pittura e Scultura at Venice was the Capriccio
with a colonnade, of 1765.
The protagonist of this painting is the large oval church - a
product of Canaletto’s sophisticated imagination. The most famous such
structure known to the artist would undoubtedly have been the Pantheon, in Rome
- the Classical circular temple completed in 126AD. Rotundas were clearly a
source of intrigue to Canaletto and they feature in several others of his capricci. In
the present work, the elliptical church is topped with a tower flanked by a
pair of engaged colonnettes, reminiscent of parts of the façade of the Basilica
di San Marco in Venice itself.
A more definitive nod to reality comes in the form of the
elegant campanile (bell tower) of the church of Santo
Stefano, visible in the distance beyond the oval church. This accent in the
skyline draws attention to a particularly lyrical passage of painting: the far
view of the dilapidated arch and buildings, beside which a small sailing boat
is moored, illuminated by gentle - perhaps early morning - sunlight. Such a
detail is prescient of the small capricci that Francesco
Guardi - one of the last great masters of 18th-century Venetian vedute painting
- would come to paint.
The work is characterized by an elegant restraint of tone and
palette. The red ground on which it is executed lends a warmth to the the
limited number of pigments used to create a nonetheless variegated composition
that is immediately evocative of Venetian light and atmosphere. And these
qualities have also led to a dating of the picture to circa 1742,
a few years before Canaletto moved to London in 1746.
It is not clear how this painting reached its first recorded
owner Mary, Lady Carbery, of Castle Freke, County Cork, Ireland, whence it was
sold with an attribution to Bernardo Bellotto, Canaletto’s talented nephew.
Afterwards recognized indisputably as a work by Canaletto himself, in the 1960s
the painting came to be owned by Henry Fonda, whose wife Baroness Afdera
Franchetti was the niece of the creator of the Ca’ d’Oro Museum in Venice.
Having passed through the hands of some of London’s most reputable dealers,
Arthur Tooth and Thomas Agnew, the canvas came into the possession of the
family of the present owner around half a century ago, where it has remained
since.
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