Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History

The Metropolitan Museum of Art



  • View of the Villa Lante on the Janiculum (Gianicolo) in Rome, 1782–83
    John Robert Cozens (British, 1752–1798)
    Watercolor over traces of graphite on white laid paper

    10 x 14 1/2 in. (25.3 x 36.8 cm)
    Rogers Fund, 1967 (67.68)

    Like many British artists of his era, John Robert Cozens traveled to Italy, where he made sketches in the landscape. Working directly from the motif—typically in graphite or black chalk—he captured the essential forms en plein air, then colored his sketches with watercolor washes—either on the spot, or slightly later, in his Italian lodgings, or (in some instances) upon his return to Britain.

    He made this view for William Beckford, the wealthy author, collector, and aesthete whom Cozens accompanied to Italy in 1782–83. By omitting hard outlines, blotting his fluid brushstrokes, and articulating details of foliage and architecture with delicate touches of color, Cozens achieved a soft, luminous effect. By selecting a viewpoint from below, in which the buildings appear dramatically silhouetted against the sky, he revealed his interest in the aesthetic category of the Sublime. The result is an evocative, atmospheric style of watercolor that would inspire countless artists of the following generation, and prompt John Constable to describe Cozens (in 1835) as "the greatest genius that ever touched landscape."

    Related


    MoveSeparatorPrint
    Close
  • View of the Villa Lante on the Janiculum (Gianicolo) in Rome, 1782–83
    John Robert Cozens (British, 1752–1798)
    Watercolor over traces of graphite on white laid paper

    10 x 14 1/2 in. (25.3 x 36.8 cm)
    Rogers Fund, 1967 (67.68)