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This story has appeared in the Christian
Science
Monitor.
Of
comic
books and Canaletto
Donald Duck gives a
visiting professor in Poland some perspective.
[The Monitor has a very nice picture with this
article, online.]
April 13, 2016
I’m not an art expert, or a historian, so I’m not
the one to
judge how the paintings by Canaletto’s nephew, Bellotto, compare
with the more
famous work of Canaletto. But I’ve been struck by how often in
my travels a
question occurs to me in one place, sticks in my mind, and gets
answered years
later and far away. If I were a better researcher I might find
answers more
quickly, but letting them arrive when they happen to do so may
be more fun.
In the summer of 1998 my wife and I spent a few
weeks teaching
English conversation in a children’s summer camp in rural
eastern Poland. The
trip was organized by Global Volunteers, and we were privileged
to stay in the
summer home of the Polish winner of the 1924 Nobel Prize in
Literature,
Władysław Reymont.
The children had studied English in school, and
could read it
fairly well. My group of 10- to 12-year-olds also knew geography
far better
than pupils their age in the United States: They knew not only
the state
capitals, but also the names of all the principal rivers and
capes along the
coasts of North America. However, their conversational skills
were weak. While
the communist government was gone, few of their teachers had as
yet traveled or
studied in English-speaking countries.
Among other things, I brought a stack of Donald
Duck comic
books. My students enjoyed reading them and talking about
Donald’s adventures.
Comic books are wonderful aids for learning languages. Unlike
newspapers and
history books, they use conversational language. They also have
pictures to help
students reconstruct what the words mean.
Sometimes pictures allow another sort of
reconstruction.
One weekend that summer, my wife and I visited
Warsaw. Much of
old Warsaw was destroyed in World War II and was reconstructed
afterward. In a
room in the rebuilt Royal Palace, a guide told us that all the
exquisite
pictures that lined the walls of that room from floor to ceiling
had been
painted by the Italian artist Canaletto. These paintings had a
special place in
Warsaw’s history, the guide added.
Canaletto had been hired by the King of Poland in
1768 to paint
all the principal sites of downtown Warsaw. At the start of
World War II, these
extremely valuable paintings had been buried, then dug up after
the end of the
war. When the old downtown was rebuilt, the Canaletto paintings
had been used
as a guide to reconstruct the facades to make the old streets
look as they had
in the late 1700s.
It was a wonderful story, but it raised
questions. We’d never
heard of Canaletto traveling to Warsaw. We’d never seen
paintings by Canaletto
of anything other than Venice, Italy. Our limited knowledge of
art history
didn’t suggest how to research this, beyond a single source,
which told us that
Canaletto had worked in England for a few years when a war
disrupted painting
sales in Italy.
But then in 2010 a local museum, the Memphis
(Tenn.) Brooks
Museum of Art, had a traveling exhibit come to town: “Venice in
the Age of
Canaletto.” The paintings were naturally of Venice, but there
was also a talk
by the curator, which provided an opportunity to ask our
questions. Had
Canaletto ever visited Warsaw? Had he painted pictures there?
The curator was quite sure the answer was “no” to
both
questions, but he knew how to research the matter and found an
explanation.
Canaletto, whose name was Giovanni Antonio Canal, had a nephew,
Bernardo
Bellotto, who studied under him. Bellotto mastered Canaletto’s
style very well
– so well that when he had finished his studies, he could
produce
Canaletto-style paintings in such quantity that there was not
enough of a
market in Venice for both his paintings and Canaletto’s.
Canaletto remained in Venice, and Bellotto
traveled around
Europe. Apparently, Bellotto often introduced himself as
Canaletto and even
signed that name to his paintings.
I do not know whether the King of Poland, who
employed Bellotto
from 1768 to 1794 to paint those scenes of historical Warsaw,
was misled as to
the identity of the painter. I don’t know enough about
18th-century law, or his
arrangement with Canaletto, to know if Bellotto did anything
improper.
After all, quite a few artists (employed by the
Disney company)
have drawn Donald Duck. But I’m very glad that Bellotto’s work
survived to help
rebuild Warsaw.