Roman Wine Cart
Payment methods
- PayPal
- Credit card
- Bank transfer
- Pubblica amministrazione
- Carta del Docente
Details
- Year of publication
- 1876
- Place of printing
- Londra
- Size
- 130 X 190
- Engravers
- COOKE Edward William
- Keyword
- Scuola Inglese & Americana
Description
Litografia tinta firmata in basso a sinistra. Da un disegno dello stesso Cooke, ora conservato alla Royal Academy of Arts. Edward Cooke arrivò a Roma con sua sorella Laura il 23 dicembre 1845. Tranne che per un'escursione di due settimane a Tivoli, rimase in città fino al maggio dell'anno successivo. Roma era una destinazione insolita per un pittore di marine, e Cooke scrisse alla sua famiglia affermando che la stava "prendendo con freddezza" e aggiungendo che aveva 'taking it coolly' and adding that he had 'intended to paint one or two pictures for the Academy whilst here but it was impossible - 1st because I have been out of spirits and poorly, 2ndly the multitude of objects of intense interest have so completely seized all my thoughts since I left Genoa and the sea, that I seem for a time to have lost all my impressions of marine subjects and effects'. ' Tuttavia, Cooke disegnò avidamente i siti classici e medievali della città durante il suo soggiorno e questi formarono la base per diversi successivi dipinti ad olio di scene romane. Molti dei disegni furono incisi e pubblicati nelle due edizioni di Leaves from my Sketchbook (1876 e 1877). Nell'introduzione a queste pubblicazioni Cooke scrisse: "I viaggi in molti paesi, che si estendono per un periodo di cinquant'anni, hanno riempito i miei Sketch-books con diverse migliaia di schizzi, che spesso sono serviti a richiamare agli amici piacevoli ricordi di giorni felici e climi soleggiati, e ad eccitare il desiderio di visitare luoghi ugualmente notevoli per bellezza naturale e interesse storico". Tinted litograph signed at lower left. From a drawing by Cooke himself, now preserved at ' Royal Academy of Arts. Edward Cooke arrived in Rome with his sister Laura on December 23rd 1845. Except for a two week excursion to Tivoli, he remained in the city until May the following year. Rome was an unusual destination for a marine painter, and Cooke wrote to his family stating that he was 'taking it coolly' and adding that he had 'intended to paint one or two pictures for the Academy whilst here but it was impossible - 1st because I have been out of spirits and poorly, 2ndly the multitude of objects of intense interest have so completely seized all my thoughts since I left Genoa and the sea, that I seem for a time to have lost all my impressions of marine subjects and effects'. ' Nevertheless, Cooke avidly sketched the city's classical and medieval sites during his stay and these formed the basis for several subsequent oil paintings of Roman scenes. Many of the drawings were engraved and published in the two editions of Cooke's Leaves from my Sketchbook (1876 and 1877). In the introduction to these publications Cooke wrote, 'Travels in many countries, extending over a period of fifty years, have filled my Sketch-books with several thousand sketches, which have often served to recall to friends pleasant memories of happy days and sunny climes, and excite a wish to visit places alike remarkable for natural beauty and historic interest.' Cfr.