
Property From a Private Collection
La Chiesa Gesuati from the Canale della Giudecca, Venice
Auction Closed
May 22, 09:00 PM GMT
Estimate
80,000 - 120,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Federico del Campo
Peruvian 1837 - 1927
La Chiesa Gesuati from the Canale della Giudecca, Venice
signed, dated and inscribed lower left: F. del Campo / Venezia 1887
oil on canvas
canvas: 15½ by 26 in.; 39.5 by 66 cm
framed: 22 ½ by 33 ¼ in.; 57.2 by 84.5 cm
Arthur Tooth & Sons, London
Bolton & Fairhead, Ltd., London
Sale: Sotheby's, New York, April 18, 2007, lot 39, illustrated
MacConnal-Mason, London
Sale: Sotheby's New York, 22 May 2018, lot 52
Federico del Campo's panoramic view captures the Zattere, meaning raft, built as a dock in the early sixteenth century to accommodate the delivery of timber for ships and buildings. For centuries, Venice was a critical hub of global commerce, with silk, grains, spices and other exotic goods moving east to west via her formidable maritime fleets. Painted in 1884, the present work could be perceived as del Campo's tribute to Venice's grand history of trade. Red-coated gondoliers, waiting for their next passenger, crowd in front of the Renaissance façade of the Chiesa di Santa Maria della Visitazione. At the center of this composition, bright yellow cargo is off-loaded from the sea-going two-masted brig to the smaller peàta, a cargo boat built specifically to transport goods through Venice’s rios. The brightly-colored sails of flat-bottomed bragozzo flutter as they carry goods across the calm waters of the canal to the island of Giudecca. This bustling view would have been among the first of La Serenissima for many visitors as traghetto and vaporetto launches from the Venice train station made their first landing on the Zattere just beyond Chiesa di Santa Maria del Rosario, more commonly referred to as I Gesuati.
Distinguished by its commanding Corinthian columns, I Gesuati stands on the Fondamenta delle Zattere facing the Giudecca canal. Designed by the famed architect Giorgio Massari and consecrated in 1743, the interior features ceilings executed by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo and altars painted by Sebastiano Ricci and Tintoretto. Baedeker’s Italy, Handbook for Travellers, an indispensable guide for any tourist, listed I Gesuati and the Zattere on their Venetian “plan of visit,” touting the pretty views of the famed churches of Il Redentore and San Giorgio Maggiore – visible in the right distance - an ideal location only a three-minute walk from the Gallerie dell’Accademia (Baedeker’s Italy, Handbook for Travellers, Volume 1, London, 1892, p. 245).
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