Perspective de la ville neuve - Bernardo Bellotto
Archival giclée
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Description
A detailed 1748 etching by Bernardo Bellotto, capturing a panoramic view of Dresden with architectural precision and atmospheric depth.
This etching by Bernardo Bellotto captures a precise view of Dresden, reflecting the artist's mastery of the veduta tradition. Bellotto, the nephew and pupil of Canaletto, moved to Dresden in 1747 to serve as court painter to Augustus III, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland. His work is defined by a rigorous attention to architectural detail and atmospheric perspective. The composition presents the city from the meadows of the Elbe, providing a wide, panoramic view that balances the urban architecture with the natural surroundings. On the right, the Hofkirche stands as a dominant structure, its silhouette rendered with fine, controlled lines. The foreground contains figures engaged in daily tasks, including a horse-drawn cart, which provides a sense of scale and human activity against the grand backdrop of the city. The sky is treated with delicate hatching to suggest the soft light of a northern European day. Bellotto produced a series of large-scale views of Dresden during his tenure at the court. These prints were intended to document the city's transformation and the architectural ambitions of the Saxon monarch. The technical execution demonstrates the artist's ability to translate the luminosity of his oil paintings into the monochromatic medium of etching. The work functions as a historical record of the city's appearance in the mid-eighteenth century, prior to the significant changes brought by later conflicts and urban development. The inclusion of the royal coat of arms at the base of the print indicates its official commission and the prestige associated with the project. Collectors of topographical art will appreciate the clarity of the lines and the balanced arrangement of the scene, which remains a primary source for the study of eighteenth-century Dresden.
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Each print is produced to order using 12-colour giclée printing on FSC-certified archival paper. Designed in Britain and printed at your nearest production hub to reduce waste and speed up delivery.
Perspective de la ville neuve - Bernardo Bellotto
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Specific Features
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Materials & Sizing
Museum-grade giclée on FSC-certified archival matte paper, with framed and canvas options.
- Paper sizes: A4, A3, A2, A1, A0 and B2 (50×70 cm)
- Canvas: XS (20×30 cm) to Large (60×90 cm)
- Frames: black, natural wood, dark wood or white
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Artist Biography
Bernardo Bellotto
Born in Venice in 1721, Bellotto was the nephew of Giovanni Antonio Canal on his mother's side and trained in his uncle's studio from early adolescence. By his mid-teens he was a registered member of the Venetian painters' guild. His early work so closely followed Canaletto's manner that he occasionally signed canvases "Canaletto" himself, a habit that has tangled attribution ever since. He left Venice in 1746 for a long Italian tour before heading north; in 1747, aged twenty-six, he accepted an invitation to Dresden from Frederick-Augustus II, Elector of Saxony, who paid him twenty thalers a year as court painter.
The Dresden commissions produced some of his finest work: The Moat of the Zwinger (1749-53, 133 x 235 cm, Gemaldegalerie) and a series of Neumarkt views including the Frauenkirche, in which extreme diagonal compositions amplify the spatial depth of the city's Baroque squares. Empress Maria Theresa summoned him to Vienna in 1758, where he painted View from the Belvedere (1759-60, Kunsthistorisches Museum); in 1767 he moved to Warsaw, entering the service of Stanislaw II of Poland and beginning the topographical documentation that would outlast the city itself.
His palette runs consistently cooler and crisper than Canaletto's; he paid more attention to cloud formations, deep shadows, and foliage, and packed his views with more figure groups. Where Canaletto often revisited the same standpoints, Bellotto almost always sought new vantage points. Scholars read his documentary precision as a function of his market: not Venice's tourist trade but the royal courts of Europe, patrons who wanted their capitals recorded with near-surveyor exactitude.
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