
Old Walton Bridge
Canaletto·1755
Historical Context
Old Walton Bridge, painted in 1755 and now at the Yale Center for British Art, depicts a remarkable wooden bridge spanning the Thames at Walton-on-Thames, designed by the architect William Etheridge in 1750. Created during Canaletto's English period, the painting captures an engineering marvel — a daringly designed bridge of white-painted timber that attracted admiring visitors. The composition demonstrates Canaletto's ability to find visual drama in English subjects, the bridge's elegant arc reflected in the calm Thames creating a symmetry reminiscent of Venetian canal views. The painting documents a structure that was demolished and replaced within decades, making Canaletto's precise rendering an invaluable historical record.
Technical Analysis
The bridge's elegant arched form provides a dramatic compositional focus spanning the river. Canaletto captures the structural ingenuity of the wooden lattice work while setting it within a pastoral riverside landscape.
Look Closer
- ◆Notice the elegant arched form of Old Walton Bridge spanning the Thames — a remarkable wooden lattice bridge designed by William Etheridge in 1750.
- ◆Look at the pastoral riverside landscape providing a charming English setting for this engineering marvel, quite different from Canaletto's stone Venetian bridges.
- ◆Observe the 1755 Dulwich Picture Gallery painting documenting a timber bridge of daring innovation that no longer exists.
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