
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto Giclée Fine Art Prints 10 of 13
1697-1768
Italian Rococo Painter
Giovanni Antonio Canal, known by the diminutive Canaletto, emerged from the theatrical milieu of early eighteenth-century Venice to become the Republic's most accomplished chronicler of urban spectacle. Born in 1697 to the painter Bernardo Canal and Artemisia Barbieri, the artist's formative years were shaped by the collaborative enterprise of stage design - a training that would profoundly influence his approach to pictorial composition and atmospheric effect.
The Roman sojourn of 1718-1719 proved transformative. Working alongside his father on operatic productions for Alessandro Scarlatti, Canal absorbed the architectural grandeur and luminous clarity that distinguished the vedute of Giovanni Paolo Pannini. Yet upon returning to Venice, he transcended mere topographical documentation, developing a visual language that captured both the material substance and ephemeral poetry of his native city. His earliest signed work, the Architectural Capriccio of 1723, already demonstrated a sophisticated understanding of perspective and light that would distinguish his mature production.
What separated Canal from his mentor Luca Carlevarijs was not simply technical proficiency but an almost scientific attention to atmospheric conditions and natural phenomena. Working en plein air - a practice uncommon among his contemporaries - he recorded the subtle variations of Venetian light, the seasonal flooding of the piazzas, the precise play of shadows across weathered stone. The Stonemason's Yard of circa 1725 exemplifies this dual engagement with the quotidian and the monumental, presenting a working-class quarter with the same gravitas traditionally reserved for palatial facades.
The artist's association with Joseph Smith, begun before 1728, established the commercial framework that would sustain his career. Through Smith's entrepreneurial acumen, Canal's views found eager collectors among British Grand Tourists, establishing a market that would eventually draw the artist to London during the disruptions of the War of Austrian Succession. The English period of 1746-1755 witnessed both triumph and crisis - while his views of Westminster Bridge and aristocratic estates secured prestigious commissions, the mechanical quality of certain works prompted George Vertue's notorious suggestion of imposture.
This accusation, whether motivated by the concurrent activities of his nephew Bernardo Bellotto or by unscrupulous dealers trafficking in copies, reveals the precarious nature of artistic reputation in an era of burgeoning commercialism. Canal's response - the public invitation to inspect his St. James's Park canvas at his Silver Street studio - demonstrated both professional pride and market savvy, though full vindication would prove elusive during his lifetime.
Returning to Venice in 1755, Canal continued to negotiate between documentary precision and pictorial invention. His late works, while sometimes dependent on earlier sketches, could still surprise with unexpected compositional solutions. The capricci, those architectural fantasies that blur the boundaries between observation and imagination, perhaps best encapsulate his artistic philosophy - one that recognized topographical accuracy as merely the foundation for more complex aesthetic ambitions.
Canal's legacy extends beyond the magnificent holdings of the Royal Collection or the high prices his works command at auction. In his synthesis of theatrical design, scientific observation, and commercial acumen, he articulated a distinctly modern conception of the artist as both chronicler and entrepreneur. That his luminous surfaces and precise perspectives anticipated aspects of Impressionism suggests how thoroughly he understood painting as both document and transfiguration - a dual achievement that continues to reward close scrutiny.
The Roman sojourn of 1718-1719 proved transformative. Working alongside his father on operatic productions for Alessandro Scarlatti, Canal absorbed the architectural grandeur and luminous clarity that distinguished the vedute of Giovanni Paolo Pannini. Yet upon returning to Venice, he transcended mere topographical documentation, developing a visual language that captured both the material substance and ephemeral poetry of his native city. His earliest signed work, the Architectural Capriccio of 1723, already demonstrated a sophisticated understanding of perspective and light that would distinguish his mature production.
What separated Canal from his mentor Luca Carlevarijs was not simply technical proficiency but an almost scientific attention to atmospheric conditions and natural phenomena. Working en plein air - a practice uncommon among his contemporaries - he recorded the subtle variations of Venetian light, the seasonal flooding of the piazzas, the precise play of shadows across weathered stone. The Stonemason's Yard of circa 1725 exemplifies this dual engagement with the quotidian and the monumental, presenting a working-class quarter with the same gravitas traditionally reserved for palatial facades.
The artist's association with Joseph Smith, begun before 1728, established the commercial framework that would sustain his career. Through Smith's entrepreneurial acumen, Canal's views found eager collectors among British Grand Tourists, establishing a market that would eventually draw the artist to London during the disruptions of the War of Austrian Succession. The English period of 1746-1755 witnessed both triumph and crisis - while his views of Westminster Bridge and aristocratic estates secured prestigious commissions, the mechanical quality of certain works prompted George Vertue's notorious suggestion of imposture.
This accusation, whether motivated by the concurrent activities of his nephew Bernardo Bellotto or by unscrupulous dealers trafficking in copies, reveals the precarious nature of artistic reputation in an era of burgeoning commercialism. Canal's response - the public invitation to inspect his St. James's Park canvas at his Silver Street studio - demonstrated both professional pride and market savvy, though full vindication would prove elusive during his lifetime.
Returning to Venice in 1755, Canal continued to negotiate between documentary precision and pictorial invention. His late works, while sometimes dependent on earlier sketches, could still surprise with unexpected compositional solutions. The capricci, those architectural fantasies that blur the boundaries between observation and imagination, perhaps best encapsulate his artistic philosophy - one that recognized topographical accuracy as merely the foundation for more complex aesthetic ambitions.
Canal's legacy extends beyond the magnificent holdings of the Royal Collection or the high prices his works command at auction. In his synthesis of theatrical design, scientific observation, and commercial acumen, he articulated a distinctly modern conception of the artist as both chronicler and entrepreneur. That his luminous surfaces and precise perspectives anticipated aspects of Impressionism suggests how thoroughly he understood painting as both document and transfiguration - a dual achievement that continues to reward close scrutiny.
309 Canaletto Artworks
Page 10 of 13

Giclée Canvas Print
$54.54
$54.54
SKU: 6655-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:37 x 65.2 cm
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania, USA
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:37 x 65.2 cm
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$72.33
$72.33
SKU: 6711-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:191 x 203 cm
Musee des Beaux Arts, Grenoble, France
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:191 x 203 cm
Musee des Beaux Arts, Grenoble, France

Giclée Paper Art Print
$52.06
$52.06
SKU: 6776-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:23.2 x 18.2 cm
The Royal Collection, London, UK
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:23.2 x 18.2 cm
The Royal Collection, London, UK

Giclée Canvas Print
$54.54
$54.54
SKU: 6714-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:182 x 259 cm
Private Collection
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:182 x 259 cm
Private Collection

Giclée Canvas Print
$54.54
$54.54
SKU: 585-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:119 x 186 cm
Gemaldegalerie, Berlin, Germany
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:119 x 186 cm
Gemaldegalerie, Berlin, Germany

Giclée Canvas Print
$54.54
$54.54
SKU: 6729-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:80 x 95.3 cm
Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart, Germany
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:80 x 95.3 cm
Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart, Germany

Giclée Paper Art Print
$52.06
$52.06
SKU: 6770-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:13.5 x 18.5 cm
Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Massachusetts, USA
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:13.5 x 18.5 cm
Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Massachusetts, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$54.54
$54.54
SKU: 17336-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:43 x 71.8 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:43 x 71.8 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$54.54
$54.54
SKU: 6586-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:58.2 x 93.5 cm
The Wallace Collection, London, UK
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:58.2 x 93.5 cm
The Wallace Collection, London, UK

Giclée Paper Art Print
$52.06
$52.06
SKU: 6739-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:31.1 x 47.6 cm
Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University, Massachusetts, USA
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:31.1 x 47.6 cm
Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University, Massachusetts, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$72.01
$72.01
SKU: 560-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:143 x 200 cm
Palazzo Ca' Rezzonico, Venice, Italy
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:143 x 200 cm
Palazzo Ca' Rezzonico, Venice, Italy

Giclée Paper Art Print
$52.06
$52.06
SKU: 6931-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:21.5 x 33.8 cm
The Royal Collection, London, UK
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:21.5 x 33.8 cm
The Royal Collection, London, UK

Giclée Canvas Print
$65.68
$65.68
SKU: 563-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:63 x 96 cm
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, UK
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:63 x 96 cm
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, UK

Giclée Canvas Print
$63.68
$63.68
SKU: 6611-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:unknown
Private Collection
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:unknown
Private Collection

Giclée Paper Art Print
$52.06
$52.06
SKU: 6752-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:13.2 x 20.6 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California, USA
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:13.2 x 20.6 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California, USA

Giclée Canvas Print
$54.54
$54.54
SKU: 6656-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:42 x 32.5 cm
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, Madrid, Spain
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:42 x 32.5 cm
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, Madrid, Spain

Giclée Canvas Print
$54.54
$54.54
SKU: 6721-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:118 x 188 cm
Gemaldegalerie, Berlin, Germany
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:118 x 188 cm
Gemaldegalerie, Berlin, Germany

Giclée Paper Art Print
$52.06
$52.06
SKU: 6769-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:21.4 x 31.6 cm
Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Massachusetts, USA
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:21.4 x 31.6 cm
Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Massachusetts, USA

Giclée Paper Art Print
$52.06
$52.06
SKU: 6751-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:14.3 x 20.9 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California, USA
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:14.3 x 20.9 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California, USA

Giclée Paper Art Print
$52.06
$52.06
SKU: 6753-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:14.5 x 20.8 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California, USA
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:14.5 x 20.8 cm
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California, USA

Giclée Paper Art Print
$52.06
$52.06
SKU: 6777-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:18.1 x 23.4 cm
The Royal Collection, London, UK
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:18.1 x 23.4 cm
The Royal Collection, London, UK

Giclée Canvas Print
$56.51
$56.51
SKU: 599-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:130.2 x 190.8 cm
The Wallace Collection, London, UK
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:130.2 x 190.8 cm
The Wallace Collection, London, UK

Giclée Canvas Print
$90.61
$90.61
SKU: 6632-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:unknown
Private Collection
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:unknown
Private Collection

Giclée Canvas Print
$54.54
$54.54
SKU: 566-CAN
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:47 x 80 cm
Private Collection
Giovanni Antonio Canal Canaletto
Original Size:47 x 80 cm
Private Collection