Monday, April 6, 2026

Reading Pictures - A History of Illustration

 



Marcel Duchamp


Philadelphia Museum of Art
October 10, 2026–January 31, 2027

 The  (PMA) is pleased to present the first major U.S. retrospective in more than 50 years dedicated to the work of Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968). On view in the Dorrance Galleries from October 10, 2026–January 31, 2027, the exhibition will feature a chronological display of approximately 300 works from a career spanning painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, film, printed matter, and the unclassifiable works known as readymades.

The last major U.S. Duchamp survey took place in 1973–74, co-organized by the PMA—home to the world’s largest Duchamp collection—and The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. Co-organized by the same two institutions, this exhibition will reappraise an oeuvre that transformed the very idea of what art could be.

“We are delighted to join forces once again with The Museum of Modern Art to present an ambitious retrospective of Marcel Duchamp’s work,” said Daniel Weiss, the George D. Widener Director and Chief Executive Officer, PMA. “Remarkably, Duchamp himself played a key role in guiding the distinguished art collection of Louise and Walter Arensberg, his principal patrons, to the PMA as a gift in 1950. That act made Philadelphia the artist’s permanent home, and today, the PMA holds the world’s most significant assembly of works by Duchamp—comprising some two hundred paintings, sculptures, and works on paper, as well as the most extensive archives relating to the artist’s life and work.”

“When, in 1913, Duchamp produced the first readymade, making use of ordinary, mass produced, commercially-available items, he defied fixed beliefs about the nature and definition of art itself. He also brought forth new ways of being an artist,” said Matthew Affron, the Muriel and Philip Berman Curator of Modern Art, PMA. “This retrospective will reintroduce contemporary audiences to Duchamp’s complex ideas, his elusive personae, and his revolutionary approach to making art.”

Duchamp was associated with three of the 20th century’s radical art movements—Cubism, Dada, and Surrealism—yet his practice was one of continuous reinvention, impossible to consolidate under any singular label. Marcel Duchamp will present a chronological survey of the entirety of the artist’s career, from 1900 to 1968. The exhibition’s opening sections will explore Duchamp’s early development: his fledgling efforts as a cartoonist working for the satirical press, his apprenticeship in the various styles of French modern art, and his first flashes of public recognition as a member of the Cubist group in Paris in 1911 and 1912. The rejection of Nude Descending a Staircase (No. 2) (1912) by his own Cubist associates, and the scandal provoked by its display at the 1913 Armory Show in New York, cemented both the painting’s iconic status and its maker’s enduring reputation as an artistic provocateur.

In 1912, Duchamp began to question his occupation and, remarkably for a young artist who was having his first brush with fame, decided to abandon the craft of oil painting to imagine more independent ways of being an artist. This led to the creation of his magnum opus, the monumental painting on glass titled The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even (The Large Glass) (1915–23). One section of the exhibition will offer a rare opportunity to study the full range of materials and approaches that Duchamp employed in his precise planning and execution of The Large Glass. The exhibition will also look at the  invention of the readymades through many of the early examples that remain extant, including With Hidden Noise (1916), Apolinère Enameled (1916–17), and one of the best-known images of the 20th century: L.H.O.O.Q. (1919), Duchamp’s irreverent defacement of a reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa with added moustache, beard, and a vulgar phonetic pun.

Around 1920, Duchamp began talking about shifting his vocation from art to chess, which he thought had a higher form of abstract beauty. He also took on the female alter ego known as Rrose Sélavy. The exhibition will go on to explore Rrose Sélavy’s work in different specialities. One was language games: aphorisms, puns, tongue twisters, and spoonerisms, or sentences with sounds or letters transposed to humorous effect. The other was machines for producing optical illusions, or visual images with no material reality. 

By the mid-1930s, Duchamp became interested in revisiting his own life’s work in the form of reproductions. The centerpiece of the exhibition will be the work known as Box in a Valise (1935–41), Duchamp’s “portable museum” of his own drawings, paintings, works on glass, and readymades. Not only did the Box in a Valise embody Duchamp’s work in miniature; it also epitomized the positive paradox of his art by advancing his lifelong exploration of originals, copies, and the nature of art in the era of mechanical reproduction. This will be the most extensive presentation of the Box in a Valise to date. The exhibition will feature three deluxe examples, a complete set of standard copies assembled between 1941 and 1971, and a large, never-before-seen selection of preparatory materials detailing the work’s genesis and assembly.

In the 1950s and 1960s, Duchamp gained unprecedented visibility through lectures, interviews, television appearances, publications, gallery exhibitions, and his first museum retrospectives. These exhibitions were made possible, in part, because Duchamp changed his mode of working yet again: he allowed the proliferation of his work via the creation, often by others, of full-scale replicas. The exhibition will feature a comprehensive group of readymade replicas, including iterations of Bicycle Wheel (1913), Bottle Rack (1914), In Advance of the Broken Arm (1915), and the notorious Fountain (1917), the porcelain urinal laid on its back and signed with a pseudonym.

In the final twenty years of Duchamp’s life, when it was generally assumed that his work was complete, Duchamp labored in secret to create Étant donnés: 1° la chute d’eau, 2° le gaz d’éclairage . . . (Given: 1. The Waterfall, 2. The Illuminating Gas . . . ) (1946–66), a room-sized diorama with a sculpted female figure in a landscape. The exhibition will conclude with artworks and studies that supported the creation of this final major work (the alter ego of The Large Glass), which was installed at the PMA in 1969, according to Duchamp’s wishes. Visitors will be invited beyond the Dorrance Galleries to visit Galleries 281-283 where The Large Glass and Étant donnés are on permanent display.

Marcel Duchamp is organized by Matthew Affron, the Muriel and Philip Berman Curator of Modern Art, PMA; Ann Temkin, the Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture, MoMA; and Michelle Kuo, Chief Curator at Large and Publisher, MoMA, with Alexandra “Lo” Drexelius, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Painting and Sculpture, MoMA; Helena Klevorn, Curatorial Assistant, Department of the Chief Curator at Large, MoMA;  Danielle Cooke, Exhibition Assistant, PMA; and Julia Vázquez, Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, PMA.

The exhibition in Philadelphia will follow its presentation at MoMA (April 12–August 22, 2026). A related exhibition will travel to the Grand Palais in Paris in Spring 2027, where it will be organized by Jeanne Brun, Deputy Director, Musée National d’Art Moderne, with Pauline Créteur, Research Assistant to the Deputy Director.

Marcel Duchamp will be accompanied by an illustrated catalogue published by MoMA and authored by the PMA and MoMA co-curators, offering a panoramic view of the artist’s work in all mediums. The catalogue essay addresses Duchamp’s museum-like approach to working with private collections, his role as co-founder of the exhibition society known as the Société Anonyme, Inc., his close association with MoMA during its early decades, and his decision to make the PMA the permanent repository of his work.

Organizing Information
Marcel Duchamp is organized by the Philadelphia Art Museum and The Museum of Modern Art, New York, with the generous collaboration of the Centre Pompidou.


Curatorial Credits
The exhibition is organized by Matthew Affron, The Muriel and Philip Berman Curator of Modern Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art; Ann Temkin, The Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture, MoMA; and Michelle Kuo, Chief Curator at Large and Publisher, MoMA; with Danielle Cooke, Exhibition Assistant, Philadelphia Museum of Art; Julia Vázquez, Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, Philadelphia Museum of Art; Alexandra “Lo” Drexelius, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Painting and Sculpture, MoMA; and Helena Klevorn, Curatorial Assistant, Department of the Chief Curator at Large, MoMA.


IMAGES


Marcel Duchamp. Landscape. Neuilly, January-February 1911. Oil on canvas; 18 1/8 x 24" (46.3 x 61.3 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Katherine S. Dreier Bequest © 2026 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Estate of Marcel Duchamp




Man Ray (1890 –1976), Marcel Duchamp as Rrose Sélavy, c. 1920-1921, Gelatin silver print, 1/2 x 6 13/16 in, The Samuel S. White 3rd and Vera White Collection, 1957, 1957-49-1. © Man Ray Trust / Artists Rights Society ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.



Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968), Portrait of Dr. Dumouchel, 1910, Oil on canvas, 39 1/2 x 25 7/8 in, Philadelphia Museum of Art, The Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection, 1950, 1950-134-508. © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Association Marcel Duchamp.



Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968), Nude Descending a Staircase (No. 2), 1912, Oil on canvas, 57 7/8 x 35 1/8 in, Framed: 59 3/4 × 36 3/4 × 2 inches (151.8 × 93.3 × 5.1 cm), Philadelphia Museum of Art, The Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection, 1950, 1950-134-59. © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Association Marcel Duchamp.



Marcel Duchamp (1887–1968), The Chess Game, 1910, Oil on canvas, 44 7/8 x 57 11/16 in, Philadelphia Museum of Art, The Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection, 1950, 1950-134-82. © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Association Marcel Duchamp.



Sunday, April 5, 2026

CANALETTO & BELLOTTO


Kunsthistorisches Museum, Picture Gallery 

24 March to 6 September 2026

In the 18th century, painted cityscapes (in Italian vedute: “views”) became much sought-after souvenirs. Particularly so among young British aristocrats who bought these paintings on their so-called “Grand Tour,” an educational journey across Europe, as a sign of their newly acquired worldly finesse and as a keepsake of their travel experiences.

Two of the most eminent exponents of veduta painting are in the center of the new exhibition at the Kunsthistorisches Museum. The Venetian painters Giovanni Antonio Canal, called Canaletto (1697–1768), and his nephew and pupil Bernardo Bellotto (1721–1780) have continued to inform our imagination of several European cities to this day. With their delicate feel for light, atmosphere, and architectural precision, Canaletto and Bellotto transformed these places into stages on which everyday life played out—and in the views of them, into places of longing.

“Canaletto’s and Bellotto’s works show Europe as a space of cultural encounter, long before the concept of a European public ever gained currency. Their vedute connect cities such as Venice, Dresden, London, and Vienna through the perspective of 18th- century travelers and collectors. The exhibition illustrates how art became the visual language of a shared European experiential environment—an empowering culture of exchange, inspiration, and curiosity about other cities and societies,” says Jonathan Fine, Director General of the Kunsthistorisches Museum.

In the 1730s, Canaletto’s vedute fetched record prices in Venice. With the outbreak of the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–1748), however, the market slumped: international travel

came to a halt, and deep-pocketed patrons stayed away. Uncle and nephew first responded by turning to new subject matter in their work, but soon realized that prospects for their careers were better outside Italy.

The exhibition starts out in Venice and then moves on to Canaletto’s time in England as well as to Bellotto’s places of work in Vienna and Dresden, with the main focus on exploring the veduta as a painterly genre.

“City views from the 18th century, which are often perceived as immediate, almost photographic depictions of reality, are in fact carefully constructed pictorial creations that afford telltale insights into the social and political contexts of the time they were created,” adds Mateusz Mayer, curator of the exhibition.

Canaletto’s and Bellotto’s paintings unfold a multifaceted panorama of the Europe of their time. By showing a selection of particularly significant works and placing them within the scientific currents of the period, the exhibition demonstrates that the veduta is not an objective documentation. Rather, it is a deliberately designed image of a city—informed by artistic choices, socio-political conditions, and the expectations of the patrons commissioning them— manifesting a concept that is particularly relevant in light of present-day debates about visual media, urban development, and the cultural memory.

Canaletto—one name, two artists

The name of “Canaletto” has come to be almost synonymous with the “veduta” genre, and not infrequently has caused some confusion, as Bernardo Bellotto also added “called Canaletto” to his signature in some works. He did this not only to underscore his artistic connection with his famous relative and teacher, but also to bolster up his own market value. In this exhibition, though, only the uncle is referred to as “Canaletto.” While the latter, throughout his lifetime, led the precarious existence of a freelance veduta painter, dependent on a changing clientele of patrons, Bellotto was eventually granted the honor of a permanent position at the court of the Elector of Saxony and King of Poland.

High-caliber loans

The exhibition features 32 outstanding paintings—comprising works from the Kunsthistorisches Museum as well as high-caliber loans. One of the highlights is Canaletto’s spectacular view Venice: The Bacino di San Marco from San Giorgio Maggiore (1735/44) from the holdings of the Wallace Collection. The son of a stage painter, he was familiar with

perspective construction and geometry as they were employed in the theater. That theatrical quality becomes particularly evident in this painting in his subtle handling of spatial illusion.

Also of unique quality are Canaletto’s London paintings, such as London: The Thames on Lord Mayor’s Day (c. 1748) from the Lobkowicz Collection and Westminster Abbey with a Procession of the Knights of the Order of the Bath (1749) from the collection of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster. On view for the general public in Austria for the first time here, they afford rare insights into Canaletto’s artistic engagement with the English capital city.

Another main emphasis is on Bellotto’s two-year stay in Vienna, an extremely productive creative period. His large-size views of Vienna’s inner city, such as View of Vienna from the Belvedere (1759/60), and of palaces around the city from the holdings of the Kunsthistorisches Museum have been cleaned especially for the exhibition. Complemented by prominent loans from the collection of the Princes of Liechtenstein, such as The Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna, Seen from the Belvedere (1759/60), these vedute can now be presented together, almost in their entirety, for the first time in more than 20 years.

In order to further elucidate the intellectual and artistic context of the epoch, the show is supplemented with additional paintings, art prints, and scientific instruments on loan from numerous European museums. Lenders include: Academy of Fine Arts Vienna; ALBERTINA, Vienna; Andrew Lloyd Webber Foundation supported by Tate, UK; Compton Verney, UK; Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia, Museo Correr, Venice; Gallerie dell’Accademia, Venice; Royal Castle in Warsaw – Museum; Leica Microsystems GmbH; LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna; Musée des Beaux-Arts et d’Archéologie, Troyes; Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid; Museu National d’Art de Catalunya, Barcelona; National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin; Nationalmuseum, Stockholm; Austrian National Library, Vienna; Saxon State Archives, Central State Archives Dresden; Schottenstift, Vienna; Vienna Museum of Science and Technology; The British Museum, London; The Dean and Chapter of Westminster, London; The Lobkowicz Collections, Lobkowicz Palace, Prague Castle, Czech Republic; The Wallace Collection, London; Wien Museum, Vienna.


EXHIBITION TEXTS

In eighteenth-century Europe, painted city views (or vedute in Italian) became immensely popular. British aristocrats especially, when visiting Italy during their educational journey (the “Grand Tour”), sought pictorial souvenirs of key destinations, in particular Venice. Among Venetian painters who catered to this market, Antonio Canal (1697–1768), known as Canaletto, shaped the city’s image like few others. The son of a theatrical set designer, he merged optical accuracy and painterly imagination to turn Venice’s unique urban
environment into an idealized stage. Whether showing busy quays and canals or the Doge’s ceremonial barge (the
Bucintoro) during its annual procession to the Adriatic Sea, his paintings present Venice as a cultural ideal of republican virtue, maritime power, and ceremonial splendor. His compositions were widely sought after and contemporaries noted that they possessed such luminosity it was as if sunlight itself shone from within them.

Canal’s nephew Bernardo Bellotto (1722–1780) began his career in this Venetian context, training in his uncle’s workshop. He also adopted the name “Canaletto” to signal artistic lineage with his famous kinsman and to enhance his own market appeal. To avoid confusion, this exhibition refers to Antonio Canal as Canaletto and his nephew as Bellotto, as it traces how both artists carried the idealizing veduta genre from Venice across Europe: Canaletto to London; Bellotto via Dresden to Vienna.

Venice: Camera Obscura

To achieve precision, veduta painters often used optical devices like the camera obscura, which projected a view through a lens onto a flat surface, making it ideal for tracing. Such instruments gained prominence in the 1700s alongside increased scientific interest in optics, advanced by writers (including the English physicist Isaac Newton) who likened the human eye to a camera. Canaletto may have owned the box camera bearing his name shown here, though he likely worked mainly with booth- or tent-type models, such as those reproduced in Denis Diderot’s contemporary Encyclopédie. Despite using such tools however, Canaletto always combined the mechanical with his own observational skill and artistic invention— shifting buildings, adjusting proportions, and combining viewpoints to suit his needs and effectively stage his scenes.

Venice: a Stage

In his canvases, Canaletto transforms Venice into grand pictorial theater. For example, in the sweeping view from the island of San Giorgio Maggiore toward San Marco a triangular quay juts into the foreground like a stage, where lawyers, priests, merchants, and beggars animate the scene. Behind them, ships under Venetian, British, and Dutch flags enliven the lagoon against the city’s spectacular skyline. In The Bucintoro on Ascension Day, the Doge’s voyage to symbolically “wed the sea,” becomes a pageant of civic pride, while the View of the Dogana reveals Canaletto’s optical precision and ability to seamlessly blend multiple viewpoints into one coherent whole. His pictures appear to capture reality but are in fact staged performances of his artistic ingenuity.

Venice: Bellotto Learns From Canaletto

Bellotto trained in his uncle’s workshop and absorbed Canaletto’s methods of close observation and creative transformation. In this room we see how he echoes his uncle’s precision, use of perspective, and interest in everyday life along the canals. We also see how his style is already marked by deeper hues and sharper contrasts of light and shadow (chiaroscuro). In the large painting of the Grand Canal, the figure attended by two companions (at the lower right corner of the composition) has been tentatively identified as Prince Frederick Christian of Saxony, who visited Venice from 1739 to 1740. If this proposal is correct, it may represent an early example of Bellotto’s commissions from Central European patrons, in contrast to his uncle’s focus on British clients.

Canaletto & London

While Canaletto’s studio flourished in the 1730s, the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48) disrupted the flow of art-buying visitors to Venice. Canaletto resolved that if his British clients could no longer come to him, he must go to them. He arrived in London in 1746 and remained nine years, encountering a metropolis that imagined itself as a new Rome: a modern and commercial capital of a global empire. Adapting his veduta approach to this setting, he was among the first to portray London’s architecture, parks, and ceremonies as emblems of national identity. In views such as The Thames on Lord Mayor’s Day, bands

of water, city, and sky frame the mayor’s gilded barge beneath St. Paul’s Cathedral, the Protestant rival to St. Peter’s in Rome. The bustling river evokes Venice, yet the rebuilt city—rising after the Great Fire of 1666—proclaims Britain’s modernity. However, Canaletto’s serene vistas also gloss over the city’s social tensions that artists like his English contemporary William Hogarth exposed with biting cynicism.

London: Old & New

Canaletto closely observed London’s changing cityscape. Depicting Old London Bridge shortly before its demolition, he carefully captured a notorious bottleneck made up of medieval houses. He would have known how this outdated structure inspired plans for Westminster Bridge, built further upstream in 1739–50. With classicizing forms and grand arches, it was the first new bridge over the Thames in six centuries—a feat of modern engineering that Canaletto celebrates in a drawing also shown here. A dialogue between past and progress likewise shapes his view of Westminster Abbey, the coronation site and burial church of English monarchs. Newly crowned with neo-Gothic towers, the Abbey forms a dramatic backdrop for the procession of the Order of the Bath, a medieval chivalric order re- established in 1725.

London: Pleasure Grounds

Canaletto celebrates London’s new culture of leisure in his views of St. James’s Park, Vauxhall Gardens, and the Ranelagh Rotunda. Music, conversation, and fashion animate these meeting places, where public sociability defines the modern city. In St. James’s Park, graceful Georgian façades rising around the old, crumbling Horse Guards (the headquarters of the Army’s Commander-in-Chief) frame a microcosm of London society, where soldiers drill and servants, burghers, and children mingle. At Vauxhall, grand paths, supper boxes, and orchestra pavilions provide the setting for the spectacle of seeing and being seen, while Ranelagh’s domed rotunda—built for concerts and masquerades— glows with light as it attracts fashionable crowds. Canaletto once again staged his scenes, rendering tumultuous
urban life ordered, elegant, and harmonious.

English Castles

In England, Canaletto mostly painted London, but he also turned to country estates such as Warwick Castle. In 1748, Lord Brooke commissioned him to depict his ancestral seat while it underwent architectural improvements. Canaletto shows the castle with new windows, reshaped gardens, and the Avon transformed into a canal-like river with a gondola. Transposing his Venetian idiom to the English countryside, he turns a medieval fortress into
a vision of Georgian elegance. Despite such prominent commissions however, Canaletto struggled financially. He returned to Venice in 1755, and when he died in 1768, he had little to his name—in contrast to his nephew Bellotto, whose court career provided him

(at least temporarily) with a regular salary, a security Canaletto never had.

Bellotto & Dresden

In 1747, a year after his uncle had left for England, Bellotto moved from Venice to Dresden to become court painter to Augustus III, Elector of Saxony and King of Poland. Receiving a generous salary, he produced celebrated city views for the royal collection and smaller versions for private patrons, two of which are shown here. They present Dresden’s baroque skyline with the Augustus Bridge, the Lutheran Frauenkirche, and the newly rising Catholic Hofkirche. Like his uncle, Bellotto refined his images into ideal compositions: he manipulates the Frauenkirche’s proportions to suit his compositional needs and represents the Hofkirche as if complete, though its tower was still under construction.

Bellotto’s flourishing decade ended abruptly when Prussian troops invaded Dresden in 1756. The artist departed for Vienna in early 1759, accompanied by his son in search of new patronage. He left behind his wife and daughters in embattled Dresden.

Bellotto & Vienna

Bellotto arrived in Vienna in January 1759 and stayed for two years, until early 1761. In this period, Vienna was the political and cultural heart of the Habsburg monarchy, where Holy Roman Emperor Francis Stephen and Maria Theresa used art to promote dynastic power amid the turmoil of war. During his stay, Bellotto produced views of palaces, squares,

and religious and scientific institutions. His monumental views of Schönbrunn Palace
capture the Imperial suburban residence at the height of its splendor. In the forecourt
scene, courtiers and servants gather as Count Kinsky arrives in his carriage to deliver news
of Austria’s victory over Prussian soldiers at Kunersdorf in 1759. Merging veduta and history painting, Bellotto transforms the canvas into political theater. Painted at a time when the Seven Years’ War (1756–63) weighed heavily on the Viennese court—and as Bellotto’s family endured the siege of Dresden—this work stands among his most representative Viennese works. Undoubtedly Bellotto hoped to be appointed court painter in Vienna, albeit to no avail.

Vienna: Orderly Gardens

In this view Bellotto turns to the palace gardens, redesigned under Emperor Francis Stephen in the 1750s. The vast parterre unfolds in geometric order, while Vienna appears on the distant horizon. The scene presents a vision of Imperial harmony: Bellotto records gardeners, servants, and aristocrats alike, hinting at the dynamics that sustained court life. The figures moving through the formal paths, perhaps including members of the Imperial family, animate the ordered setting with gestures of polite sociability. Yet the play of light and shadow also reflects hierarchy. While noble figures bask in sunshine, workers often remain in shadow. The result is an allegory of absolutist rule. Geometry, horticultural labor, and Imperial authority converge in a vision of an ordered and controlled society.

Vienna: Empirical Realism

Bellotto’s Viennese vedute unite careful observation, measured perspective, and deliberate topographical adjustment. In his famous view of Vienna from the Belvedere, he records the skyline with near-cartographic precision while compressing its elements into a dense, monumental whole. He drew closer together the domes of the Karlskirche (to the left) and Salesian Church (to the right) and made the city’s church towers appear steeper to lead the eye in- and upward. Unlike later Romantic visions of the city, such as Josef Heideloff’s view that foregrounds pastoral leisure and lets the city fade into a hazy distance, Bellotto’s clarity reflects the Enlightenment—the intellectual movement championing reason, science, and precise vision.

Vienna: Measurement

Characteristically, the Enlightenment encouraged the accurate measurement of the world and Bellotto’s views indeed reflect this ambition. Like contemporary surveyors and mapmakers, he used high vantage points, sighting devices, and geometric projection to record the modern city with empirical precision. Instruments such as the graphometer shown here, the

sighting boards used and depicted by the Imperial cartographer Giovanni Jacopo de Marinoni in De re ichnographica (1751), and Joseph Liesganig’s triangulated map of Vienna’s surroundings all reveal a shared pursuit—to translate space into knowledge. Bellotto’s paintings, though not strictly topographical, belong to this same world of observation and calibration, where artistic vision meets scientific inquiry.

Vienna: University District

Bellotto’s engagement with empirical observation began in Venice, whose specialized glassmakers supplied lenses for microscopes, telescopes, and camera obscuras. By 1760, Vienna too had become a hub for scientific inquiry. The reformed university, Jesuit astronomy, and medical innovations under court physician Gerard van Swieten fostered an atmosphere where optical devices were extensively used and empirical methods flourished. Bellotto celebrates the city’s university district in two views, showing the Jesuit College and new aula, including the observatory towers that marked Vienna’s rise as a center of Enlightenment science. Grounding his art in close observation, Bellotto follows the recommendation of Francesco Algarotti—a Venetian polymath and acquaintance of Canaletto—who urged painters to study nature with a scientist’s eye. 

Vienna: Aristocratic Display

After the dispersal of the Ottoman siege in 1683, Vienna experienced a building boom. While fortifications constrained the Inner City, new palaces and gardens flourished in the suburbs. Among them rose the Liechtenstein Garden Palace, portrayed by Bellotto as a stage of aristocratic display. The palace, with its terraces, sculptures, and gardens, provides a refined backdrop for poised figures whose elegant gestures embody contemporary ideals of discipline and grace. This cultivated display however was marked by inequality. The Black page in the lower right corner of one of the compositions recalls the presence of Africans in Viennese elite circles, including the learned Angelo Soliman, who served Prince Liechtenstein. Aristocratic representation, for all its beauty, relied not only on refinement but subjugation as well.

Vienna: a Stage

Bellotto, similar to his uncle, transformed the city into theater. Composing his vedute from multiple viewpoints, he arranged buildings like stage sets and figures like actors. His only Viennese print, showing the ballet-pantomime Le Turc Généreux, makes this link explicit, revealing how he translated spectacle into pictorial form. His purported scientific precision thus also conceals. Like all major cities, Vienna grappled with crime and social unrest. Maria Theresa’s judicial reforms—especially those regarding torture in the Constitutio Criminalis—reflect the era’s harsher realities. While artists such as the Austrian printmaker Salomon Kleiner depicted occasional street brawls, Bellotto’s views omit such tensions. His paintings portray not everyday life but the ideal the Habsburg court wished to project.

Vienna: Religion & Commerce

In his two views of the Freyung square, Bellotto stages Vienna’s religious and commercial life. Before the Schottenkirche unfolds a procession, often interpreted as Corpus Christi, which would have required an ornate monstrance like the one exhibited here. A closer look however suggests that the priest is carrying a relic instead, likely from one of the abbey’s confraternities. Whatever the rite, the choreography of deference—aristocrats, monks, and servants bowing in unison—skillfully focuses attention on the procession.

The other view of the square shows teeming market life. Here, Bellotto’s meticulous rendering of street vendors anticipates Johann Christian Brand’s series of etchings, the Wiener Kaufruf (1775). Bellotto shares this almost ethnographic attention to Vienna’s populace.

Vienna: Splendor & Hardship

In Bellotto’s view of the Mehlmarkt, a figure bends beneath the weight of a flour sack—a reminder that Vienna’s splendor relied on physical labor. The square is framed by Baroque façades, the Capuchin Church, and Fischer von Erlach’s Mehlgrube, whose cellars stored grain while upper floors hosted balls. Work, worship, and revelry thus converge.

The second canvas sharpens this contrast: Palais Lobkowitz basks in sunlight, while the Bürgerspital—home to the poor and infirm—lies in shadow. Between them, the Capuchins’ mission cross and St. Stephen’s Gothic edifice evoke piety and mortality. In the 1700s, artists often studied the infirm. Bellotto includes a girl with a crutch at right, cast into shade. Hardship, while acknowledged, is subdued, absorbed into a composition that normalizes, rather than criticizes, social hierarchy.

Schloss Hof

Bellotto extended his meditation on splendor and hardship to Schloss Hof on the March River. Originally a seventeenth-century fortified complex, Prince Eugene of Savoy had it transformed from 1725 to 1729. Hundreds of laborers, gardeners, and craftsmen worked here, providing employment to many of Eugene’s returning soldiers. The estate later passed to his niece and, in 1755, was purchased by Francis Stephen and Maria Theresa. Bellotto painted three large canvases showing the garden, forecourt, and northern flank.

In the garden view, terraces, fountains, and trimmed trees rise rhythmically, and aristocrats, gardeners, and disheveled men appear neatly placed within a geometrically ordered landscape. The forecourt view animates architecture with aristocrats, servants, and vagrants, balancing courtly display with everyday life. The northern prospect emphasizes the palace’s fortified mass against the plain, its terraces evoking a frontier citadel.

Ruins

Bellotto’s Ruins of Theben/Devín shows the medieval fortress at the confluence of the March and Danube, marking the former Hungarian border once contested in Ottoman wars. A diagonal leads the eye to the crumbling walls, while to the right the plain opens and Schloss Hof appears as a distant speck. In the foreground, a destitute family shelters in a makeshift tent, evoking hardship rather than Arcadian charm. The man’s truncated arm suggests a disabled veteran, perhaps referencing Prince Eugene’s efforts to employ injured soldiers returned from war. Unlike Bellotto’s other works, this painting bespeaks ruin, vulnerability, and perhaps the artist’s own precarity. War and loss were his reality: exiled from Dresden, separated from family, and without a court appointment, he faced financial insecurity akin to his uncle Canaletto.

Reality & Utopia

In early 1761, Bellotto left Vienna carrying the letter of introduction exhibited here. Empress Maria Theresa addressed it to her cousin, the Princess of Bavaria, but mentions Bellotto only laconically. After a short stay in Munich, Bellotto returned to Dresden to find the city and his possessions devastated by war. In The Ruins of the Pirna Suburb, he records this destruction with stark naturalism, although the grazing sheep, a shepherd, and overgrown vegetation suggest quiet resilience.

Back in Dresden, Bellotto faced professional setbacks. Having formerly worked here as court painter, he was now demoted to “perspective instructor” at the Academy. He struggled to maintain a livelihood. Amid this hardship, he painted Architectural Fantasy with a Venetian Nobleman, making a strong argument for the importance of perspective as a foundation for artistic invention. The red-cloaked figure, perhaps an alter ego, asserts creative freedom, echoed by a citation from the ancient Roman poet Horace inscribed on the column: “Painters and poets have always enjoyed equal freedom to dare anything.” Together, these two paintings navigate between harsh reality and imaginative utopia. By 1767 Bellotto left Dresden again, this time moving to Warsaw, where he secured once more the position of court painter and put his observational and compositional skills in the service of the Polish king.

IMAGES



The Riva degli Schiavoni in Venice

Canaletto (1697–1768)
c.1730 
Oil on canvas
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, Picture Gallery
© KHM-Museumsverband




View of Vienna from the Belvedere

Bellotto (1722–1780)
1759/60
Oil on canvas, 135 × 213 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, Picture Gallery 
© KHM-Museumsverband



Venice: The Bacino di San Marco from San Giorgio Maggiore

Canaletto (1697–1768)
1735/44 
Oil on canvas, 129,2 × 188,9 cm
Wallace Collection, London
© Wallace Collection, London, UK / Bridgeman Images



London: The River Thames on Lord Mayor’s Day

Canaletto (1697–1768)
c.1748
Oil on canvas, 118,5 × 237,5 cm
The Lobkowicz Collections, Prague
© The Lobkowicz Collections, Prague; Photo: Jon P. Stokes





The Interior of the Rotunda, Ranelagh

Canaletto (1697–1768)
c.1751
Oil on canvas, 70 × 96 cm
Compton Verney, UK
© Compton Verney, photo by Jamie Woodley




The Liechtenstein Garden Palace in Vienna, seen from the Belvedere

Bellotto (1722–1780)
1759/60
Oil on canvas, 99,8 × 158,5 cm
© LIECHTENSTEIN. The Princely Collections, Vaduz–Vienna




Architectural Capriccio with Self-Portrait of the Artist in the Robes of a Venetian Nobleman

Bellotto (1722–1780)
c.1765
© The Royal Castle in Warsaw – Museum

Photo: Andrzej Ring, Lech Sandzewicz