Women Gathered around Fountain, Venice

Oil on canvas
21 x 31 inches

Signed lower right: Theodore Wendel

Circa 1897
$38,500

During a year-long honeymoon spent exploring France and Italy, Theodore Wendel continued to find inspiring subject matter for his work. In Venice, he focused less on the grand palazzos and winding canals and more on capturing the city’s residents going about their daily activities. Women Gathered around Fountain, Venice demonstrates this attention to figural work during his second stay in the Floating City, and clearly relates to the genre pictures created over a decade earlier by his mentor Duveneck, according to Laurene Buckley. The painting is a faithful rendition of one of the city’s wells, which served as both a source of vital drinking water and a gathering place for socializing, and was included in a later exhibition of Wendel’s work held at the St. Botolph Club in February of 1910.

Click here to read full artist biography

By descent through the family of the artist

  1. Pictures by Theodore Wendel, St. Botolph Club, Boston, February 16 – 28, 1910
  2. Bringing to Light: Theodore Wendel, Vose Galleries, Boston, October 19 – December 7, 2019

Buckley, Laurene. Theodore Wendel: True Notes of American Impressionism (North Adams, MA: The Artist Book Foundation, 2018), Plate 15, p. 116

Good. The painting is not lined and was recently cleaned, and has a small 2” x 2 ½” patch at lower right. There are specks and dots of in-paint scattered in the sky and left buildings, small spots of in-paint in the left and center figures, a small spot in the child’s face, some small spots in and around the right barrel, and a short thin line at lower right over the patched repair.

During a year-long honeymoon spent exploring France and Italy, Theodore Wendel continued to find inspiring subject matter for his work. In Venice, he focused less on the grand palazzos and winding canals and more on capturing the city’s residents going about their daily activities. Women Gathered around Fountain, Venice demonstrates this attention to figural work during his second stay in the Floating City, and clearly relates to the genre pictures created over a decade earlier by his mentor Duveneck, according to Laurene Buckley. The painting is a faithful rendition of one of the city’s wells, which served as both a source of vital drinking water and a gathering place for socializing, and was included in a later exhibition of Wendel’s work held at the St. Botolph Club in February of 1910.

Click here to read full artist biography

By descent through the family of the artist

  1. Pictures by Theodore Wendel, St. Botolph Club, Boston, February 16 – 28, 1910
  2. Bringing to Light: Theodore Wendel, Vose Galleries, Boston, October 19 – December 7, 2019

Buckley, Laurene. Theodore Wendel: True Notes of American Impressionism (North Adams, MA: The Artist Book Foundation, 2018), Plate 15, p. 116

Good. The painting is not lined and was recently cleaned, and has a small 2” x 2 ½” patch at lower right. There are specks and dots of in-paint scattered in the sky and left buildings, small spots of in-paint in the left and center figures, a small spot in the child’s face, some small spots in and around the right barrel, and a short thin line at lower right over the patched repair.

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