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Italian Landscape (Lake Avernus) with Figures
Richard Wilson·1750
Historical Context
Italian Landscape (Lake Avernus) with Figures from 1750 at Towneley Hall represents one of Wilson’s earliest treatments of this mythologically charged site. Lake Avernus, the volcanic crater Virgil described as the gateway to the underworld, would become one of Wilson’s signature subjects, painted in numerous versions over the following decades. 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 figures in the foreground establish human scale against the lake and surrounding volcanic terrain. Wilson’s early handling of Italian light shows the warm, golden tones he would develop further during his Roman residency.
Look Closer
- ◆Lake Avernus is rendered as a still, dark mirror — the volcanic crater's water has the quality of polished obsidian rather than the flowing, reflective quality of a river or sea.
- ◆The wooded hills encircling the lake create a natural amphitheater that Wilson emphasizes through the painting's vertical proportions — the viewer feels enclosed, not liberated, by this landscape.
- ◆The composition's warm-cool contrast — warm foreground earth tones, cool middle-distance water, warm-tinted far sky — follows the Claudian tripartite landscape color organization.
- ◆Small figures navigating a boat on the lake provide both scale and the suggestion of crossing to the Underworld — the mythological undertone made visible through human action.

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