Currently not on view
Lion Sculpture, Arsenal, Venice,
ca. 1865
At the Piazza San Marco, Ponti had a shop where he sold photographic views of Venice in souvenir books called Ricordi di Venezia. His photos reveal his eye for composition and architectural detail—as is evident in this example, taken at the Venetian Arsenal, once the greatest shipyard in the world. The marble lion shown is one of two flanking the Arsenal’s Porta Magna, or main gate. Both lions hail from ancient Greece and were looted in the seventeenth century. The male figure in worker’s clothes standing at the base of the statue adds a hint of social realism to the image. Ponti probably intended for this photograph to be viewed using one of his optical instruments—such as the megalethoscope—that made two-dimensional images appear three-dimensional.
Information
ca. 1865
Albumen print
35.3 x 27.3 cm (13 7/8 x 10 3/4 in.)
mount: 43.9 x 30.9 cm. (17 5/16 x 12 3/16 in.)
Museum purchase, gift of Mr. and Mrs. Max Adler