Landscape (recto); Landscape (verso)

Perugino (Pietro di Cristoforo Vannucci) Italian

Not on view


This view of a wooded slope on the bank of a river is an exceptionally rare example of a fifteenth-century landscape study. Perugino eschews linear penwork in favor of wash and white gouache, using the brush to draw forms that seem to dissolve into atmosphere and light. The eloquent passages of blank space call attention to the broad, watery brushstrokes with which the artist prepared the paper with a gray-green wash. The subtle texture of the preparation, together with the thin applications of brown wash in the design layer, gives the scene a vaporous softness. One of the most sought-after artists of his day, Perugino frequently included serene landscapes inspired by the Tuscan and Umbrian countrysides in the backgrounds of his paintings. A composition closely related to this one appears in the distance in his Vision of Saint Bernard (Alte Pinakothek, Munich).

Landscape (recto); Landscape (verso), Perugino (Pietro di Cristoforo Vannucci) (Italian, Città della Pieve, active by 1469–died 1523 Fontignano), Brush and brown wash, highlighted with white gouache, on gray-green prepared paper (recto); pen and brown ink on unprepared off-white paper (verso)

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