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Caspar van Wittel, Gaspare Vanvitelli

Piazza Navona Rome Print by Gaspar Van Wittel

Piazza Navona Rome

Rome a View of the River Tiber at the Porto Della Legna Looking Towards Castel Sant'Angelo with Sain Print by Caspar van Wittel

Rome a View of the River Tiber at the Porto Della Legna Looking Towards Castel Sant'Angelo with Sain

Rome A View of the Ponte Salario Print by Caspar van Wittel

Rome A View of the Ponte Salario

View of the Campo Vaccino with the Arch of Septimius Severus Print by Caspar van Wittel

View of the Campo Vaccino with the Arch of Septimius Severus

Caspar van Wittel

St Peter's in Rome

Caspar van Wittel

Castel Sant'Angelo from the South

Caspar van Wittel

View of the Piazza del Popolo, Rome

Caspar van Wittel

Rome: View of the River Tiber with the Ponte Rotto and the Aventine Hill

Caspar van Wittel

Rome: View of St Peter's and the Vatican Seen from Prati Di Castello

Caspar van Wittel

Rome: View of the Arch of Titus

Caspar van Wittel

Rome: A View of The Colosseum

Caspar van Wittel

The Villa Medici and Garden in Rome

Caspar van Wittel

View of Rome with the Tiberand Castel Sant'Angelo

Caspar van Wittel

View of Rome

Caspar van Wittel

The Ponte Sisto, Rome

Caspar van Wittel

Rome: A View of the Ponte Salario

Caspar van Wittel

View of Florence from the Via Bolognese

Caspar van Wittel

Villa Farnese at Caprarola

Caspar van Wittel

View of Naples

Caspar van Wittel

Rome, the Tiber near the Porto di Ripa Grande

Caspar van Wittel

A View of Tivoli

Caspar van Wittel

The Molo Seen from the Bacino di San Marco

Caspar van Wittel

The Piazzetta from the Bacino di San Marco

Caspar van Wittel

The Piazzetta from the Bacino di San Marco (detail)

Caspar van Wittel

Bacino di San Marco

Caspar van Wittel

Bacino di San Marco (detail)

Caspar van Wittel

The Island of San Michele, Looking toward Murano

Caspar van Wittel

Piazza San Marco: Looking South

Caspar van Wittel

Verona: A View of the River Adige at San Giorgio in Braida

Caspar van Wittel

View of the Castel Sant'Angelo

Caspar van Wittel

View of the Castel Sant'Angelo and the Vatican seen from Prati di Castello

Caspar van Wittel

View of Tor di Nona

Caspar van Wittel

Piazza Navona, Rome

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Piazza Navona Rome Print by Gaspar Van Wittel

Piazza Navona Rome

Caspar van Wittel or Gaspar van Wittel (born Jasper Adriaensz van Wietel, Italian name variations: Gaspare Vanvitelli, Gasparo degli Occhiali, Gasparo dagli Occhiali, Gaspare van Vitelli; 1652 or 1653, Amersfoort – September 13, 1736, Rome) was a Dutch painter who made a career in Rome where he played a pivotal role in the development of the genre of topographical painting known as veduta.[1]

Life

Van Wittel was born into a Roman Catholic family. His father was a cart maker.[2] Caspar studied painting in Amersfoort with the relatively obscure Thomas Jansz van Veenendaal for 4 or 5 years and then with the better known Matthias Withoos for 7 years.[3] His first extant works were made in Hoorn in 1672 to where he had fled after the French invasion and occupation of Amersfoort in the Rampjaar.[2] He returned to Amersfoort where he was active until 1674, the year in which he left for Italy together with his friend Jacob van Staverden, another pupil of Withoos.[4]

Like his former teacher Withoos, he joined the Bentvueghels, an association of mainly Dutch and Flemish artists working in Rome. His nickname in the Bentveughels was "Piktoors" (Pitch-torch) or "Toorts van Amersfoort" (Torch of Amersfoort).[5] He was also nicknamed ‘Gasparo dagli Occhiali’ (Gaspare with the spectacles).[6] He worked in Rome together with the Flemish painter Abraham Genoels and may even have been his pupil. Other collaborators included Hendrik Frans van Lint who would become one of the leading vedute painters in the first half of the 18th century.[7]

In 1697 van Wittel married Anna Lorenzani. His first son Luigi was born in 1700. Luigi became a famous architect and used the italianized family name of Vanvitelli. A second son was born in 1702.

Van Wittel spent almost all his life in Italy where he arrived in 1674 and died in 1736. He lived mainly in Rome but, particularly between 1694 and 1710, he also toured the country and painted in Florence, Bologna, Ferrara, Venice, Milan, Piacenza, Urbino, and Naples. He became member of the Accademia di San Luca in Rome in 1711. He made his last dated work in 1730.[1]


Work
Piazza Navona, Rome

Van Wittel is one of the principal painters of topographical views known as vedute. He is credited with turning topography into a painterly specialism in Italian art.[8] He may have been influenced by the drawings of the Flemish draughtsman Lieven Cruyl who had produced a series of cityscapes of Rome in the 1660s.[9][10] He is also considered to have influenced one of the major Italian vedutisti, the Venetian painter Canaletto.

When van Wittel first arrived in Rome he drew 50 drawings illustrating the Dutch hydraulic engineer Cornelis Meyer's designs for restoring navigability to the River Tiber between Rome and Perugia.[11] His first vedute also originated from his collaboration with Meyer, who used drawings by van Wittel to illustrate one of his tracts with a series of engraved Roman views. Van Wittel used some of these drawings for tempera and oil vedute dating from the early 1680s. His style of vedute was formed about 10 years later.[6]

His work developed from that of the Dutch Italianate painters, whose work incorporated Roman ruins and other Roman sights. Their paintings always placed architecture within the surrounding landscape. Van Wittel's approach was derived from this and as result his views show buildings from a distance. He showed large architectural complexes in an overall view. His work should therefore be seen as a mixture of landscape and urban architecture painting rather than simple vedute. It is possible that he relied on the aid of a camera obscura in drawing his vedute.[8]

His compositional and perspectival principles remained the same from the 1690s, only the subject matter changed.[6] His work was very popular with travellers on their Grand Tour of Italy. Thomas Coke, the future 1st Earl of Leicester and builder of Holkham Hall, Norfolk, acquired at least seven vedute by van Wittel during his Grand Tour in the years 1715 and 1716.[12]
References
Caspar van Wittel and Cornelis Meyer, The navigable Tiber

Caspar van Wittel's biographical details on website dedicated to Caspar van Wittel (Dutch)
Caspar van Wittel's jeugdjaren on website dedicated to Caspar van Wittel (Dutch)
Caspar van Wittel at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (Dutch)
Jacob van Staverden at the Netherlands Institute for Art History (Dutch)
Gasper van Wittel gebentnaamt de Toorts van Amersfoort in Arnold Houbraken's Schouburg (Dutch)
Ludovica Trezzani. "Wittel, Gaspar van." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 28 Mar. 2014
Edgar Peters Bowron, Joseph J Rishel, Art in Rome in the Eighteenth Century, Philadelphia Museum of Art; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 2000, p. 236-237
Lyckle de Vries. "Townscape." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 2 Apr. 2014
Robert C. Smith, The Ruins of Rome
Egbert Haverkamp-Begemann, Sir John Wyndham Pope-Hennessy. Fifteenth- to Eighteenth-century European Drawings: Central Europe, the Netherlands, France, England, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1999, p. 280
Facsimile of the L'Arte di restituire a Roma la tralasciata navigatione del suo Tevere

John Wilton-Ely. "Veduta." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 3 Apr. 2014.

Further reading

Review of Gaspar Van Wittel, e l'origene della veduta settecentesca (Rome) Ugo Bozzi publishers, by William Barcham in The Art Bulletin (1969) pp. 189–193.

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