Skip to main content
Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
Seacoast View with a Shipwreck
Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
© Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami. All rights reserved.

Seacoast View with a Shipwreck

Artist/Maker (Italy, 1667-1749)
Dateafter 1735
Mediumoil on canvas
DimensionsSight: 56 7/8 x 44 7/8 in. (144.5 x 114 cm)
Framed: 62 x 49 3/4 x 2 7/8 in. (157.5 x 126.4 x 7.3 cm)
ClassificationsVisual Works
Credit LineGift of The Samuel H. Kress Foundation
Terms
    Object number61.041.000
    DescriptionLike his contemporary, Giuseppe Maria Crespi, the Genoese-born painter Alessandro Magnasco was uninterested in the classical concepts of ideal beauty and the formal perfection of contemporary academic art. Attracted instead to the realism of genre painting introduced to Italy by Flemish and Dutch artists, he chose to paint primarily seascapes and landscapes. This seacoast view was painted late in Magnasco’s career, when the artist was in his seventies or eighties. It is the surviving pendant of a pair of large seascape paintings that were originally incorporated into the interior decoration of a palazzo in Genoa. Ostensibly inspired by the scenery of the local seacoast, the scene is essentially a fantasy depicting the aftermath of a nighttime storm at sea and a shipwreck. The next morning, while the seas are choppy and the winds blow fiercely, scavengers have descended on the shoreline to salvage the scattered remains of the ship and its cargo. A precursor of the Romantic landscape painters of the nineteenth century, Magnasco was famous during his lifetime for the originality of his representations of the confrontation between man and nature.
    On View
    Not on view
    Collections
    Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
    Thomas Gainsborough
    ca. 1770-1775
    Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
    Guidoccio Cozzarelli
    ca. 1480-1490
    Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
    Vincenzo di Biagio Catena
    ca. 1510
    Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
    Benvenuto Tisi da Garofalo
    ca. 1535
    Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
    Benedetto Diana
    ca. 1504
    Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
    Henry Salem Hubbell
    1915
    Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
    Everett Shinn
    1931
    Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
    Jacob Jordaens
    ca. 1620-1625
    Collection of the Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami
    Francesco di Giorgio Martini
    ca. 1470