The Piazza San Marco
Rudolf von Alt, 1874
About this artwork
**The Piazza San Marco** (1874) by Rudolf Alt captures the grandeur of Venice's iconic square in a luminous watercolor over black chalk on thick wove paper (34.7 × 49.5 cm). The Austrian artist, a master of 19th-century topographical, renders the Basilica di San Marco, Campile, and bustling piazza exquisite precision and atmospheric depth. Von Alt, who made repeated visits to Italy, was celebrated for his ability to evoke the city's shimmering light and architectural splendor, blending Romantic sensitivity with meticulous detail. This work exemplifies watercolor's unique strengths: its translucent layers build subtle gradations of tone, enhanced by the black chalk underdrawing that provides a firm structural foundation on durable wove paper. Such techniques allowed von Alt to achieve jewel-like clarity, making his Venetian scenes highly sought after by collectors during the Grand Tour era. Housed in the National Gallery of Art as a gift from Joan and David Maxwell (Department CG-E), this drawing highlights Venice's enduring cultural allure as a crossroads of East and West. It invites visitors to savor the piazza's timeless magic, frozen in a moment of 1870s elegance.