Description
Privileged young Europeans embarking on the Grand Tour during the 1700s invariably visited Venice, where they purchased paintings, prints, and drawings to commemorate their trip. Canaletto’s vedute (view paintings) were particularly desirable as mementos of the city. This drawing is a capriccio—an artistic fantasy of architecture and landscape. Canaletto often referred to actual buildings in his capricci, manipulating and combining them to create his invented views. The palatial structure in this composition appropriates the neo-Palladian portal to the Palazzo Tasca in Venice; however, the lagoon, peasant figures, and architectural details are artifice. Traces of Canaletto’s graphite underdrawing are visible in the cloudy sky, as are the black chalk lines he carefully ruled in before delineating the building with pen and brush. The brown ink outlines of the composition contrast with Canaletto’s tints of transparent gray wash, which animate the drawing through their effect of flickering sunlight. Though three large, painted capricci paintings share compositional elements with this drawing, it is unclear whether it is a preliminary study, or an independent work of art.
Provenance
(Obach & Co. (est. 1884), London, sold to Dr. Guy Bellingham Smith.) (?-?); Dr. Guy Bellingham Smith [1856-?], London, UK. (before 1911-1927); (Frederik Muller & Co., Amsterdam, sold July 6, 1927, cat. no. 9.) (1927); (Thomas Agnew and Sons (est. 1817), Ltd., London, UK, sold to The Cleveland Museum of Art, Jan. 1930.) (possibly 1927-1930); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH. (1930-)
Accession Number
1930.23
Medium
pen and brown ink and brush and gray and black washes over traces of graphite (?); framing lines in pen and brown and black ink
Dimensions
Sheet: 26.9 x 42.1 cm (10 9/16 x 16 9/16 in.)
Classification
Drawing
Credit Line
Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund