Tasso's Oak, Rome
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.
This pencil drawing was made during his first Mediterranean tour of 1845–46, when he travelled through the south of France, to Florence, Rome, Salerno and Capri. It shows the celebrated Roman landmark Tasso’s Oak, under which, according to legend, the Renaissance poet Torquato Tasso, author of ‘La Gerusalemme Liberata’, used to sit. In the background is St Peter’s, Rome.
This pencil drawing was made during his first Mediterranean tour of 1845–46, when he travelled through the south of France, to Florence, Rome, Salerno and Capri. It shows the celebrated Roman landmark Tasso’s Oak, under which, according to legend, the Renaissance poet Torquato Tasso, author of ‘La Gerusalemme Liberata’, used to sit. In the background is St Peter’s, Rome.
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Object Details
ID: | PAE5824 |
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Type: | Drawing |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Cooke, Edward William |
Places: | Unlinked place |
Date made: | 1846 |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |
Measurements: | 109 x 181 mm |