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Conservation & Preservation
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Wallace Collection crowdfunds to conserve Canaletto works in room with many views

Museum aims to clean and analyse all 28 of its vedute paintings of Venice by spring 2020

Hannah McGivern
27 November 2018
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Canaletto’s Venice: the Bacino di San Marco from San Giorgio Maggiore (around 1735-44) undergoing treatment at the Hamilton Kerr Institute in Cambridge © Chris Titmus

Canaletto’s Venice: the Bacino di San Marco from San Giorgio Maggiore (around 1735-44) undergoing treatment at the Hamilton Kerr Institute in Cambridge © Chris Titmus

The Vedute room of London’s Wallace Collection is a window on to the Venice of the aristocratic Grand Tour. Densely hung with picture-postcard views of the floating city by Canaletto, Guardi and Canaletto’s followers, the gallery “reflects the Franco-British taste of our founders”, the Hertford family, says Lelia Packer, the museum’s curator of Dutch, Italian, Spanish, German and pre-1600 paintings.

Over time, however, the shimmering blues of the sky and lagoon in these pictures have been obscured by a “yellow film of dirty varnish”, Packer says. “That could be a single layer or multiple layers,” she adds, as varnish was traditionally applied to “saturate the colours”. A multi-phase conservation project called Venetian Views now aims to clean and analyse all 28 vedute paintings in the Wallace Collection, including their frames, by spring 2020.

With no paintings conservator on site, the museum is sending the works in batches to the Hamilton Kerr Institute, part of the University of Cambridge’s Fitzwilliam Museum. Most had not been cleaned since they entered the Hertford collection in the 18th or 19th centuries. The Cambridge specialists are also using x-ray and infrared reflectography techniques to develop “a clear picture of how they were painted”, Packer says. This research could identify the hand in some of the anonymous works.

So far, the Hamilton Kerr Institute has treated a pair of large Canalettos of the Bacino di San Marco, seven scenes by his followers and three Guardi capriccio paintings, which inventively reconfigure Venetian landmarks. The work was funded by the Bank of America Art Conservation Project, the Charles Hayward Foundation and individual donors.

The Wallace Collection is turning to the public to support the next phase of the £250,000 project. A crowdfunding campaign launched today (27 November) through Art Happens, the online platform of the UK charity Art Fund, seeks to raise £17,500 by 20 December to conserve Canaletto’s two pendant views of the Doge’s Palace (around 1740-45).

The initiative is a way to ensure that a beloved part of the collection continues to look its best, Packer says. “They are such beautiful pictures to look at and enjoy. I think cleaning them will really facilitate that for our public.”

  • The Wallace Collection's Art Happens campaign launches on 27 November at
Conservation & PreservationPaintingWallace CollectionMuseums & HeritageCanaletto
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