The Waterfall of Marmore at Terni

Description

Influenced by the landscapes of Claude Lorrain and seventeenth-century Dutch artists, the German Jakob Philipp Hackert was one of the most successful landscape artists based in late 18th-century Rome. His precise renderings of beautiful and historic sites attracted an international clientele on the European grand tour. This finished drawing depicts one of Italy's most spectacular natural phenomena, the Marmore waterfall at Terni, located north of Rome. Hackert carefully crafted the composition so that the detailed cliffs covered with foliage frame the tiered cascade from its soaring heights to its final emptying in the foreground. Hackert was known for traveling to the countryside on foot with large portfolios so that he could execute complete wash drawings like this one directly in nature. He probably drew this scene during one such sketching tour in 1776, or 1778.

Provenance

Galerie Gerda Bassenge (Auktionskatalog Nr. 11), Berlin, 23-27 April 1968, Nr. 581 (1968); with Lucien Goldschmidt, New York (?-?); with Sven H.A. Bruntjen, Woodside, CA (?-1982); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1982-)

The Waterfall of Marmore at Terni

Philipp Hackert

1776–78

Accession Number

1982.40

Medium

pen and black ink, brush and brown wash, with white gouache and graphite

Dimensions

Sheet: 52.2 x 39.9 cm (20 9/16 x 15 11/16 in.)

Classification

Drawing

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Dudley P. Allen Fund