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Antonio Visentini

Antonio Visentini (21 November 1688 – 26 June 1782) was a Venetian architectural designer, painter and engraver, known for his architectural fantasies and capricci, the author of treatises on perspective and a professor at the Venetian Academy.

Antonio Visentini

(1688-11-21)21 November 1688

26 June 1782(1782-06-26) (aged 93)

Venice

Architect

Life and works[edit]

Born in Venice, Visentini was a pupil of the widely travelled Baroque painter Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini,[1] who had painted some decors in English country houses at the beginning of the 18th century. Visentini is best known today as the engraver for Canaletto's first great series of Venetian vedute published under the title Urbis Venetiarum Prospectus Celebriores ex Antonii Canal,[2] organised by British resident Joseph (Consul) Smith (1682–1770). The series was begun around 1728 and by the time it was completed in 1735, thirty-eight etchings and engravings had been printed.


On the Grand Canal, Visentini was commissioned to redesign the façade of the residence of Consul Smith, the Palazzo Balbi. He collaborated with Francesco Zuccarelli on capriccios based on English Palladian villas, again for Consul Smith;[3] some have passed with Smith's collection to the British Royal Collection. In Vicenza, Visentini painted frescoes at the Villa Valmarana, for which Gian Domenico Tiepolo painted the figures. In the 1760s the English architect James Wyatt studied with him as an architectural draughtsman and painter.


Visentini's work, the Osservazioni,[4] published in Venice in 1771, was intended as a complement and an extension of a treatise by Teofilo Gallacini (1564–1641), which concerned itself with the errors of Mannerist and early Baroque architecture.[5] Visentini's engravings in the Osservazioni illustrate his proposed modifications correcting Baroque architectural details.


Visentini taught at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Venice from 1772–78, and he died in Venice in 1782.

Portrait of Giovanni Antonio Canal, called Canaletto.

Portrait of Giovanni Antonio Canal, called Canaletto.

Architectural fantasy Gallerie dell'Accademia[6]

Architectural fantasy Gallerie dell'Accademia[6]

San Geremia and the Entrance of Cannaregio.

San Geremia and the Entrance of Cannaregio.

The Grand Canal from Santa Croce to the East.

The Grand Canal from Santa Croce to the East.

The Grand Canal with San Simeone Piccolo and the Scalzi.

The Grand Canal with San Simeone Piccolo and the Scalzi.

The Basilica di San Giovanni e Paolo.

The Basilica di San Giovanni e Paolo.

Burlington House. Antonio Visentini and Francesco Zuccarelli.

Burlington House. Antonio Visentini and Francesco Zuccarelli.

Mereworth Castle. Antonio Visentini and Francesco Zuccarelli.

Mereworth Castle. Antonio Visentini and Francesco Zuccarelli.

Old Testament Playing Cards. Antonio Visentini after Francesco Zuccarelli.

Old Testament Playing Cards. Antonio Visentini after Francesco Zuccarelli.

Delneri, Annalia (1988). "Antonio Visentini: 1688–1782," in Capricci veneziani del Settecento a cura di Dario Succi (Torino: Umberto Allemandi).

Lazzaro, Claudia (1981). Eighteenth-Century Italian Prints. (Stanford).

Links, J.G. (1977). Canaletto and his Patrons, Paul Elek Ltd, London. p. 97–98.

Succi, D., ed (1986). Canaletto & Visentini, Venezia & Londra: catalogo della mostra alla Galleria d’arte Moderna di Cà Pesaro. Edition Bertoncello–Tedeschi: Venezia.

Web Gallery of Art: Antonio Visentini

[1]

Visentini, Antonio. Osservazioni di Antonio Visentini, architetto veneto, che servono di continuazione al trattato di Teofilo Gallacini sopra gli errori degli architetti. Giambatista Pasquali: Venice, 1771.

[2]

Biographical sketch of Antonio Visentini in: Pellegrino, Antonio Orlandi. Abecedario pittorico del m.r.p. Pellegrino Antonio Orlandi, bolognese, contenente le notizie de' professori di pittura, scoltura, ed architettura. Giambatista Pasquali: Venice, 1753.

[3]

Vat.lat.8482, Antonio Maria Visentini L'introductione Della soda e reale Architettura, e Prospetiva di Antonio Visentini, Veneto (c. 1764)

[4]