domingo, 22 de dezembro de 2019

Veneza, Uma Vista do Grande Canal, Olhando Para o Leste com a Basílica de Santa Maria Della Salute, Veneza, Itália (Venice, A View of the Grand Canal Looking East with Santa Maria Della Salute) - Giovanni Antonio Canal "Canaletto"


Veneza, Uma Vista do Grande Canal, Olhando Para o Leste com a Basílica de Santa Maria Della Salute, Veneza, Itália (Venice, A View of the Grand Canal Looking East with Santa Maria Della Salute) - Giovanni Antonio Canal "Canaletto"
Veneza - Itália
Coleção privada
OST - 47x79


This majestic bird's eye view of the landing stage in front of Santa Maria della Salute was likely painted in circa 1740, during the height of Canaletto's Venetian period. The warm sunlight and clear shadows evoke a peaceful afternoon on a clear day, as gondolas and merchant ships populate the Grand Canal and Venetians stroll in and out of the church, which is dedicated to the city's survival of the plague. Canaletto treated this recognizable view of the Salute several times: his earliest picture of the canal and the Salute from the west dates to the late 1720s, while his largest and most famous canvas of this subject dates to 1744 and is in the British Royal Collection.
In 1630, a devastating outbreak of the plague killed nearly a third of the population of Venice. In thanksgiving for delivering the city through the outbreak, the Venetian Senate elected to consecrate a new church to the Virgin as protector of the republic.  Baldassare Longhena (1598–1682) won the competition to design the church, and construction began in 1631 and was finished fifty years later, just one year before Longhena's death. The location of the Salute was chosen to form an arc with San Giorgio Maggiore, San Marco, and the Redentore, the city's other important churches, and its dome became a civic emblem. Each year on November 21, city officials commemorated the Feast of the Presentation of the Virgin by parading from Piazza San Marco across the canal to the Salute on a specially constructed floating bridge; the festival is still celebrated today. The Salute, as a symbol of Venetian piety, also stands adjacent to the Dogana da Mar, the center of maritime commerce.
Beyond the Salute at right, Canaletto included the facade of the Seminario Patriarcale, and further along is the tower of the Dogana. At left, across the canal, are some of the most important buildings in Venice, all of which appear in other paintings by the master: the mint, the library, one of the columns in the Piazzetta, the Palazzo Ducale, and the prison, with the Riva degli Schiavoni curving to the right.
By 1740 Canaletto had reached the most productive period of his career, during which time he strove to record detailed scenes of Venetian life and topography with emphasis on light and color. In this year and the following, Canaletto and his accomplished pupil and nephew Bernardo Bellotto (1721 - 1780) toured the Brenta and the mainland, making drawings that would later inspire paintings and etchings that he produced in the studio. In 1741, the War of Austrian Succession caused a decline in foreign visitors to Venice, and Canaletto lost British patrons, who had comprised a substantial part of his clientele; he would eventually relocate to London from 1746 - 1755.
The present lot is comparable to a picture dated 1738/42 in the Emil Bürhle collection, Zurich, which centers the Salute along the vertical edge of the canvas and looks on from a viewpoint slightly to the left and further back from the present view. In both scenes, Canaletto defined the facade of the Salute with strong shadows indicating time of day and the figures surrounding the cathedral in subdued local color. In the picture from 1744 in the Royal Collections, which is likely the last that Canaletto made of this particular view, he used a lower and closer viewpoint angled toward the Salute that cuts off the cupola, and rendered the sculpture and texture on the facade in almost obsessive detail. The present picture has more strongly defined shadows as well as more boats in the foreground, including a sandalo at lower left carrying two barrels not seen in other renditions of this subject, and tall masts of seagoing ships in the background. This view of the Grand Canal is broader than other iterations, which therefore makes the buildings on the opposite bank appear diminutive in comparison to the grand Salute.
Precisely this type of view of a famous landmark, surrounded by everyday activity and rendered in nuanced local color, is what would make Canaletto the most sought-after vedustisti in 18th-century Italy and later in London. Such scenes have remained popular since his lifetime and continue to enchant viewers today.


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