
I Guardi di Calouste Gulbenkian
Francesco Guardi
Ca' Rezzonico - Museo del Settecento Veneziano
Sestiere Dorsoduro, 3136, 30123 30123
Admission
Free Admission
The exhibition can be visited according to the museum's opening hours and admission procedures.
About
One of the most renowned groups in the Gulbenkian Museum's collections is the splendid set of paintings by Francesco Guardi (1712-1793), the last great Venetian painter of views in the 18th century, acquired in the first twenty years of the 20th century. They include some of the most sublime works by the artist, who is famous for having begun painting views in middle age, after years spent experimenting with history and genre painting. All dating from between 1770 and 1790, Guardi's works in the Gulbenkian are outstanding examples of his style, with allusive brushstrokes and freely distorted proportions, creating views in which the structure of perspective appears elastic. Now far removed from Canaletto's geometric certainties and camera obscura, Venice as portrayed by Francesco Guardi is made up of buildings eroded by light, rendered through tremulous brushwork, as if offering an inward image of Venice and its civilisation already in rapid decline. The subjects are those that the artist explored at various times, such as The Feast of the Ascension in St. Mark's Square, the Regattas on the Grand Canal and the Departure of the Bucintoro. Thanks to collaboration between the Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia and the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, visitors will be able to admire a selection of these paintings by Francesco Guardi in the Portego of Ca' Rezzonico, together with a set of drawings from the collection of the Cabinet of Drawings and Prints. The dialogue between painting and graphic art will offer insights into the creative achievement of one of the iconic artists of 18th-century Venice.