CÀ REZZONICO, Second Floor

Your browser doesn't support HTML5 audio

After going back to the "portego", you went up to the second floor, which opens onto a gallery decorated with large paintings by Venetian masters from the 1700s, of course. And if you've never seen his work before, it's time to get acquainted with Canaletto, who managed to capture the city's atmosphere and put it onto canvas like nobody else. His real name was Giovanni Antonio Canal, and he has painted hundreds of landscapes capturing every beloved angle and perspective of Venice. His works were mainly aimed at international travelers, and for this reason, ironically, were rare in Italy and especially in Venice itself!

After Canaletto, another genius of 18th-century painting awaits you in a room that collects thirty small canvases: I'm talking about Pietro Longhi. With an extraordinary sense of humor and curious vivacity, Longhi was specialized in scenes of everyday life. In his paintings that are set mostly inside buildings, you'll find an extraordinary repertoire of costumes, characters, and situations that seem to turn the world into a stage. Out of all of them, I'd like to point out The Rhinoceros, which shows the animal exposed in a pavilion in front of an astonished audience. If you look up at the ceiling, you'll see a painting by Giambattista Tiepolo....

Scarica MyWoWo! La Travel App che ti racconta le meraviglie del mondo!