BELLOTTO, Bernardo - b. 1720 Venezia, d. 1780 Warszawa - WGA

BELLOTTO, Bernardo

(b. 1720 Venezia, d. 1780 Warszawa)

Italian painter, nephew, pupil, and assistant of Canaletto (Antonio Canal) in Venice.

At about the age of fourteen he entered the service of his uncle Canaletto as a student. In 1742 Bernardo left to spend some time in Rome, just as his uncle Antonio had done at the same age, and apparently with the same goal: to study architectural and topographical painting at the place where the best practitioners had lived, or at any rate where they had worked. A year later he returned to Venice, by way of Florence. In the archives of the Venetian guild Bellotto is mentioned for the last time in 1743.

We can be certain that Bellotto worked closely together with his uncle during his last years in Venice. In a number of paintings of about 1740 from Canaletto’s workshop Bellotto’s hand can be recognized with a reasonable degree of certainty in stylistic idiosyncrasies which were to become increasingly characteristic of his work. Almost doubtlessly, other canvases were painted by Canaletto after composition drawings by Bellotto.

As an independent artist, however, Bellotto comes most clearly to the fore in two pairs of paintings from 1744 and 1745, which represent the village of Gazzada near Varese and the ramparts of Turin, respectively. Even aside from the motifs, which are completely different from those of Canaletto, it is especially the use of colour that one notices: not the light, clear pastel colours of Canaletto’s middle period, but rather saturated greens and browns, and a good deal of shadow, against skies which can be of a very cool blue.

Bellotto left Italy for good in 1747, to spend the rest of his life working at various European courts, notably Dresden and Warsaw, where he died. He called himself Canaletto, and this caused confusion (perhaps deliberate) between his work and his uncle’s, particularly in views of Venice.

He worked in Dresden for eleven years as court painter to the elector-king August III of Saxony and Poland. He was commissioned by August III to paint three series of large-sized canvases - twenty-nine in all - with scenes of the cities of Dresden and Pirna and of the fortresses Sonnenstein and Königstein. These canvases, most of them almost two and a half metres wide, were to be hung in the royal painting gallery in the Stallhof. In addition he painted a similar series, though of more modest dimensions, for the courtier Count Brühl, and a number of even smaller ones for various other private individuals.

It was in Dresden that Bellotto’s style finally was fully developed. It is characterized by the greatest possible topographical precision, complete control of light and mathematical perspective, and a consequent pursuit of clarity and organization. Not surprisingly, Bellotto’s work shows no trace of the virtuosity with which his uncle would dash figures and other details onto the canvas. His brushwork is unhurried and descriptive, almost severe, and in his use of colours he constantly seems to be seeking to reproduce precisely the hues he had observed in the open air. Yet the most remarkable feature of Bellotto’s work is his handling of light. He seems not to be occupied with atmospheric perspective; an almost unreal clarity and calm pervades his canvases, and the link which has been suggested between these features and the ideals of the enlightened despots for whom he worked may not be far from the mark.

In 1758 Bellotto fled from the violence of the Seven Years War to Vienna, where he entered the services of Empress Maria Theresia for three years. For her and her courtiers he also painted a series of large canvases with cityscapes and views of imperial and princely residences, but most of the canvases produced during this period were intended to embellish the imperial palaces. Perhaps this is why the views of residences are expressive of a taste for decor and theatre much more than the Dresden canvases.

Toward the end of the war Bellotto returned to Dresden, the city he knew so well, by way of Munich. But there was no longer any place for court painters in the capital of Saxony. The city had suffered terribly, the prince was impoverished and in artistic matters the lay members of the recently founded Akademie held sway, who espoused classical ideals rather than the realism preferred by the royal house. Bellotto adjusted. He painted two more views, both of the ruins, one of which was actually purchased by the Akademie, and also produced architectural fantasies in classicist style.

As soon as he could, however, Bellotto left Dresden, finding himself eventually in Warsaw, where he settled and continued to work from 1767 until his death in 1780. Here he was at the court of an enlightened prince once more, this time King Stanislaus Poniatowski. As August III had done in Dresden, this prince was attempting to create a modern Western European cultural climate in Poland, along Italian lines. Besides many palace decorations and a series of Roman townscapes Bellotto again painted in Warsaw a series of topographical views of the large size he had used earlier: twenty views of Warsaw itself and four of Wilanow Palace. Virtually the entire series decorates the ‘Canaletto Hall’ in Warsaw’s Royal Palace.

In marked contrast to Canaletto, who worked largely for the tourist market, virtually all Bellotto’s paintings were intended for royal residences and galleries. It is very likely for this reason that, whereas Canaletto’s oeuvre attracted a hoard of imitators and followers, Bellotto remained a relatively isolated figure in the history of art, whose work was only slowly discovered, recognized and distinguished from that of the other Canaletto in the course of the 20th century.

Bellotto’s style is distinguished from his uncle’s by an almost Dutch interest in massed clouds, cast shadows, and rich foliage. His colouring is also generally more sombre, much of his work being characterized by a steely grey. The best collections of his work are in Dresden (Gemäldegalerie) and Warsaw (National Museum). In the rebuilding of Warsaw after the Second World War his pictures were used as guides, even in the reconstruction of architectural ornament.

Architectural Capriccio with a Self-Portrait
Architectural Capriccio with a Self-Portrait by

Architectural Capriccio with a Self-Portrait

In this architectural capriccio Bernardo Bellotto has depicted himself in the crimson robes and golden stole of the Venetian nobility, standing before a magnificent arrangement of columned arches and colonnaded galleries. He steps forward with a gesture of proud display, as if inviting the viewer to behold and admire his latest artistic creation - the splendid painted architectural capriccio before which he stands - as proof of his artistic capabilities and invention. Attended by his faithful servant Checo (Francesco), he is followed by an elderly ecclesiastic carrying a folder, which may contain sketches. At the left, a young peasant boy points to Bellotto as if to encourage the viewer to take particular note of the splendidly-dressed painter.

Bellotto inserted himself into the compositions of important paintings on other occasions, too.

Capriccio Padovano
Capriccio Padovano by

Capriccio Padovano

The painting is an early work, executed before the painter’s first trip to Rome, and is still close to the style of Canaletto.

Capriccio of the Capitol
Capriccio of the Capitol by

Capriccio of the Capitol

The painting is part of a cycle of four canvases which are similar in shape and subject matter. The young Bellotto painted them during a seminal visit to Rome. Gradually, he was to move away from the faithful view of glimpses of Roman monuments. Instead he favoured the freer capriccio or imaginary view. This still included real buildings (which were truthfully reproduced) but they were set in an eclectic combination of invented architecture which in turn was given an evocative setting. Such capricci were very popular at the time.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 19 minutes):

Francesco Maria Veracini: Suite in F Major

Capriccio with the Colosseum
Capriccio with the Colosseum by

Capriccio with the Colosseum

The painting is part of a cycle of four canvases which are similar in shape and subject matter. The young Bellotto painted them during a seminal visit to Rome. Gradually, he was to move away from the faithful view of glimpses of Roman monuments. Instead he favoured the freer capriccio or imaginary view. This still included real buildings (which were truthfully reproduced) but they were set in an eclectic combination of invented architecture which in turn was given an evocative setting. Such capricci were very popular at the time.

Dresden from the Left Bank of the Elbe, below the Fortifications
Dresden from the Left Bank of the Elbe, below the Fortifications by

Dresden from the Left Bank of the Elbe, below the Fortifications

The title now normally given to the painting is somewhat misleading, the painting’s real subject is the new town on the opposite shore of the Elbe.

The view of the city occupies no more than a narrow strip of the painting; none of Bellotto’s other Dresden vedute adheres so strongly to the horizontal. Broad stretches in the foreground are filled with incidental characters from farming life, with a cart, country folk resting and out walking, anglers and shepherds; the walls of the fortifications have been used to hang out the laundry to dry. Bellotto adopted several motifs from the Venetian landscape painter Francesco Zuccarelli, the cow shown here in the middleground among them.

Dresden from the Right Bank of the Elbe, above the Augustusbrücke
Dresden from the Right Bank of the Elbe, above the Augustusbrücke by

Dresden from the Right Bank of the Elbe, above the Augustusbrücke

This painting is considered to be Bellotto’s first view of Dresden. Sitting at the centre before the city backdrop is a draughtsman who can only be Bellotto himself. An older man in a green coat points out the painting’s subject to Bellotto, while a second man with a round, reddened head stands behind him to the left. No historical sources exist to help us identify these and the figures further to the right, but tradition has it that the more corpulent figure is the court painter Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich, who was simultaneously inspector of the K�nigliche Gemäldegalerie, and that the older man is Johann Alexander Thiele, Bellotto’s predecessor as vedutista at the court of Dresden. The gentlemen further to the right have been identified as the royal physician Filippo di Violante, the corpulent countertenor Niccolò Pozzi (known as Niccolini), one of the court Turks, and — standing slightly apart — the court-jester Fr�hlich. Only the last can be definitively identified, for he is known from contemporary illustrations that show him wearing the costume of the Salzkammergut region of Austria.

The painting has a pendant, assuredly the most famous view of Dresden, which is taken from the same side of the Elbe but from a point further downstream, below the Augustusbr�cke. That composition, dating from 1748, more or less mirrors the work on view here so that the diagonal course of the river in the two pictures is symmetrically arranged.

Dresden, the Frauenkirche and the Rampische Gasse
Dresden, the Frauenkirche and the Rampische Gasse by

Dresden, the Frauenkirche and the Rampische Gasse

Bellotto was not the first painter at the Saxon court employed specially to depict topographical scenes. The tradition of this type of work in Saxony reaches back at least to the first quarter of the seventeenth century and Bellotto’s work ought to be interpreted within this tradition. Bellotto’s paintings of Dresden show the overall picture of the city, the Zwinger, the principal squares and the two most important churches, the Kreuzkirche and the Frauenkirche. The artist also produced engravings after most of these paintings.

Perpendicular to the image surface and stretching towards the east runs the Innere Rampische Gasse. The left foreground is taken up entirely by the southern wall of the Frauenkirche. This creation of Georg Bahr, completed in 1743 and destroyed in 1945, was hemmed in on all sides by buildings, so that it was impossible to gain a picture of the church in its entirety.

The painter probably used a camera obscurato reduce the church’s height; because of the short distance the church is represented with a marked perspective distortion. Undoubtedly in order to prevent such distortions from dominating the image completely and to achieve a better spatial effect, the church is not shown frontally. Instead, Bellotto has shifted his attention to the right, so that the view is determined by the axis of the Rampische Gasse and only the roof and south wall of the church can be seen.

The Frauenkirche was the most important modern church of Dresden, the Kreuzkirche the most important old one. In the pendant to this painting (also in Gemäldegalerie, Dresden) Bellotto represented the Kreuzkirche.

Dresden, the Ruins of the Pirnaische Vorstadt
Dresden, the Ruins of the Pirnaische Vorstadt by

Dresden, the Ruins of the Pirnaische Vorstadt

This painting was believed lost for a long time. For almost two centuries it led a hidden existence as an anonymous work in the depot of the Mus�e des Beaux-Arts at Troyes, where it was thought to represent the city of Lisbon following its destruction by an earthquake in 1755. It was not until 1974 that it was recognized as a painting of the ruins of the Pirnaische Vorstadt of Dresden by Bellotto. In 1986 the painting was identified as the one named in the inscription on the etching executed by Bellotto after his own painting, as being owned by Prince Xaver of Saxony.

Dresden, the Ruins of the Pirnaische Vorstadt
Dresden, the Ruins of the Pirnaische Vorstadt by

Dresden, the Ruins of the Pirnaische Vorstadt

The etching was made by Bellotto after his own painting which was believed lost for a long time. For almost two centuries the canvas led a hidden existence as an anonymous work in the depot of the Mus�e des Beaux-Arts at Troyes, where it was thought to represent the city of Lisbon following its destruction by an earthquake in 1755. It was not until 1974 that it was recognized as a painting of the ruins of the Pirnaische Vorstadt of Dresden by Bellotto. In 1986 the painting was identified as the one named in the inscription on the etching, as being owned by Prince Xaver of Saxony.

Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna Seen from the East
Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna Seen from the East by

Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna Seen from the East

This topographically correct view (and its companion piece Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna Seen from its Belvedere) shows also Prince Joseph Wenzel standing in front of his suburban palace.

Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna Seen from the East
Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna Seen from the East by

Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna Seen from the East

This topographically correct view (and its companion piece Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna Seen from the East) shows also Prince Joseph Wenzel standing in front of his suburban palace.

New Market Square in Dresden
New Market Square in Dresden by

New Market Square in Dresden

The painting is part of an exceptional series of views of Dresden commissioned by the Elector of Saxony. A number of things are of interest: the large size of the paintings; the unfailingly splendid light; the clarity of the views; and finally the variety of different angles from which Bellotto framed the city. They supply fascinating views of a great Baroque city in its prime.

New Market Square in Dresden from the Jüdenhof
New Market Square in Dresden from the Jüdenhof by

New Market Square in Dresden from the Jüdenhof

The painting collection of Augustus I, the Strong was placed in the reconstructed old equerry of the J�denhof in 1731, seen on the right of the picture. Under Augustus II, ascended to throne in 1733, the picture gallery became world famous. Bellotto depicts the prince elector in his state coach approaching the entrance to the gallery.

Pirna Seen from the Harbour Town
Pirna Seen from the Harbour Town by

Pirna Seen from the Harbour Town

After the large vedute of Dresden, the royal capital, Bellotto turned his attention to the smaller town of Pirna, further up the Elbe, with the royal castle of Sonnenstein rising magnificently above it. The artist’s eleven views of Pirna, taken from greatly differing angles (but always showing Sonnenstein Castle), number among his most beautiful works.

The foreground of this veduta shows the small harbour at Pirna, which opens onto the Elbe. The pool was only used to store river-barges in winter; ships loaded with goods would moor downriver, beyond the customs house, on the corner to the far right, which stands to this day. The veduta shows few of the town’s better-known buildings: the castle rises sublimely above it, and the small guardhouses can clearly be seen on the tips of the bastions.

The main fascination of this view, however, lies in the row of small, simple buildings set parallel to the picture plane, some half-timbered, some in plain masonry, but all shown fairly close up with their sheds and outhouses, washing and stacked wood. Bellotto performs a daring artistic feat by casting these shabby buildings, so central to the composition, totally in shadow. Dutch painting of the seventeenth century frequently used such effects.

Indeed, Bellotto underlines here the ‘Dutch’ character of his Pirna vedute by adding elements typical of genre painting: laundry is being hung out to dry in the foreground, using a gnarled willow behind a hut as a clothes-pole. Further to the right, a boat is landing, and the boatman is in the process of casting a rope to some men ashore. To the far left, however, where the veduta brings the castle, church and wooden shacks tightly together, a herdsman has driven his cattle to drink in the shallow waters.

Pirna Seen from the Harbour Town (detail)
Pirna Seen from the Harbour Town (detail) by

Pirna Seen from the Harbour Town (detail)

The main fascination of this view, however, lies in the row of small, simple buildings set parallel to the picture plane, some half-timbered, some in plain masonry, but all shown fairly close up with their sheds and outhouses, washing and stacked wood. Bellotto performs a daring artistic feat by casting these shabby buildings, so central to the composition, totally in shadow. Dutch painting of the seventeenth century frequently used such effects.

Bellotto underlines here the ‘Netherlandish’ character of his Pirna vedute by adding elements typical of genre painting: laundry is being hung out to dry in the foreground, using a gnarled willow behind a hut as a clothes-pole.

Rio dei Mendicanti with the Scuola di San Marco
Rio dei Mendicanti with the Scuola di San Marco by

Rio dei Mendicanti with the Scuola di San Marco

A nephew and follower of Canaletto, Bernardo Bellotto applies the clear reporter’s vision of the master to a slower and more intimate exploration of reality. And from his earliest works, Bellotto softens the formal rigour of Canaletto into natural, simple, concrete observations, and his brilliant, kaleidoscopic palette into a dense range of colours, tending towards the coldly bright. In the Rio dei Mendicanti the buildings of the left bank lie partly in shadow and partly in full sunlight. And beyond the bridge standing between light and shade, the dome of the Emiliani chapel in the church of S. Michele in Isola can be seen in the distance. On the opposite bank the corners of the Scuola of San Marco and the seventeenth century building in the foreground are darkened as the shadows of the hour before sunset gather. The density of the chiaroscuro and the paint itself lend the view a fascinating concreteness with every detail assuming an undramatized presence.

Rio dei Mendicanti with the Scuola di San Marco (detail)
Rio dei Mendicanti with the Scuola di San Marco (detail) by

Rio dei Mendicanti with the Scuola di San Marco (detail)

This is a youthful work, probably completed when Bellotto was still an apprentice in the studio of his uncle Canaletto, whose manner can be plainly discerned in this painting.

Rio dei Mendicanti with the Scuola di San Marco (detail)
Rio dei Mendicanti with the Scuola di San Marco (detail) by

Rio dei Mendicanti with the Scuola di San Marco (detail)

This is a youthful work, probably completed when Bellotto was still an apprentice in the studio of his uncle Canaletto, whose manner can be plainly discerned in this painting.

Rome: View of the Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano
Rome: View of the Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano by

Rome: View of the Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano

The painting shows a view of the Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano looking east, with the Scala Santa beyond. It was long considered the work of Canaletto, however, recently it has been universally acknowledged as an early masterpiece by his nephew. The picture is a key work because it illustrates Bellotto’s emergence as a distinctive artistic personality in his own right, also demonstrating the nature of the artistic relationship between him and his uncle.

The Arno in Florence
The Arno in Florence by

The Arno in Florence

The vedute representing parts of Florence are early works. The two views of Florence in Budapest, the Piazza della Signoria in Florence, and its pendant, the Arno in Florence, are presumed to have been produced in the 1740s, when Bellotto made a long study tour of Italy and painted views of many Italian towns, including Verona, Turin and Florence. In these early works the influence of the older Canaletto is strikingly obvious: as tradition demanded, the young view-painter at his debut kept his construction compact and strictly observed the laws of perspective. However, accurate observation and a good eye for details were evident assets of the young painter.

The Fortress of Königstein
The Fortress of Königstein by

The Fortress of Königstein

This painting, commissioned by Augustus III, elector of Saxony and king of Poland, is one of five large canvases depicting the renovated medieval fortress in the countryside near Dresden.

The Kreuzkirche in Dresden
The Kreuzkirche in Dresden by

The Kreuzkirche in Dresden

A few years later, during his second stay in Saxony, Bellotto depicted the demolition of this Gothic church. There exists an almost identical version in the Gemäldegalerie, Dresden.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 21 minutes):

Ludwig August Lebrun: Concerto in C major for oboe

The Kreuzkirche in Dresden
The Kreuzkirche in Dresden by

The Kreuzkirche in Dresden

A few years later, during his second stay in Saxony, Bellotto depicted the demolition of this Gothic church. There exists an almost identical version in The Hermitage, St. Petersburg.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 21 minutes):

Ludwig August Lebrun: Concerto in C major for oboe

The Moat of the Zwinger in Dresden
The Moat of the Zwinger in Dresden by

The Moat of the Zwinger in Dresden

Bernardo Bellotto’s views of Dresden demonstrate astonishing precision both in their topographical detailing and their mastery of perspective. Such precision has frequently been attributed to the use of a camera obscura. Bellotto’s paintings allow the viewer to walk around the city; the various locations of his vedute complement each other and forever provide new angles on already familiar sights.

This painting is part of an exceptional series of views of Dresden commissioned by the Elector of Saxony. A number of things are of interest: the large size of the paintings; the unfailingly splendid light; the clarity of the views; and finally the variety of different angles from which Bellotto framed the city. They supply fascinating views of a great Baroque city in its prime. The subject and composition seem particularly unusual in this view. The Zwinger, one of the masterpieces of Baroque architecture, has been placed to one side where it is obscured by trees; indeed, buildings only occupy a small amount of the picture’s centre, for the focus of the composition is the moat.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 28 minutes):

George Frideric Handel: Water Music, Suite No. 1

The Moat of the Zwinger in Dresden (detail)
The Moat of the Zwinger in Dresden (detail) by

The Moat of the Zwinger in Dresden (detail)

Imposing buildings can be seen directly above the moat, such as the brightly painted house dating from 1744 belonging to Andreas Adam, Secretary to the Department of Public Buildings, with its five large chimneys on the roof. Beside that is the squat roof of the Wilsdruffer Tor, which concealed the water tank for the fountains of the Zwinger.

The Piazza della Signoria in Florence
The Piazza della Signoria in Florence by

The Piazza della Signoria in Florence

The vedute representing parts of Florence are early works. The two views of Florence in Budapest, the Piazza della Signoria in Florence, and its pendant, the Arno in Florence, are presumed to have been produced in the 1740s, when Bellotto made a long study tour of Italy and painted views of many Italian towns, including Verona, Turin and Florence. In these early works the influence of the older Canaletto is strikingly obvious: as tradition demanded, the young view-painter at his debut kept his construction compact and strictly observed the laws of perspective. However, accurate observation and a good eye for details were evident assets of the young painter.

The Piazza della Signoria in Florence (detail)
The Piazza della Signoria in Florence (detail) by

The Piazza della Signoria in Florence (detail)

The Ruins of the Old Kreuzkirche in Dresden
The Ruins of the Old Kreuzkirche in Dresden by

The Ruins of the Old Kreuzkirche in Dresden

In 1760 the Kreuzkirche, the oldest church in Dresden, was shelled by Prussian artillery; a blaze ensued during which the building collapsed. The church tower, though damaged, remained standing. When the work of reconstructing the church commenced it was decided to preserve the original tower. In June 1765, however, when the construction of the new church was already under way, the greater part of the tower collapsed nevertheless.

This painting is one of Bellotto’s later works, painted during his second stay in Saxony. It demonstrates his quite extraordinary, perhaps unique, capacity to capture the spirit of an event. In this case it was the demolition of the Gothic church of the Holy Cross in Dresden’s New Market Square. This image of ruin, bordering on an anatomical dissection of the mortally wounded church, was to reappear two centuries after Bellotto’s day with the devastating bombing of Dresden during the Second World War.

Vienna, Panorama from Palais Kaunitz
Vienna, Panorama from Palais Kaunitz by

Vienna, Panorama from Palais Kaunitz

In the Panorama from Palais Kaunitz Bellotto attempted to summarize a very broad panorama in a painting of limited dimensions. The garden, the facade of the palace on the garden side, the church of Mariahilf and a panorama are all represented in a perhaps somewhat laboriously executed but exceptionally fascinating perspectival painting.

In the left foreground Wenzel Kaunitz is depicted with several servants on the roof terrace of one of the outbuildings of his palace at Mariahilf near Vienna. Kaunitz’s palace was one of the approximately four hundred country estates of the nobility and the prosperous citizenry which were built in the environs of Vienna, after the aggression of the Turks had finally been quashed in 1683. Count Wenzel Kaunitz (1711—1794) had risen from a humble civil servant in the diplomatic corps to an almighty Chancellor and was the confidant of Empress Maria Theresa. In recognition of his merits he was admitted to the Order of the Golden Fleece and later awarded the title of “F�rst”. He is shown on the left side of the terrace, identifiable by the red ribbon of the Golden Fleece.

Vienna, Panorama from Palais Kaunitz (detail)
Vienna, Panorama from Palais Kaunitz (detail) by

Vienna, Panorama from Palais Kaunitz (detail)

Similar size and construction authorize the assumption that the picture may have been one of the series of Vienna residences and palaces painted by Bellotto for Maria Theresa in Vienna in 1759-60. The arrangement and the wide, sunny stretch of panorama, with the garden and the characteristic portrait figures in the foreground, are reminiscent of the vedute of the Belvedere, Schlosshof and other familiar Viennese sights.

Vienna, the Lobkowitzplatz
Vienna, the Lobkowitzplatz by

Vienna, the Lobkowitzplatz

Following his departure from Dresden Bellotto lived in Vienna from 1758 till 1761, where he worked for Empress Maria Theresa and her courtiers Kaunitz and Liechtenstein. The paintings he executed for the court have been imperial property ever since. For a long time most of them were kept at the Castle of Laxenburg. Since 1890 they have all been preserved in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.

The Lobkowitzplatz, the former Schweinemarkt, is seen from the southwest, with Palais Dietrichstein — later Lobkowitz — on the left and on the right the Burgerspital. On the opposite side of the square, in front of the wall of the Capuchin monastery, rises the Missionskreuz. On the left the apse of the Dorothea Church on the Spiegelgasse can still be seen, while in the background the tower of St. Stephen’s Cathedral stands out against the light.

Bellotto, however, has not represented visual reality as it appeared to him, but rather — following his visual practice — chosen to beautify it. In fact Bellotto has made a composite of two separate views in this canvas.

Bellotto’s paintings for Maria Theresa may be divided into two groups: views of imperial palaces and views within the city of Vienna. The six Viennese town views fall into three sets of two paintings each. In terms of both form and content, the Lobkowitzplatz forms a pair together with the Mehlmarkt (also in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna). Though the Lobkowitzplatz and the Mehlmarkt seem at first sight to be traditional representations of a square or a palace on a square, on closer inspection these paintings appear to have a monastery in common, which probably is the true subject of the paintings. Whereas the present canvas depicts the back wall around the Capuchin monastery, its companion piece shows the main entrance of the Capuchin church.

The other four works in this group can also be divided into two pairs. There are two paintings which show the Monastery of the Scots and two showing the buildings of the Jesuits and the Jesuit-led University of Vienna.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 8 minutes):

Franz Schubert: Der Wanderer, Franz Liszt’s transcription

View of Dresden from the Right Bank of the Elbe with the Augustus Bridge
View of Dresden from the Right Bank of the Elbe with the Augustus Bridge by

View of Dresden from the Right Bank of the Elbe with the Augustus Bridge

Bellotto painted his first large view of Dresden in 1747, and complemented it a year later with a pendant. Replicas of the two pictures, painted in a smaller format but from his own hand, came also to the Gemäldegalerie in 1778.

The panorama of the city, shown in this picture, was to become the classic view of Dresden, seen approximately from the level of the Japanische Palais: the right-hand side of the painting is dominated by the Catholic Hofkirche, shining in its light shades and intensified by its reflection in the river. Although the tower had not yet been finished, Bellotto faked it after inspecting the architect’s plans. Behind the Hofkirche we see parts of the royal residence, including the lofty Hausmannsturm, which seems to rest on the roof of the Hofkirche. The Augustusbr�cke as designed by Matthias Daniel Poppelmann sweeps across the Elbe, and acts as it were as the plinth for the buildings that form the Br�hlsche Terrasse behind: the palace of Anton Egon von Fiirstenberg, who ruled Dresden whenever Augustus the Strong was away in Poland, followed by the Palais Br�hl with its tall windows in the form of semicircular arches, and then the Br�hlsche Bibliothek and the Gemäldegalerie of Count Br�hl, Prime Minister to Augustus III. Rising up directly behind them is the majestic dome of the Protestant Frauenkirche, designed by George Bahr, newly built but already an integral part of Dresden’s skyline.

The precision of Bellotto’s vedute makes it easy to forget their carefully calculated compositions. The way the river forms a diagonal, or the bank in the foreground a wedge shape, or the building on the far left acts as a link between picture and frame: all accord with specific rules and conventions that developed from landscape painting. Bellotto adds a number of incidental figures, most strikingly an impoverished family at the front left who have settled outside a simple wooden hut.

View of Gazzada near Varese
View of Gazzada near Varese by

View of Gazzada near Varese

This view and another (View of the Villa Cagnola at Gazzada near Varese) in the same museum have recently been restored and we can once again see the crystal transparency of the light.

One of the great Venetian view painters, Bellotto can be compared to Canaletto and Guardi. Canaletto’s abstract poetry was dependent on a visual rediscovery of the historic landscape, while Guardi gave it a lyric vibrancy by means of atmospheric effects. Bellotto’s views, however, present specific and impressive images of reality. He is thus the major representative of the objective view, obtained by the use of the camera obscura. Bellotto’s purpose in utilizing the device was not to give a photographic order to things, nor to exalt their atmospheric emanations; his aim was rather to seek out the nature and inner truth of the landscape, whether urban, rural or marine. His intuition anticipated Romanticism.

View of Pirna from the Sonnenstein Castle
View of Pirna from the Sonnenstein Castle by

View of Pirna from the Sonnenstein Castle

The painting is part of a series of views of Dresden and Pirna commissioned by the Elector of Saxony.

View of Turin near the Royal Palace
View of Turin near the Royal Palace by

View of Turin near the Royal Palace

Turin is seen here from an unusual vantage point. The spectator is situated somewhere on the ramparts of one of the lunettes near the royal palace and looks toward the west, obliquely along the moat which was part of the fortifications. This lunette is surrounded by earthworks, enclosing an area we see as the flat meadow on the right. The palace garden is situated on the bastion to the left of the moat, with the tower called ‘il Garritone’ on the left in the corner. Behind the main building of the palace, which is shaded, rises the opulent dome of the chapel of San Sidone; and the tower of the Cathedral soars above its western wing. The old city with its multitude of towers is visible beyond the palace complex to the right, while further into the distance we see the Alps, their tallest peaks capped with snow.

The scene is full of human activity. Scaffolding has been erected against the retaining wall for the masons who are repairing it and who have their mortar pit and their supply of bricks in the meadow on the opposite side of the moat. The farmer’s cart has apparently brought material. We also see women doing their washing. A dignified and elegantly dressed gentleman - a courtier or perhaps the King himself - draws his companion’s attention to the restoration work in progress.

Both in its breadth and depth the scene is divided in two by the flat, brightly lit wing of the palace, which runs parallel to the image surface. The two parts are connected by the moat which is seen in a strong perspective. Bellotto apparently borrowed this unrelenting diagonal, which leads the eye of the beholder into the depth, from his teacher Canaletto.

The painter had to bring a good deal of ingenuity to bear on this composition, given that it was not possible to see this view from one vantage point. From a viewpoint directly opposite the rampart of the fortification Bellotto could see the Garritone to his left, but he almost certainly drew the view of the palace itself, sitting in or near this tower. Furthermore he ‘straightened’ the fa�ade of the western wing. There is another curious feature of the three-dimensionality evoked in this work. On the one hand the strong linear perspective induces our eye to jump some tens of kilometres towards the Alps, on the other, all the buildings, even far away into the distance, have been represented with equal sharpness, as if by the zoom-lens of a camera. This effect is present in all panorama paintings by Bellotto. It could be explained by a need to convey a maximum of topographical information and precision. It is not known whether Bellotto made individual detailed sketches of the remoter buildings on the spot, or whether he studied them with the aid of a telescope-like optical instrument.

The painting has a pendant which represents the old bridge over the Po in Turin (also in Galleria Sabauda, Turin). Both canvases were commissioned by Carlo Emmanuele III, King of Sardinia and Duke of Savoy. They were Bellotto’s first royal commissions, and he accordingly signed them both with his name and surname.

View of Verona and the River Adige from the Ponte Nuovo
View of Verona and the River Adige from the Ponte Nuovo by

View of Verona and the River Adige from the Ponte Nuovo

The campanile of S. Anastasia and the ancient Scaliger castle seem to protect the quiet flow of the river. For once, Bellotto opted to capture the ordinary life of the people and the everyday look of the city. He included the small houses built along the shores of the river which were to be demolished at the end of the nineteenth century to make way for flood protection embankments.

View of Vienna from the Belvedere
View of Vienna from the Belvedere by

View of Vienna from the Belvedere

View of Warsaw from the Royal Palace
View of Warsaw from the Royal Palace by

View of Warsaw from the Royal Palace

When Bellotto arrived in Warsaw in 1766 on his way to Saint Petersburg, Stanislaus II August Poniatowski, the new King of Poland, offered him a position as painter at the Polish court. Bellotto accepted the offer and sent for his wife and children (who were still in Dresden) to join him in Warsaw, where he spent the last fourteen years of his life. His most important work from this period is a series of twenty-six views of Warsaw, intended for the entrance to the royal suite of the palace, which was called “Canaletto Hall”, after the painters assumed name. The views show locations related to the life of Poniatowski or containing allusions to the King’s illustrious predecessors. They were grouped around a painting by Bellotto that showed the election of Poniatowski as king of Poland. The large View of Warsaw from the Royal Palace, one of the most impressive works from Bellotto’s later years, did not belong to this group. Probably it was intended for the King’s private apartments.

In the painting one looks toward the South, along the wall of the Royal Palace on the right. A monumental staircase gives access to the royal suite on the first floor. This staircase, designed in 1773, the year in which the painting was made, was never actually built. In front of the palace the terrace on the Vistula can be seen. Both on the staircase and the terrace the spectator’s attention is attracted by numerous small figures. In the middle of the terrace there is a riding school, with a young man receiving a riding lesson, and on the right a sculptor’s workshop is seen. The lighted Lubomirski Palace below the terrace on the left forms the transition to the middle distance.

In the upper right of the scene, churches and palaces are shown rising along the street called the Krakowskie Przedmiescie, or the Cracow Suburb. These buildings had a special significance to the monarchy and the street itself linked the palaces outside the city, Wilanow and Ujazdow, to the palace in the city. Thus, the street had turned into a Warsaw Via Sacra or Rue Royale. From right to left we see, inter alia. Saint Anne’s Church, directly behind the palace; the church of the Carmelites; the two towers of the church of the Holy Cross; the Radziwill Palace and the church of the Sisters of the Visitation. In the middle of the scene are the buildings on the slope leading down to the Vistula and below that on the far left the river itself, with the small wooden cottages in the hamlet of Powisle huddled on its bank. To the left of the centre background stands the white Kazimierzowski Palace, the main building of the military academy.

This canvas is highly successful in its rendering of an attractive, sweeping panorama; the blue sky, the long shadows and the light from the west which casts an orange glow over the scene are suggestive of a warm spring or summer evening. The various elevations in the painting, which leap from front to back and rise gradually from left to right, contribute to the illusion of space. The buildings along Krakowskie Przedmiescie Street rendered in an interesting alterations of lighted and shaded elements, create a strong sense of depth. By means of perspective and light the artist has ensured that the spectator’s eye finally is directed to the gleaming white building of the military academy in the distance.

The View of Warsaw from the Royal Palaces the last large town view painted by Bellotto. By this point the staffage had developed into an element of no less importance than the architecture. The painting attests magnificently to the artistes capacities, and constitutes a brilliant culminating point in Bellotto’s oeuvre. Moreover, it marks a final stage in the development of topographical painting.

View of Warsaw from the Royal Palace (detail)
View of Warsaw from the Royal Palace (detail) by

View of Warsaw from the Royal Palace (detail)

In front of the palace the terrace on the Vistula can be seen. Both on the staircase and the terrace the spectator’s attention is attracted by numerous small figures. In the middle of the terrace there is a riding school, with a young man receiving a riding lesson, and on the right a sculptor’s workshop is seen. The lighted Lubomirski Palace below the terrace on the left forms the transition to the middle distance.

View of the Grand Canal at San Stae
View of the Grand Canal at San Stae by

View of the Grand Canal at San Stae

This painting is the work of the young Bellotto, previously regarded as the work of Canaletto. The lean figures, rendered with thick brush strokes, are looking almost like caricatures.

View of the Villa Cagnola at Gazzada near Varese
View of the Villa Cagnola at Gazzada near Varese by

View of the Villa Cagnola at Gazzada near Varese

This view and another (View of Gazzada near Varese) in the same museum have recently been restored and we can once again see the crystal transparency of the light. The splendid early masterpieces were painted while the young artist was traveling in Lombardy. They manage to combine poetry with faithful realism in the way they capture the feel of the climate and season. He succeeded in catching the movement of the early fall wind which was pushing the clouds along and drying the washing on the line. He painstakingly and lovingly portrayed the simple colours of the stones, the roof tiles, the clothes people wore, and the way the leaves are just beginning to turn colour. All this makes these paintings perhaps the most heartfelt portraits ever painted of the region.

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