Elevation of Ca’ Rezzonico, Venice
Drawing
mid 18th century (made)
mid 18th century (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Ca’ Rezzonico is a Venetian palace facing the Grand Canal, formerly belonging to the Bon family. It was commissioned in 1649 from the architect Baldassarre Longhena (1597-1682) and completed over a century later by the architect Giorgio Massari (1687-1766). This drawing depicts the two-levelled elevation of Ca' Rezzonico before 1750, when the palace was purchased by the Rezzonico family and extended by a floor. The first level has a flight of steps leading to a tripartite, lintelled entrance with rusticated columns and pilasters of the Doric order. On each side, the entrance is flanked by wall segments with rusticated half columns and paired half columns of the Doric order. A Doric entablature surmounted by a balustrade and pedestals separates the first level from the second. The second level is composed by a seven-bay order of engaged Ionic columns on pedestals, with contracted serlianasexecuted in the manner of Sansovino.
The drawing belongs to a set of 66 measured drawings of Italian Renaissance and Ancient Roman architecture which the V&A purchased from Edwin Parsons in 1886. The Parsons set may belong to a larger series of over 700 architectural drawings scattered in English and international collections formerly owned by the British Consul at Venice, Joseph Smith (1682-1770). A proponent of Palladian architecture, Smith began collecting measured drawings of classical and Renaissance architecture from the early 1740s. Today, most of this material exists in a series of bound volumes at the Royal Collection (where the Admiranda Artis Architecturae Varia is kept) and at the British Library (which holds the three-volume Admiranda Urbis Venetae), as well as in loose sheets scattered in collections across Europe and North America including the Royal Institute of British Architects and the Canadian Centre for Architecture.
The author of these drawings is unknown. However, their style and subject matter suggests the involvement of the Venetian architect, painter, engraver and theorist Antonio Visentini (1688-1782). A member of the Venetian Academy since its foundation in 1755, Visentini was affiliated with Smith and executed a vast number of architectural drawings for the British Consul as well as for a broader British collector base. Most of these drawings are scaled in English feet and consist of simplified plans and elevations of exemplary Italian architecture. Often produced as a series, the drawings were purchased by British Gentlemen to be included in their libraries and collections. The present drawing forms part of this material. The drawing is not signed by Visentini, but may have been produced by one of Visentini’s workshop members or pupils or by an unknown draughtsman working in the style of Visentini.
The drawing belongs to a set of 66 measured drawings of Italian Renaissance and Ancient Roman architecture which the V&A purchased from Edwin Parsons in 1886. The Parsons set may belong to a larger series of over 700 architectural drawings scattered in English and international collections formerly owned by the British Consul at Venice, Joseph Smith (1682-1770). A proponent of Palladian architecture, Smith began collecting measured drawings of classical and Renaissance architecture from the early 1740s. Today, most of this material exists in a series of bound volumes at the Royal Collection (where the Admiranda Artis Architecturae Varia is kept) and at the British Library (which holds the three-volume Admiranda Urbis Venetae), as well as in loose sheets scattered in collections across Europe and North America including the Royal Institute of British Architects and the Canadian Centre for Architecture.
The author of these drawings is unknown. However, their style and subject matter suggests the involvement of the Venetian architect, painter, engraver and theorist Antonio Visentini (1688-1782). A member of the Venetian Academy since its foundation in 1755, Visentini was affiliated with Smith and executed a vast number of architectural drawings for the British Consul as well as for a broader British collector base. Most of these drawings are scaled in English feet and consist of simplified plans and elevations of exemplary Italian architecture. Often produced as a series, the drawings were purchased by British Gentlemen to be included in their libraries and collections. The present drawing forms part of this material. The drawing is not signed by Visentini, but may have been produced by one of Visentini’s workshop members or pupils or by an unknown draughtsman working in the style of Visentini.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Elevation of Ca’ Rezzonico, Venice (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Pencil, pen and ink with brown wash on paper |
Brief description | Elevation of Ca’ Rezzonico, Venice, Italy, mid 18th century (made) |
Physical description | Elevation of Ca’ Rezzonico (previously Bon) in Venice, in pencil, pen and ink with brown wash, on paper. The drawing, in a landscape format, depicts the façade of the building seen from the Grand Canal with a plan of the façade relief below. A linear scale in English feet is inscribed in pen in the bottom centre of the sheet. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Object history | The object was purchased from Edwin Parsons in 1886 as part of a collection of 66 drawings of Italian Renaissance and Ancient Roman architecture. Edwin Parsons was a dealer in books, prints and drawings. He was the founder of Edwin Parsons & Sons (1850-1950s) at 45 Brompton Road SW7. Parsons had a notable client base reportedly including the writer William Makepeace Thackeray, Sir John Pierpoint Morgan (of J.P. Morgan), and Napoleon III. |
Production | This drawing depicts the palace façade in simplified form omitting the high-reliefs inserted in the spandrels of the arches as well as the masks carved on keystones of the lintelled openings in the lower order. A later drawing of Ca’ Rezzonico executed in the manner of Visentini which includes the third level exists in the three-volume Admiranda Urbis Venetae at the British Library (71.i.1). |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | Ca’ Rezzonico is a Venetian palace facing the Grand Canal, formerly belonging to the Bon family. It was commissioned in 1649 from the architect Baldassarre Longhena (1597-1682) and completed over a century later by the architect Giorgio Massari (1687-1766). This drawing depicts the two-levelled elevation of Ca' Rezzonico before 1750, when the palace was purchased by the Rezzonico family and extended by a floor. The first level has a flight of steps leading to a tripartite, lintelled entrance with rusticated columns and pilasters of the Doric order. On each side, the entrance is flanked by wall segments with rusticated half columns and paired half columns of the Doric order. A Doric entablature surmounted by a balustrade and pedestals separates the first level from the second. The second level is composed by a seven-bay order of engaged Ionic columns on pedestals, with contracted serlianasexecuted in the manner of Sansovino. The drawing belongs to a set of 66 measured drawings of Italian Renaissance and Ancient Roman architecture which the V&A purchased from Edwin Parsons in 1886. The Parsons set may belong to a larger series of over 700 architectural drawings scattered in English and international collections formerly owned by the British Consul at Venice, Joseph Smith (1682-1770). A proponent of Palladian architecture, Smith began collecting measured drawings of classical and Renaissance architecture from the early 1740s. Today, most of this material exists in a series of bound volumes at the Royal Collection (where the Admiranda Artis Architecturae Varia is kept) and at the British Library (which holds the three-volume Admiranda Urbis Venetae), as well as in loose sheets scattered in collections across Europe and North America including the Royal Institute of British Architects and the Canadian Centre for Architecture. The author of these drawings is unknown. However, their style and subject matter suggests the involvement of the Venetian architect, painter, engraver and theorist Antonio Visentini (1688-1782). A member of the Venetian Academy since its foundation in 1755, Visentini was affiliated with Smith and executed a vast number of architectural drawings for the British Consul as well as for a broader British collector base. Most of these drawings are scaled in English feet and consist of simplified plans and elevations of exemplary Italian architecture. Often produced as a series, the drawings were purchased by British Gentlemen to be included in their libraries and collections. The present drawing forms part of this material. The drawing is not signed by Visentini, but may have been produced by one of Visentini’s workshop members or pupils or by an unknown draughtsman working in the style of Visentini. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | D.1452-1886 |
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Record created | June 30, 2009 |
Record URL |
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