The Colosseum and Arch of Constantine, Rome
Giovanni Battista Busiri (Rome 1698 - 1757)
Category
Art / Drawings and watercolours
Date
Unknown
Materials
Gouache on paper
Measurements
390 x 625 mm
Place of origin
Rome
Order this imageCollection
Osterley Park and House, London
NT 267122
Summary
Gouache on paper, The Colosseum and the Arch of Constantine, Rome by Giovanni Battista Busiri (Rome 1698 -1757). A view of the Arch of Constantine and the Colosseum beyond. Two men converse on a rocks in the foreground while a woman, supporting a basket on her head, walks on the road. Giovanni Battista Busiri specialised in architectural vedute and capricci of Rome and its surroundings. Inspired by the sixteenth-century landscapes of Gaspard Dughet and Claude, his views convey a pastoral calm amid the antiquities of ancient Rome. Busiri's views were particularly sought by Grand Tourists of the 1740s; twenty-six remain at Felbrigg, acquired by William Windham in 1739-40.
Provenance
Probably one of the gouache paintings of Italian ruins by 'Del Titarelli' hanging in the Blue Room, Westport House, Co. Mayo, Ireland, July 1910. No. 111 in the Westport House Paintings Catalogue c.1910-1930 and by descent to Denis Edward Browne, 10th Marquess of Sligo (1908-1991), Westport House, Co. Mayo, Ireland; his sale, Christies, 4 October, 1958 (lot 43) as Pietro Bianchi; purchased by Brinsley Ford (£57.15s.0d) and by descent to Augustine Ford. Accepted under the Cultural Gifts Scheme by HM Government from Augustine Ford and allocated to the National Trust for Osterley, 2023.
Makers and roles
Giovanni Battista Busiri (Rome 1698 - 1757) , artist previously catalogued as by Pietro Bianchi (Rome 1694 – Rome 1740), artist
References
Ford 1998 Brinsley Ford, John Ingamells, Francis Russell, John Christian, Nicholas Penny, Jennifer Montagu, Howard Coutts, Timothy Wilson & Dudley Dodd, The Ford Collection – II, Walpole Society, Vol. 60, 1998, pp. 91-376, p. 164 (RBF83) Garnett 2015: Oliver Garnett, At Home with Art Treasures from the Ford Collection at Basildon Park, National Trust, 2015, p. 18