Piazza San Marco, Venice, Bernardo Bellotto, 1735

Piazza San Marco, Venice, Bernardo Bellotto, 1735

This view of the piazza san marco, venice shows bellotto's devotion to faithful observation. At the left is the church of st. Mark with the doge's palace just beyond, leading to the lagoon. Vertically dividing the canvas is the campanile (bell tower) with the procuratie nuove (a government building) extending to the right. At the extreme right, opposite st. Mark's, is the façade of the church of san geminiano which was removed in the 19th century by napoleon. The two wings of the procuratie were then joined across the west end of the piazza. Bernardo bellotto was the nephew and student of canaletto (giovanni antonio canal, 1697–1768) who ran one of the most productive painting workshops in italy. Like his uncle, bellotto specialized in vedute (views) of italy, especially venice, which were purchased avidly by british aristocrats traveling on the grand tour. Bellotto later worked for the courts of dresden, vienna, warsaw, and munich, painting topographical and imaginary views of those cities. Object Type: painting. Date: 1735. Place of creation: Italy, 18th century. Dimensions: Framed: 164.5 x 264 x 12 cm (64 3/4 x 103 15/16 x 4 3/4 in.); Unframed: 136.2 x 232.5 cm (53 5/8 x 91 9/16 in.). Medium: oil on canvas. Collection: Cleveland Museum of Art. Clevelandart 1962.169
Edit image
Author: Bernardo BellottoSource: https://commons.wikimedia.org/

Loading...

0 downloads
Loading...
paintings by bernardo bellotto in the cleveland museum of artpaintings of venice by bernardo bellottooil on canvascleveland museum of artbernardo bellotto

MORE LIKE THIS

Creazilla logo
Over 10 million free graphic resources for content creators and designers.
© 2018 - 2025 Creazilla
Our resourcesAll imagesPhotosDigital illustrationsClipartIconsPNG ImagesEmojisSilhouettesTraditional Art3D ModelsVectorsFontsColor namesColor palettesGradientsAudioAnimationVideosTemplates
InformationAbout CreazillaTerms of useTech teamPrivacy policyLicence Information
FeedbackContact Us