Object data
brown ink, with grey wash, over traces of graphite
height 267 mm × width 411 mm
Caspar van Wittel
Grottaferrata, 1674 - 1736
brown ink, with grey wash, over traces of graphite
height 267 mm × width 411 mm
inscribed on verso, in graphite: lower centre, aus der Samlung von Otto Mundler Paris ; below that, Van Vittel (underlined); lower left, F. van Bloemen (gen. Ori[j]onto) / Grotto Forrata bei Frascati ; lower right corner, Ovni Par (?); next to that, 53 (encircled); next to that 56[5?]8/973
stamped: lower right corner, with the mark of Jolles (L. 381)
stamped on verso: lower centre, with the mark of the museum (L. 2228)
watermark: circle (fragment)
brown spots throughout
…; collection Boguslaw Jolles (?-1912), Vienna and Dresden (L. 381); …; sale, Dr Michael Berolzheimer (1866-1942, Untergrainau (Bavaria) and Mount Vernon (NY)), Munich (A. Weinmüller), 9 March 1939 sqq., no. 111, as Jan Frans van Bloemen, bought in;1 ‘zu den Aufrufpreis’ to Weinmüller, Munich;2 by whom sold, 1939;3 …; collection Dr Einar Perman (1893-1976, Stockholm and Amsterdam), 1973;4 his sale, Amsterdam (Mak van Waay), 9 June 1975, no. 156, fl. 9,400, to the museum (L. 2228); restituted to the heirs of Dr Michael Berolzheimer (1866-1942, Untergrainau (Bavaria) and Mount Vernon (NY)), 2017;5 from whom purchased by the museum, 2018
Object number: RP-T-1975-52
Credit line: Purchased with the support of the I.Q. van Regteren Altena Fonds/Rijksmuseum Fonds
Copyright: Public domain
Caspar van Wittel (Amersfoort, ca. 1653 – Rome, 1736)
He was probably born in Utrecht or Amersfoort to Adriaen Jaspersz Van Wietel (?-?), who was a cartwright, and Mayken Cornelisdr Copiers (?-?).6 His initial training was with portrait painter Thomas van Veenendaell (c. 1628-after 1673). He joined the workshop of Matthias Withoos (1627-1703) a few years later.7 At the end of 1674 Van Wittel moved to Rome, where he was recorded at the local guild of Netherlandish artists, the Schildersbent, on 3 January 1675. His Bent-name was ‘Piktoorts’ (Pitch-torch), but his more commonly used Italian name was ‘Vanvitelli’ or ‘Gasparo dagli Occhiali’, a reference to the spectacles that he had to wear due to his cataracts.8 In his initial years in Rome, he worked as the assistant of hydraulic engineer Cornelis Meyer (1629-1701), illustrating Meyer’s plans to restore navigability to the River Tiber between Rome and Perugia. They also produced several printed views of Rome and its environs.9 Van Wittel spent the remainder of his life in Rome, but made several trips throughout Italy and a short trip to the Netherlands in 1685.10 The majority of his drawn and painted oeuvre depicts Rome and the surrounding campagna.
Van Wittel is considered to be one of the principal painters of topographical views in Italy known as vedute: realistic (panoramic) landscape or town views that are largely topographical in conception. He was renowned for his careful and detailed observations of the individual elements that appear in such works, be they natural or architectural details. He probably made use of a camera obscura to help with perspective. Inspired by his Dutch predecessors, he employed bright colours, for instance to render clear blue skies, and avoided heavy shadows, a novelty in Italy. Several of his paintings are drenched in late-afternoon sunlight reflected from the white façades of local Roman villas and palaces. This technique was certainly inspired by Claude Lorrain (1600-1682), another foreigner active in Italy.11 While many of Van Wittel’s predecessors were attracted by the Classical architectural ruins found in and around Rome, Van Wittel documented the modern city in its present-day form and rarely depicted its ancient monuments and religious sites.12
Drawings were a crucial part of Van Wittel’s working method, and he often used a single drawing for several painted compositions. Many of his drawings were apparently part of sketchbooks with which he usually travelled, which were later taken apart. His in situ sketches are in black or red chalk and were later finished in his studio with ink and washes. Several of his larger sheets include (colour) notations and were squared for transfer. A large group of these preparatory sheets is now in the collection of the Biblioteca Vittorio Emanuele in Rome.13 He also drew imaginary views partly based on actual sites, which are almost exclusively finished works in pen and wash. Several are signed. They were likely made for specific clients; at the height of his career, Van Wittel was unable to meet the large demand for his paintings and instead sold drawings to his clientele.14
On 18 February 1697, Van Wittel married Anne Lorenzani (1669-1736). The couple had six children, three of whom reached adulthood: Luigi Vanvitelli (1700-1773), who became a famous architect and sculptor, Urbano Vanvitelli (1702-1770) and Petronilla Vanvitelli (1710-1766). Caspar van Wittel passed away on 13 September 1736; his wife followed in December of the same year. They were buried in Santa Maria in Vallicelli, Rome.15
Carolyn Mensing, 2021
References
A. Houbraken, De groote schouburgh der Nederlantsche konstschilders en schilderessen, 3 vols., Amsterdam 1718-21, II (1719), p. 360, III (1721), p. 103; A. von Wurzbach, Niederländisches Künstlerlexikon, 3 vols., Vienna/Leipzig 1906-11, II (1910), p. 897; C. Lorenzetti, Gaspare Vanvitelli, Milan 1934; G. Briganti, ‘Gaspar van Wittel (Vanvitelli), schilder van Amersfoort’, Mededeelingen van het Nederlandsch Historisch Instituut te Rome 22 (1943), pp. 119-33; U. Thieme and F. Becker, Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler: Von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, 37 vols., Leipzig 1907-50, XXXVI (1947), pp. 130-31; G. Briganti, Gaspar van Wittel e l’origine della veduta settecentesca, Rome 1966; A. Zwollo, Hollandse en Vlaamse veduteschilders te Rome, 1675-1725, Assen 1973; M.W. Heijenga-Klomp, ‘Jacob van Staverden en Caspar van Wittel. Twee schilders van Amersfoort te Rome’, Flehite 21 (1991) nos. 3-4, pp. 34-42; M.W. Heijenga-Klomp, ‘Caspar van Wittel. Zijn ouders en jeugdjaren’, Flehite 21 (1991), no. 3-4, pp. 42-49; G. Briganti, Gaspar van Wittel, Milan 1996; L. Trezzani, ‘Caspar van Wittel’, in J. Turner (ed.), The Dictionary of Art, 34 vols., London/New York 1996, vol. XXXIII, pp. 268-70; M.W. Heijenga-Klomp, ‘Jasper van Wittel (ca. 1652-1736). Een Amersfoortse schilder in Italië’, Flehite, Historisch Jaarboek voor Amersfoort en omstreken (2005), pp. 132-47; R. Landsman, ‘Caspar van Wittel’s Family Ties’, Oud Holland 131 (2018), no. 3-4, pp. 139-50
Van Wittel drew this view of the abbey of Santa Maria di Grottaferrata from a low vantage point in the middle of the surrounding forest. Cast in the shadows of the trees, Van Wittel placed a fontanile (water basin) prominently in the foreground. This water basin can still be found at the same spot today, although a bit further from the road. The abbey was founded in the eleventh century and built on the spot where the Virgin is said to have appeared before Saint Nilus the Younger (AD 910-1005). In the background the abbey’s battlements can be seen peaking out above the distant trees.
Van Wittel made several sketches of the immediate surroundings of Grottaferrata as well the abbey. A panoramic drawing of the whole complex was in the Kupferstichkabinett, Berlin, but is now lost; a painting based on the latter was once in the collection of the Geneva dealer Paul Fatio, but its present whereabouts are also unknown.16 A similar painted panoramic vista with the abbey complex was on the London art market in 2006.17 Van Wittel also made a drawing of the abbey’s imposing fortress and entrance gate, which in 1996 was in the collection of Paul Wilson in London.18 That drawing was used for at least two paintings, one in the Pinacoteca Capitolina, Rome (inv. no. 94),19 and one that in 1996 was in a private collection in Rome.20 Another version or a possible copy after these paintings was auctioned by Sotheby’s in 1975 and again by them in 1998.21
Carolyn Mensing, 2021
A. Zwollo, Hollandse en Vlaamse veduteschilders te Rome, 1675-1725, Assen 1973, p. 154, fig. 190; ‘Keuze uit de aanwinsten 1975-4’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum, 23 (1975), p. 238, fig. 14; ‘Keuze uit de aanwinsten 1975 van het Rijksprentenkabinet’, Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum, 24 (1976), p. 156; G. Briganti, Gaspar van Wittel, Milan 1996, no. D9
C. Mensing, 2021, 'Caspar van Wittel, View of the Abbey of Grottaferrata, Grottaferrata, 1674 - 1736', in J. Turner (ed.), Dutch Drawings of the Seventeenth Century in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.64020
(accessed 25 November 2024 05:46:01).