Sunday, 7 October 2012

ART SUNDAY - CANALETTO

“Though there are some disagreeable things in Venice there is nothing so disagreeable as the visitors.” - Henry James
 

Canaletto (Giovanni Antonio Canal - born Oct. 18, 1697, Venice and died April 20, 1768, Venice) was an Italian topographical painter. His masterful expression of atmosphere in his detailed views (“vedute”) of Venice and London and of English country homes influenced succeeding generations of landscape artists.
 

Canaletto was born into a noble family whose coat of arms he occasionally used as a signature. How he came to be known as Canaletto is uncertain. It is the diminutive form of “Canal” and perhaps the name was first used to distinguish him from his father, Bernardo Canal, a theatrical scene painter in whose studio Canaletto assisted. Canaletto is recorded as working with his father and brother in Venice from 1716 to 1719 and in Rome in 1719–20, painting scenes for Alessandro Scarlatti operas. It was in Rome that Canaletto left theatrical painting for the topographical career that was to bring him international fame so quickly. Nevertheless, throughout his life, he retained a close connection to theatrical work in his choice of subject matter, his use of line and wash drawings, and his theatrical perspective.
 

On his return to Venice, he began his contact with the foreign patrons who would continue as his chief support throughout his career. Four large paintings were completed for the Prince of Liechtenstein, in or before 1723, and in 1725–26 he finished a series of pictures for Stefano Conti, a merchant from Lucca. Dated memorandums accompanying the Conti pictures suggest how busy and yet how exacting the artist was at this time. Canaletto indicates that delays in the delivery of the pictures had been due to the pressure of other commissions and his own insistence on obtaining reliable pigments and on working from nature.
 

In his pictures of the late 1720s, such as “The Stonemason's Yard”, he combined a freedom and subtlety of manner that he was rarely to achieve again with an unrivalled imaginative and dramatic interpretation of Venetian architecture. His understanding of sunlight and shadow, cloud effects, and the play of light on buildings support the contention in his memorandums that he was working out-of-doors, which was a most unusual procedure for painters of that time.
 

Throughout the 1730s Canaletto was deeply absorbed in meeting foreign demands for souvenir views of Venice. Such was the pressure upon him that he ultimately was forced to work largely from drawings and even from other artists' engravings, rather than from nature. He also developed the use of the “camera ottica”, a device by which a lens threw onto a ground-glass screen the image of a view, which could be used as a basis for a drawing or painting. Finally, he developed a mechanical technique, in which ruler and compasses played a part, and architecture and figures were put into the picture according to a dexterous and effective formula. Such a vast number of views of Venice were produced during his lifetime that it is often thought that Canaletto was head of a large studio, but there is no evidence of this.
 

Owen Mac Swinney, an English operatic figure and patron of Canaletto, wrote as early as 1727: “The fellow is whimsical and varys his prices, every day: and he that has a mind to have any of his work, must not seem to be too fond of it, for he'l be ye worse treated for it, both in the price and the painting too.”
 

The outbreak of the War of the Austrian Succession in 1740, which cut down sharply the number of visitors to Venice, seriously affected Canaletto's commissions. At this point, an early acquaintance, Joseph Smith (publisher, merchant, and later British consul in Venice) stepped into the breach. As standardised views of Venice dropped from demand, Smith seems to have encouraged Canaletto to expand his range of subjects to include Roman monuments and the area of Padua and the Brenta River. Pictures composed of more or less recognisable elements rearranged (“capricci”) and pictures composed of almost completely imaginary architectural and scenic elements (“vedute ideate”) now began to play an increasingly important part in Canaletto's work. In 1741–44 Canaletto also made a series of 30 etchings, exceptionally skilful and sensitive, showing a command of perspective and luminosity.
 

Canaletto's international reputation served him well as the tourists became more scarce. In 1746 he went to England, where he was welcomed, and remained until 1755, despite an invitation to Dresden from the elector of Saxony. He worked mainly in London, on English views. Although English atmosphere, architecture, and topography differed considerably from that of Venice, Canaletto there produced many works of great freshness and impact. On his return to Venice, however, his reputation had not diminished; and at last he received official recognition—election to the Venetian Academy in 1763 and, in the same year, appointment as prior of the Collegio dei Pittori.
 

The “View of the Grand Canal with the Rialto Bridge” shown here is typical of the artist’s oeuvre and highlights the idealised, spectacular views of Venice that tourists were rather keen in. This painting is in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and the date of the painting is not exactly known , but represents Canaletto’s well-developed style. One can see why this artist was popular and successful in his lifetime, giving his public exactly what they wanted: A delightful souvenir of their visit to Venice, which would provide them with wonderful memories every time they admired it on their wall back home…

1 comment:

  1. oh agreed! Throughout the 1730s Canaletto was a very busy lad, providing souvenir views of Venice to every Grand Tourist with some money in his pockets. Thank goodness (for us) that he met their needs.

    But I wonder what the evidence is that he didn't draw and paint from nature. My feeling was that he was down on the canals regularly, moving buildings around in his works, but largely inspired by nature.

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