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Boats of Venice
Boats of Venice
Artist (American, 1840 - 1921)

Boats of Venice

Dateca. 1885
DimensionsSight: 15 1/2 × 23 1/4 in. (39.4 × 59.1 cm)
Object numberN0005.2022
Credit LineCollection of the Fenimore Art Museum. Museum Purchase
Photograph by Richard Walker
Label TextA covered gondola approaches fishing boats creating an interesting juxtaposition of high and low class. These interactions between wealthy and working-class Venetians were more likely to occur within the lagoon, one of the more heavily travelled and fished waterways in Venice. Covered gondolas were favored by the wealthy during the nineteenth century; their small cabins (felze) provided protection from prying eyes and weather. Smillie’s true fascination lay with the fishermen working their nets, their brightly colored sails dominating the composition, while in the distance the domes of Santa Maria della Salute, and the campanile di San Marco orient our view across the lagoon.

In 1885 Smillie and his wife, Nellie, made an extended tour of Europe. Smillie, perhaps drawn to Venice through the accounts of his fellow painter-etchers, Otto Henry Bacher (1856-1909) and Samuel Colman (1832-1920), painted this view across the Venetian lagoon twice. Smillie often marveled at how landscape painting could express an endless variety of emotions.
Exhibition History"Unmasking Venice: American Artists and the City of Water," Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown, NY, May 28- September 5, 2022.
On View
Not on view
Untitled
J. Redpath
1858
Morning in Venice
Warren Sheppard
c. 1890
Cider Making in the Country
George Henry Durrie
1863
On The Canal
Edward Lamson Henry
1885-1890
View of New York Harbor
Edmund C. Coates
1837-1847
Pittsford on The Erie Canal
George Harvey
c. 1837
Valley Of Canajoharie
Unidentified Artist
n.d.
Kept In
Edward Lamson Henry
1889
Brittany
Mary Hackney Wicker
1906-1907

5798 STATE HIGHWAY 80
COOPERSTOWN NY, 13326
607-547-1400

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