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Aquae Albulae, near Tivoli
Richard Wilson·c. 1748
Historical Context
Aquae Albulae near Tivoli at the Ashmolean depicts the ancient Roman sulphur springs east of Rome, known since antiquity for their therapeutic properties. The site, near Hadrian’s Villa, was part of the rich landscape of classical ruins and natural wonders around Tivoli that attracted Wilson and countless other artists during the Grand Tour era. Richard Wilson's Italian landscapes were the foundation on which his entire career was built. The years he spent in Rome in the 1750s, studying the work of Claude Lorrain and Gaspar Dughet in the landscape of the Roman campagna that had inspired them, gave him the compositional intelligence and tonal discipline that distinguished his mature work from the topographical painting that preceded him in British art. His Italian subjects — the Alban Hills, the volcanic lakes, the ruins of the campagna — were produced both for the British tourists who wanted souvenirs of their Grand Tour and for the collector market in London that was learning to value landscape painting as a serious genre.
Technical Analysis
The milky waters of the sulphur springs create unusual color effects that Wilson captures with distinctive pale blue-green tones. The surrounding landscape is rendered with characteristic atmospheric sensitivity.
Look Closer
- ◆The sulphur springs' pale, milky water has a distinctive color that Wilson renders in cool grey-white tones quite different from the clear blue of the volcanic lakes he more often painted.
- ◆Steam or vapor rising from the springs is suggested through soft atmospheric passages in the middleground, giving the site its uncanny quality — this landscape literally breathes.
- ◆The warm limestone deposits around the spring edges, stained ochre and sienna by mineral precipitates, provide the composition's warmest colors against the cool water and sky.
- ◆Figures bathing or examining the springs are included at appropriate scale — Tivoli was a site of therapeutic bathing since antiquity, and Wilson records its continued use.

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