:host { --enviso-primary-color: #FF8A21; --enviso-secondary-color: #FF8A21; font-family: 'boijmans-font', Arial, Helvetica,sans-serif; } .enviso-basket-button-wrapper { position: relative; top: 5px; } .enviso-btn { font-size: 22px; } .enviso-basket-button-items-amount { font-size: 12px; line-height: 1; background: #F18700; color: white; border-radius: 50%; width: 24px; height: 24px; min-width: 0; display: flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; text-align: center; font-weight: bold; padding: 0; top: -13px; right: -12px; } Previous Next Facebook Instagram Twitter Pinterest Tiktok Linkedin Back to top
Townscape with Stronghold

Townscape with Stronghold

Giulio Campagnola (in circa 1490-1510)

Ask anything

Loading...

Thank you. Your question has been submitted.

Unfortunately something has gone wrong while sending your question. Please try again.

Request high-res image

More information

Specifications

Title Townscape with Stronghold
Material and technique Metalpoint on blue-grey prepared paper
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 158 mm
Width 272 mm
Artists : Giulio Campagnola
Previously attributed: Giorgione (Giorgio Barbarelli da Castelfranco)
Draughtsman: Anoniem
Accession number I 122 (PK)
Credits Loan Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (former Koenigs collection), 1940
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1940
Creation date in circa 1490-1510
Watermark none (vH, ?P)
Collector Collector / Franz Koenigs
Mark F.W. Koenigs (L.1023a)
Provenance Franz W. Koenigs (1881-1941, L.1023a), Haarlem, acquired in 1926 (Venetian, first half 16th century); D.G. van Beuningen (1877-1955), Rotterdam, acquired with the Koenigs Collection in 1940 and donated to Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Exhibitions Venice 1955, no. 2 (disegni)
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Literature Tietze/Tietze Conrat 1944, no. 707, pl. 47.3 (attr. Giorgione); Florisoone 1950, p. 38, ill.; Venice 1955, p. 278, no. 2 (disegni); Zampetti 1968, p.102 (attr. Giorgione/circle); Pignatti 1969, no. A51, fig. 148 (style G Campagnola); Magugliani 1970, p. 148 (G Campagnola); Tschmelitsch 1975, pp. 286-287 (G Campagnola); Wethey 1987, no. 56X, ill. 141 (forerunner of Giorgione)
Material
Object
Technique
Prepare > Prepared > Shaping techniques > General technique > Technique > Material and technique
Prepare > Prepared > Shaping techniques > General technique > Technique > Material and technique
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe
Place of manufacture Venice > Veneto region > Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Rosie Razzall

There are very few drawings known to be by the Venetian painter Giorgione; the only generally-accepted sheet is a red chalk landscape drawing also in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen.[1] The present abraded landscape drawing in metalpoint on grey-blue prepared paper was regarded by Tietze/Tietze Conrat in 1944 as ‘a very important drawing’ which they attributed, with reservations, to Giorgione.[2] However, few other scholars have concurred with this opinion, and it seems more likely that the drawing is by an artist in the circle of Giorgione or Giulio Campagnola (c.1482-after 1515).

Tietze/Tietze Conrat based their attribution on the similarities they observed between the landscape in this drawing and the one in a painting of The Finding of the Infant Paris in Milan, then attributed to Giorgione, but now not generally accepted as part of Giorgione’s oeuvre.[3] The landscapes do indeed closely relate to each other. There are two crenellated walls or towers high on a hill on the left, a sharply descending abutting wall, and a group of buildings around a clearing or courtyard below. At the centre is a house with a distinctive gable end divided by wooden beams. The steep hill interspersed with clumps of bushes on the right is also found in the painting, although it has been moved further across to accommodate the group of figures on the road. Pignatti suggested that the slightly different position from which the landscapes were taken might imply that the view was drawn from reality.[4]

Ultimately the attribution of the Rotterdam drawing may only be resolved via a more certain attribution of the painting, which has also been given to Vittore Carpaccio (c. 1460/1465-1525/1526),[5] Lazzaro Bastiani (before 1430-c.1512),[6] Vincenzo Catena/Vincenzo di Biagio (1480-1531),[7] Giulio Campagnola,[8] and most recently, an anonymous artist of the Venetian school.[9] As for the drawing, Pignatti felt that Giulio Campagnola was also a reasonable possibility, while Wethey referred to the work as a ‘superior sheet, possibly by a forerunner of Giorgione’, but in such a lamentable condition that an assessment was difficult to reach.[10] The remaining uncertainties make the drawing difficult to date: Wethey suggested c.1490, but an association with Campagnola or Vincenzo Catena would make it more likely to be c.1500-1510. An object in the foreground described by Wethey as a bird drawn in wash appears to be an accidental shiny spot, perhaps of glue or paste from an earlier mounting. The sheet is not laid down and has no watermark.

Although it is executed in metalpoint rather than in brush and wash, the present drawing might be loosely compared with a drawing of an assemblage of buildings on grey prepared paper, recently published by Peter Dreyer as an autograph study by Giorgione.[11] Even if that attribution does not stand, it shows that several Venetian artists in the circles of Giorgione and Campagnola made studies of clusters of buildings on prepared paper for use as landscape settings in their paintings.

Footnotes

[1] Inv. I 485.

[2] Tietze/Tietze-Conrat 1944, no. 707.

[3] Collection of Conte Paolo Gerli, Milan. Christian Hornig is the most recent scholar to accept the Giorgione attribution for the painting, believing it to be one of his earliest surviving works, see Hornig 1987, no. 1, pp. 167-68. For this painting see also Fiocco 1941, pp. 21-22; Venice 1955, no. 1, p. 2, ill.; Coletti 1955, pp. 64-65; Zampetti 1968, no. 48A, ill.; Heinemann 1962, vol. 1, p. 231, under no. V.91; Tschmelitsch 1975, pp. 74, 286-87; Torrini 1993, p. 144; Lucco 2010, p. 150, no. 59; Brucher 2013, pp. 33-38. A drawing made after the painting is in the Biblioteca di Verona, see Monneret de Villard 1904, p. 26, ill., p. 106.

[4] Pignatti 1969a, no. A51.

[5] When in the Albarelli Collection, Verona. See Venice 1955, no. 1, p. 2.

[6] Venturi 1913, pp. 254-55.

[7] Gronau 1908, p. 403; Morassi 1942, p. 44.

[8] Fiocco 1941, pp. 21-22; Coletti 1955, pp. 64-65; Heinemann 1962, vol. 1, p. 231, under no. V.91; Pignatti 1969a, p. 133; Magugliani 1970, pp. 147-48; Tschmelitsch 1975, pp. 74, 286-87.

[9] Lucco 2010, p. 150, no. 59.

[10] Wethey 1957, no. 56X.

[11] Dreyer 2015, p. 183, fig. 3.

Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Show catalogue entry Hide catalogue entry

All about the artist

Giulio Campagnola

Padua circa 1481 - na 1515

Bekijk het volledige profiel