Catania and Mount Etna - Edward Lear
Archival giclée
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Description
An oil study by Edward Lear depicting the city of Catania and the volcanic peak of Mount Etna, captured during his travels in Sicily in 1847.
Edward Lear, primarily known for his nonsense verse, was also a prolific topographical draughtsman and painter. During his extensive travels across the Mediterranean, he produced numerous studies that captured the specific light and geological character of the regions he visited. This work, dated June 1847, depicts the city of Catania situated beneath the imposing silhouette of Mount Etna in Sicily. The composition is divided into two distinct zones. The foreground consists of dark, rugged volcanic rock, rendered with quick, gestural brushwork that suggests the uneven texture of the terrain. In contrast, the middle ground and background are treated with greater atmospheric clarity. The city of Catania appears as a horizontal band of pale buildings, providing a sense of scale against the massive, snow-capped peak of the volcano. The sky is painted in soft, pale blue tones, with light clouds drifting across the summit, reflecting the artist's keen observation of Mediterranean weather patterns. Lear often annotated his sketches with colour notes and observations, a practice evident in the lower left corner of this piece. These inscriptions provide insight into his working method, as he sought to record the precise hues of the sky and the distant terrain for later reference. The work remains unfinished at the edges, revealing the raw paper support and the artist's initial approach to blocking out the scene. This study demonstrates Lear's ability to balance precise topographical detail with the atmospheric effects characteristic of his oil sketches. It offers a direct view into the process of a nineteenth-century traveller documenting the geography of Southern Europe.
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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.
Catania and Mount Etna - Edward Lear
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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
Edward Lear
His landscape career ran simultaneously. From the 1840s he made extended sketching tours through Italy, Albania, Greece, Egypt, Palestine, India, and Ceylon, producing illustrated travel journals of careful documentary precision. In 1846 Queen Victoria sought him out as a drawing teacher, having admired his Italian lithographs; he gave her twelve lessons. Brief study under William Holman Hunt in 1852 introduced Pre-Raphaelite rigour to his oils, though his watercolours and pen-and-ink drawings remain his most direct legacy.
Lear suffered from epilepsy throughout his life, calling it the Demon and concealing it carefully from a society ill-equipped to understand it. He was severely shortsighted from childhood and lived with considerable loneliness, despite the warmth of his nonsense verse. He settled in San Remo in 1871, eventually naming his house Villa Tennyson after his close friend Alfred, Lord Tennyson, for whom he composed settings of 212 poems.
His cat, Foss, was his companion for 15 years. When Lear moved to a larger house in San Remo, he had it built to identical proportions so Foss would not be disoriented. Foss died two months before Lear, in January 1888. The Owl and the Pussycat (1871), containing the word runcible spoon, now in everyday English use, is his most enduring poem.
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