Collection
Bernardo Bellotto
Explore curated art prints selected for distinctive homes and considered interiors.
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Piazza San Marco, Venice - Bernardo Bellotto
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View of Warsaw from Praga - Bernardo Bellotto
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The Spanish Riding School - Bernardo Bellotto
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Vienna, Panorama from Palais Kaunitz - Bernardo Bellotto
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The New Market in Dresden - Bernardo Bellotto
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Wilanów Palace as seen from north east - Bernardo Bellotto
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View of the New Market Place in Dresden from the Moritzstrasse - Bernardo Bellotto
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The Dominican Church in Vienna - Bernardo Bellotto
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The Neuer Marktplatz in Dresden - Bernardo Bellotto
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View of the Grand Canal at San Stae - Bernardo Bellotto
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The Ruins of the Kreuzkirche in Dresden - Bernardo Bellotto
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Perspective de la ville neuve - Bernardo Bellotto
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Pirna: The Obertor from the South - Bernardo Bellotto
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Capriccio with the Colosseum - Bernardo Bellotto
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Venice Veduta - Bernardo Bellotto
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The Kreuzkirche in Dresden - Bernardo Bellotto
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Signoria Square in Florence - Bernardo Bellotto
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The Marketplace at Pirna - Bernardo Bellotto
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Dresden, the Frauenkirche and the Rampische Gasse - Bernardo Bellotto
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View of Pirna from the Sonnenstein Castle - Bernardo Bellotto
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Pirna Seen from the Harbour Town - Bernardo Bellotto
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The Piazza della Signoria in Florence - Bernardo Bellotto
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Pirna Seen from the Right Bank of the Elbe - Bernardo Bellotto
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Dresden seen from the right bank of the Elbe, below the Augustus Bridge - Bernardo Bellotto
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Artist Biography
Bernardo Bellotto
When Soviet forces withdrew from Warsaw in 1945, leaving behind a city reduced almost entirely to rubble, Polish rebuilding committees used eighteenth-century paintings as architectural blueprints. The paintings were by Bernardo Bellotto, a Venetian court artist who had died sixty-five years earlier; his Warsaw views were precise enough to guide the reconstruction of street facades, arcades, and building heights. No other vedutista has earned an afterlife like it.
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.
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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