01 Painting of the Canals of Venice by the artists of their time, with foot notes. #52

Monique Laville, la gaude, France
Carnaval Venitien, c. 2015
Huile sur toile au couteau/ Oil on Canvas
81x60

Monique Laville, self-taught professional painter, born in Marseille on February 2, 1950 under the name of Saccomanni, "I exhibit in France as well as abroad solo or in group since 1984 with different artistic recognitions and awards.

My paintings are strongly influenced by the Impressionist movement with a very personal touch, my painting expresses the commitment and a deep cry to show that since 1900 the productivist society has brought damage in the world at the level of ecology and humanism. 
Many of our historic places in France have disappeared to give way to modernism (like the Promenade des Anglais in Nice)

All the our old trades have disappear: fishing, harvesting, harvesting for a gain... and our productivity at the expense of humans such as the pickers of lavender, carnations ... which are no longer done by hand 

Our society has become individualistic where people are ignoring themselves and all our values ​​are disappearing. 

This is the message I want to convey through my painting ... and it is thanks to Impressionism that I can express these values." More on Monique Laville




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01 Painting of the Canals of Venice by the artists of their time, with foot notes. #51

Egisto Massoni, Italy (1854-1929)
Venezia-Canal Dei Fuseri
Oil on board
24"H x 14.5"W
Private collection

Venice is known as "the City of Canals" and contains 182 named canals which break down further into Canal Segments connecting Venice' islands.. The longest canal is the Grand Canal which spans 4,016 meters. In Venice, a single canal is called rio.

The current canals of Venice are descendants of natural lagoon channels that separated the original islands. With the development of the City of Venice, their natural paths were gradually modified through land reclamation that brought the islands closer and closer to each other, resulting in the canal network one can observe today. Due to these pervasive human interventions, only a few of today's canals still retain their original natural course, as evidenced by the Grand Canal, whose sinuous shape clearly betrays its natural origins.

The Ponte dei Fuseri , constructed in 1755. It crosses the Rio dei Fuseri bridging a gap of 7.24 meters. On the northern side of the bridge is the sestiere of San Marco and on the southern side is also San Marco .There are 2 ramps.The steps are paved with Trachite. Also, this bridge has 1 arch. 

Egisto Massoni (Pisa, 1854 – Venice, 1929) was an Italian painter, of vedute and vistas dal vero. He painted both in oil and watercolor.

He was a resident of Pisa. He painted landscapes of the countryside around Rome and seascapes and vedute of Venice. At Turin, in 1884, he exhibited two paintings: In laguna a Venezia and A Canal at Venice.

After a stay in Liguria, he was in Rome before 1880, a period in which he participated in the custom of "artistic outings", to paint from the truth in the Roman countryside (Studies from life in Cervara, exposed in Rome in 1880 ). In the following decade he moved to Campania and Venice to paint marinas. In the capital he exhibited annually with the associations of the Amateurs and the Cultori and the Acquarellisti until 1893. More on Egisto Massoni





Please visit my other blogs: Art CollectorMythologyMarine ArtPortrait of a Lady, The OrientalistArt of the Nude and The Canals of VeniceAnd visit my Boards on Pinterest

Images are copyright of their respective owners, assignees or others. Some Images may be subject to copyright

I don't own any of these images - credit is always given when due unless it is unknown to me. if I post your images without your permission, please tell me.

I do not sell art, art prints, framed posters or reproductions. Ads are shown only to compensate the hosting expenses.

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Thank you for visiting my blog and also for liking its posts and pages.

01 Work of the Canals of Venice, Martín Rico y Ortega's Gondolier in a Venetian Canal, with footnotes. #125

Martín Rico y Ortega, Spanish, 1833 - 1908 Gondolier in a Venetian Canal Oil on canvas 20 by 16⅛ in.; 50.8 by 41 cm Private collectio...