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Lake Avernus
Richard Wilson·c. 1748
Historical Context
Lake Avernus at the York Art Gallery is another version of Wilson’s most repeated Italian subject, demonstrating the commercial demand for these volcanic lake scenes among British collectors. The multiple versions of Lake Avernus that Wilson produced testify to the subject’s popularity and its embodiment of the classical landscape ideal. 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
Wilson varies each version of Lake Avernus through different lighting conditions and figure arrangements while maintaining the essential compositional structure of the crater lake surrounded by wooded hills.
Look Closer
- ◆This version of Lake Avernus at York differs from the Towneley Hall and Glynn Vivian versions through small compositional adjustments — the position of the staffage figures, the distribution of cloud shadows — showing Wilson's method of generating variant compositions from a core design.
- ◆The volcanic crater's steep walls plunge directly to the water without the gradual shoreline of a natural lake — a topographic observation that distinguishes Avernus from Wilson's other Italian lake subjects.
- ◆The tree species in the foreground — Italian stone pine, holm oak — identify the specific Mediterranean flora that Wilson studied during his Italian years and deployed in all his Italian subjects.
- ◆The light quality at York differs slightly from the other Avernus versions — a cooler, more English silver light that reflects the painting's British destination audience.

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