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Artwork Detail
 
 
The Doge on the Bucintoro near the Riva di Sant^Elena (detail)
Item: DMP04144
Size:
(inch)
30x30
Price:
(USD)
ListPrice:$
OurPrice:$
Artist: GUARDI, Francesco
Location: Musée du Louvre, Paris
Note: The presented price is for referrence. For complex content of the painting, manual cost evaluation will be done after the order is made. The painting will be unframed and be shipped in rolled tube.

Other size(inch)
  36x36 $8,417.20
  40x40 $10,497.33

 
Author's biography
Italian painter, the best-known member of a family of artists. He is now famous for his views of Venice, indeed next to Canaletto he is the most celebrated view painter of the 18th century, but he produced work on a great variety of subjects and seems to have concentrated on views only after the death of his brother Gianantonio (1699-1760). Until then Francesco's personality was largely submerged in the family studio, of which Gianantonio was head and which handled commissions of every kind.The last of the great Venetian vedutisti, Francesco Guardi has achieved recognition only in the 20th century. In comparison to Canaletto and Bellotto, Guardi distinguished himself by a very liberal concept of the cityscape. He did not strive to represent each object accurately and minutely, choosing instead to emphasize the general mood and atmosphere of the scene. This holds true not only for his capriccios, but also for his cityscapes. This subjective approach held out little appeal for those who bought vedute in the eighteenth century, a substantial number of whom were foreigners and preferred the exact, almost photographic views of Canaletto and Bellotto. It was only much later that Guardi's painterly qualities came to be valued.Francesco Guardi came from a family of painters. His father and his brothers Gian Antonio and Niccolo practiced the profession. His sister Maria Cecilia married the famous Venetian history painter Giovanni Battista Tiepolo in 1719. Francesco did not learn the profession from his father, who had died when the boy was four years old, but possibly in the studio of his thirteen-year-older brother Gian Antonio. Together with his brother Francesco set up a family studio probably in the early 1730s. Only recently there is some clarity about the oeuvre of Gian Antonio. Whereas solely history paintings are attributed to Gian Antonio, Francesco devoted himself, in any case from the end of the 1750s, to painting townscapes and capriccios.Concerning the life of Francesco Guardi there is little documentation available. Most of the large number of paintings attributed to him can not be dated with certainty. There has accordingly been a good deal of speculation on questions of chronology and stylistic development in his work, one contentious area being the precise moment at which Francesco began painting veduta, and his motives for doing so. Given the fact that the first year Guardi's name appears in the registers of the Venetian painters guild is 1761, it has been assumed that he took over the leadership of the family studio following the death of Gian Antonio the previous year, and that this period also witnessed his first incursions into the genre of cityscapes. It would appear more plausible that, alongside history pieces, Francesco also executed town views in his elder brother's studio. Vedute by Guardi's hand cannot, however, be dated before the second half of the 1750s.Since the first monograph on Francesco Guardi in 1904, Guardi was thought to have been a pupil of Canaletto. Nowadays it is generally assumed that Guardi did not actually study with Canaletto, but only learned to paint vedute after the old masters death by imitating the latter's works.On the basis of a signed and dated painting from 1756 one scholar recently hypothesized that in his earliest vedute Guardi based himself on the style of Canaletto's work from the same time. This painting shows a carefully constructed compositional scheme with a highly exaggerated perspective, powerful light and colour effects and figures which are assigned a subordinate, purely decorative role. If this was indeed one of Guardi's earliest vedute, the painter did not follow Canaletto's late style for long; a number of works that can be dated approximately 1760 are characterized by a dark palette, turbulent skies and a charged atmosphere, characteristics that are far more reminiscent of Canaletto's views of the 1720s and 1730s.In the 1760s Guardi introduced the Venetian Lagoon<
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