Currently not on view

Venice–Seascape at the Giudecca,

1895

Eugène Boudin, 1824–1898; born Honfleur, France; died Deauville, France
y1986-72
Boudin is most famous for his scenes of fashionable Normandy seaside resorts, painted in the 1860s, but he also travelled abroad. Venice offered his favorite motifs--sea and sky. A large sailing ship and small fishing boats are moored at the Giudecca, the island across from Piazza San Marco. The Dominican church Santa Maria del Rosario and Andrea Palladio’s masterpiece Il Redentore beyond it furnish topographical references, but the reflections in water and the cloud-covered sky dominate the scene and are the real subjects.

Information

Title
Venice–Seascape at the Giudecca
Dates

1895

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
37.1 x 50 cm (14 5/8 x 19 11/16 in.)
Credit Line
Bequest of Clinton Wilder, Class of 1943
Object Number
y1986-72
Place Made

Europe, France

Place Depicted

Europe, Italy, Venice, La Giudecca

Signatures
Signed and dated, lower right: Venis./E. Boudin 95
Reference Numbers
Schmit 3426
Culture
Materials

Edouard Latil, Paris (until 1931; sale, Hotel Drouot, Paris, December 14, 1931, lot 4); ?anonymous sale, Palais Galliera, June 14, 1967, lot A; Professor Lamy, Paris (either before or after the 1967 sale); Clinton Wilder, New York (until 1986; bequest to the Princeton University Art Museum).