The Garden of Palazzo Contarini dal Zaffo

Description

A member of a family of painters in Venice, Francesco Guardi is renowned for his lively views of the most recognizable monuments of this picturesque city and for his engaging architectural fantasies, or capricci. Wealthy travelers making the grand tour of Europe—considered an essential part of an education for upper-class men—provided an important market for such views. In this case, however, the patron was not a foreigner passing through Venice, but John Strange, who lived in the city on the lagoon as the British resident, or representative.

This view of the garden of a private house in Venice was highly unusual for Guardi. On the right is the rear facade of the Palazzo Contarini dal Zaffo; the front faces the Grand Canal. The artist’s main subject here is the palace’s formal garden, a luxury in Venice’s crowded urban environment. Elegant couples stroll through the garden’s geometric parterres. Guardi’s attention to the play of light further animates the scene—a shadow cast by an unseen building in the foreground divides the composition and contrasts with the bright light reflected off the facade of the residence and the distant, shimmering lagoon on the left.

These observations of light and place probably reflect the aesthetic interests of Strange, who commissioned the painting from Guardi as one of a set of four remarkably original views. Two of the four paintings show Strange’s own villa on the mainland. What connection Strange may have had to the Palazzo Contarini dal Zaffo is unclear.

Provenance

One of series of four viewed in Venice and the Veneto, presumably painted for John Strange (died 1799), British resident in Venice between 1773 and 1788; sale of his collection, European Museum, London, May 27, 1799, no. 49 (bought in); sale of his collection, Christie’s, London, March 15, 1800, no. 99. Colonel Milligan of Caldwell Hall, Burton-on-Trent; Nottinghamshire; sold, Christie’s, London, March 13, 1883, no. 358 or 359, to Davies [this information given in Christie’s sale catalogue, December 8, 1989 under no. 114, Villa Loredan from the same series]; Charles Davies, London. Colnaghi’s, London [Ames 1963, p. 37 states that Rothermere acquired the series from Colnaghi]; Harold Sidney Harmsworth, first Vicount Rothermere (died 1940) [the series of four paintings was intact on the death of Lord Rothermere, but appears to have been sold separately and privately after his death, see Fahy 1973, p. 111]. Knoedler, New York [according to Knoedler label on the back with stock no. 423 [5 or 6] 2]. Alfred Frankfurter, New York [letter from Alfred Frankfurter to Mr. and Mrs. Ascoli dated July 16, 1947, copy in curatorial file]; Dr. and Mrs. Max Ascoli, New York, by 1947 [letter cited above]; given to the Marion and Max Ascoli Fund; given to the Art Institute, 1991.

The Garden of Palazzo Contarini dal Zaffo

Francesco Guardi

Late 1770s

Accession Number

111610

Medium

Oil on canvas

Dimensions

48 × 78 cm (19 × 30 5/8 in.); Framed: 63.5 × 92.7 × 6.7 cm (25 × 36 1/2 × 2 5/8 in.)

Classification

oil on canvas

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Marion and Max Ascoli Fund

Background & Context

Background Story

Francesco Guardi's "The Garden of Palazzo Contarini dal Zaffo" (late 1770s) is an oil on canvas depicting one of the most famous gardens in 18th-century Venice. The Palazzo Contarini dal Zaffo, located in the Dorsoduro district, was renowned for its garden, which was a rare green space in the dense urban fabric of Venice. Guardi's painting shows the garden with its formal plantings, statuary, and architectural elements, perhaps with figures of the nobility enjoying the refined outdoor space. The painting belongs to Guardi's mature period, when his style had become increasingly free and atmospheric. The brushwork is rapid and broken, the forms dissolved into touches of color that convey the effects of light and atmosphere rather than the precise details of the garden's layout. The palette is warm and luminous, with the green of the foliage set against the warm tones of the architecture. This painting documents a now-lost garden and captures the refined social life of the Venetian aristocracy in the final decades of the Republic.

Cultural Impact

Guardi's garden paintings document the refined outdoor spaces of 18th-century Venice, capturing a world of aristocratic leisure that was about to vanish with the fall of the Republic in 1797.

Why It Matters

This painting of the Contarini garden captures the elegance of Venetian social life in the 18th century, the loose brushwork and luminous palette conveying the atmosphere of a leisurely afternoon in a garden that was one of the city's finest.