Gondola, loaded with grapes and peaches
Throughout his career as a painter, Edward Cooke travelled extensively in Europe, visiting France, Holland, Italy, Spain, North Africa and Scandinavia. Paintings and drawings resulted from all his travels, but it is evident that the places that provided the strongest fascination for him besides the southern coastline of England, were the beaches and estuaries of Holland and the topography of Venice and Italy.
Cooke’s first visit to Venice was in 1850 and he returned there a further nine times before his last visit in 1877. It was on his second trip to Venice in 1851 that Cooke met and became friends with the critic John Ruskin.
This drawing was made in October 1853 and depicts a traditional Venetian market stall located on the canalside. To the left a gondola arrives to deliver more baskets of fruit, which Cooke has noted as ‘grapes and peaches’. On the bank are piles of ‘zucchi’ or pumpkins.
Cooke’s first visit to Venice was in 1850 and he returned there a further nine times before his last visit in 1877. It was on his second trip to Venice in 1851 that Cooke met and became friends with the critic John Ruskin.
This drawing was made in October 1853 and depicts a traditional Venetian market stall located on the canalside. To the left a gondola arrives to deliver more baskets of fruit, which Cooke has noted as ‘grapes and peaches’. On the bank are piles of ‘zucchi’ or pumpkins.
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Object Details
ID: | PAE5746 |
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Type: | Drawing |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Cooke, Edward William |
Date made: | October 1853 |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |
Measurements: | 67 x 112 mm |