Skip to main content

Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals

Issued: June 2010

13 October – 16 January 2011
Sainsbury Wing
Admission charge

"Antonio Canale…astounds everyone in this city who sees his work, which is like that of Carlevarijs, but you can see the sun shining in it."
(Alessandro Marchesini, painter and adviser to collectors, July 1725)

This landmark exhibition presents the finest assembly of Venetian views by Canaletto and his 18th-century rivals to be seen in a generation. Bringing together around 50 major loans from the public and private collections of the UK, Europe and North America, Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals highlights the extraordinary variety of Venetian view painting, juxtaposing masterpieces by Canaletto with key works by artists including Luca Carlevarijs, Michele Marieschi, Bernardo Bellotto and Francesco Guardi.

Featured works span the 18th-century, from one of the first accurately datable Venetian views by Luca Carlevarijs of 1707 to the death of Francesco Guardi in 1793. The age of the veduta (view) reached its zenith around 1740, by which time the acquisition of this choice souvenir had become an important element of the Grand Tour of Italy. In the first half of the century, aristocratic travellers, led by English milordi, fuelled a vibrant and highly competitive market for Venetian view painting which saw artists jostling for commissions and fame. Together they immortalised some of the best-loved landmarks of the city including the Grand Canal, the Piazza San Marco, the Rialto, the Molo, Santa Maria della Salute and the Lagoon.

Foremost among these artists was Giovanni Antonio Canal, known as Canaletto (1697–1768). Trained, like many of his rivals, as a painter of theatrical scenery, he visited Rome in 1719, which inspired him to try his hand at view painting. In the late 1720s, in response to market demand, he began to replace the moodiness of his earlier works with views bathed in warm sunshine. Within a decade, Canaletto had come to dominate the genre. The exhibition features some of Canaletto’s greatest masterpieces, including 'The Riva degli Schiavoni, looking West', about 1735 (Sir John Soane’s Museum, London), The Stonemason’s Yard, about 1725 (The National Gallery, London), and four of his finest works from the Royal Collection.

Room 1 opens with a pivotal work by Canaletto’s earliest precursor and the founding father of Italian view painting, Gaspare Vanvitelli (1652/3–1736): 'The Molo from the Bacino di San Marco', 1697 (Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid). Trained in the Netherlands and based mostly in Rome, Vanvitelli is thought to have visited Venice in 1695, a trip resulting in some 40 views over the following decades. Yet despite being filled with anecdotal detail, Vanvitelli’s Venice remained distinctly placid in comparison to the work of Canaletto and his contemporaries.

The immediate successor to Vanvitelli and the first view painter in Venice to depend on foreign patronage was Luca Carlevarijs (1663–1730). Important early works by Canaletto – including 'The Piazza San Marco, looking East', about 1723 (Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid) – are displayed alongside depictions of similar locations by Carlevarijs, the artist he had already begun to eclipse.

The largest room of the exhibition celebrates the floating city’s dramatic festivals, regattas and ceremonies, a highlight being Canaletto’s 'The Molo from the Bacino di San Marco on Ascension Day', about 1733–4 (Royal Collection). Here too, for the first time, Canaletto’s masterpiece, 'The Reception of the French Ambassador Jacques-Vincent Languet…', about 1727 (The Hermitage, Saint Petersburg) is displayed alongside the pioneering composition by Carlevarijs, 'The Reception of the British Ambassador Charles Montagu…', about 1707–8 (Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery).

During the 1730s and 1740s the only artist to pose a real threat to Canaletto’s domination was Michele Marieschi (1710–1743), perhaps the most spontaneous of the Venetian vedutisti. Comparisons made in Room 2 demonstrate Marieschi’s characteristically broad brushstrokes and fondness for unexpected view points, a highlight being 'The Rialto Bridge from the Riva del Vin', 1740s (The Hermitage, Saint Petersburg).

At the height of Canaletto’s fame, his workshop offered the finest training a view painter could receive. Among those to benefit was his precocious nephew, Bernardo Bellotto (1722–1780). By the age of 18 he could already imitate his uncle’s style with extraordinary dexterity and increasingly sought to introduce 'improving’ flourishes of his own. Having worked closely with Canaletto during his ‘cold’ period of 1738–42, an almost wintry light remained characteristic of Bellotto’s style for the rest of his career. Yet just as characteristic of Bellotto’s style were his uniquely vibrant blue skies, perhaps most dramatic in 'The Piazzetta, looking North', about 1743 (National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa).

During the final decade of his life Canaletto had a new rival – Francesco Guardi (1712–1793) – who was to outlive him by 25 years and to provide a glorious final chapter in the history of Venetian view painting. By the 1770s Guardi was considered something of an authority on Canaletto’s work and throughout his career showed a willingness to borrow his compositions. Yet, as juxtapositions in the final section of the exhibition demonstrate, Guardi’s concerns were very different from those expressed by Canaletto.

In his promotion of nature over the works of man, Guardi anticipated the rise of romanticism in the 19th century, and crucially emphasised the fragility of Venice rather than its permanence. Out on the Lagoon, where Venice’s human element is at its most marginal, Guardi appears at his most poetic (View of the Venetian Lagoon with the Tower of Malghera, probably 1770s, The National Gallery, London). While Guardi took this composition from a drawing by Canaletto, his intense concern with mood transforms this quiet backwater into something else entirely.

'Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals' presents the finest view paintings of one of the world’s most enthralling and beautiful cities. As well as celebrating the great works of Canaletto, one of the best-loved artists in Britain, the exhibition highlights the exceptional achievements of his now less well-known rivals and associates.


For further press information please contact Thomas Almeroth-Williams at thomas.almerothwilliams@ng-london.org.uk or 020 7747 2512.

Images
Publicity images for this exhibition can be obtained from http://press.ng-london.org.uk.

To obtain a username please contact the National Gallery Press Office on 020 7747 2865 or e-mail press@ng-london.org.uk

Additional Information

Organisation

'Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals' is organised by the National Gallery, London, and the National Gallery of Art, Washington, and is curated by Charles Beddington, with Dawson Carr as coordinating curator at the National Gallery, London. Charles Beddington is an independent scholar and art dealer in London. He has published and lectured widely on Canaletto and other 18th-century Italian view painters. In 2006–7, he curated the exhibition 'Canaletto in England: A Venetian Artist Abroad' at the Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven, and at Dulwich Picture Gallery. Dawson Carr is Curator of Italian and Spanish Painting 1600–1800 at the National Gallery, London.

The exhibition travels to the National Gallery of Art, Washington, where it will run from 20 February until 30 May 2011.

The exhibition in London is sponsored by Credit Suisse.

Publication
'Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals'
By Charles Beddington
(with a contribution by Amanda Bradley)

The exhibition is accompanied by a richly illustrated catalogue presenting the latest scholarship on the complex stylistic relationships between Canaletto, his associates and rivals – the major practitioners of Venetian view painting in the 18th century.

Charles Beddington has published and lectured widely on Canaletto and other 18th-century Italian view painters. Amanda Bradley is Assistant Curator of Pictures and Sculpture, The National Trust.

ISBN: 978 1 85709 418 3
Published by the National Gallery Company, London
£19.99 paperback; £35 hardback
Hardback distributed by Yale University Press.

Dates and opening hours
Press view:     12 October 2010 (10.30am–1.30pm)
Open to public:   13 October 2010 – 16 January 2011
 
Daily 10am–6pm, Friday until 9pm
Last admission 5.15pm (8.15pm Friday)

Admission
Enter by the Sainsbury Wing Entrance

Full price     £12  
Senior/Concession/Disabled visitors  £11  
Carers      FREE
Job seeker/Student/Art Fund   £6
Family (2 adults and ≤4 children)  £24 
Under 12s     FREE 

Season Ticket     £30
Senior/Disabled Season    £28
Job seeker/Art Fund/Student Season  £15

Tickets
For advance tickets to Venice: Canaletto and His Rivals please visit http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/whats-on/exhibitions/venice-canaletto-and-his-rivals (booking fee). You can also book tickets by post and in person from the Gallery.
 
For public information, please quote 020 7747 2885 or information@ng-london.org.uk

The National Gallery, Trafalgar Square, London WC2N 5DN   www.nationalgallery.org.uk