Canal Dona Onesta, Veneza, Itália (Canal Dona Onesta) - Rubens Santoro
Veneza - Itália
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OST - 50x36
Rubens Santoro’s oeuvre celebrates Venice’s elegant
architecture and magical urban setting. While he is most often recognized for
his depictions of the grand facades of the city’s most majestic structures on
the Grand Canal, Santoro did turn a more intimate eye on quieter streets and
less-traveled waterways. The present view likely depicts the cupola of Chiesa
di San Nicolò da Tolentino, glimpsed from the narrow Fondamenta del Forner on
the rio de la Frescada. To the left is the Ca ’Bottacin, built in the fifteenth
century by the Dalla Frescada family. The home passed through some of the most
well-known Venetian families – the Corners owned the palazzo before it was home
to Doge Pietro Loredan between 1567 and 1570 – but is now part of the Ca
'Foscari University of Venice.
Late nineteenth century visitors would also discover this
unique atmosphere of faded beauty in The Aspern Papers (1888);
written by Henry James, the American author who fell under the city’s spell,
this novella takes place in a faded old palazzo filled with mystery. As James
described, the palazzo “was a house of the class which in Venice carries even
in extreme dilapidation the dignified name...It was not particularly old, only
two or three centuries.” James was captivated by the evocative areas of
lesser-known Venice, which inspired him to experiment with new narrative form
and style. Similarly, Santoro uses these overlooked neighborhoods to
develop a new visual vocabulary of daily Venetian life: sheets drying in the
breeze; subtle earth tones of crumbling building plasters; faded awnings which
provide shade to passerbys; humble gondolas that serve as utilitarian
transportation, not a touristic fancy. This is the Venice of the Venetians, who
live every day amongst the magic of the city—unseen by many, yet sensitively
recorded by Santoro’s brush.

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