View of Baltimore from Chapel Hill Francis Guy (American, 1760-1820). View of Baltimore from Chapel Hill, 1802-1803. Oil on canvas, 47 7/16 × 93 9/16 in. ( × cm). Francis Guy’s prospect of Baltimore meticulously records the city’s distinctive topographical features, from the cliffs of Jones Falls Valley and “Howard’s Elm” in the foreground to the dense cluster of buildings that stretches to the harbor front. The contrast between built structures and natural forms speaks to a landscape transformed by urban development. Many of the buildings are readily identifiable, including the oc
View of Baltimore from Chapel Hill Francis Guy (American, 1760-1820). View of Baltimore from Chapel Hill, 1802-1803. Oil on canvas, 47 7/16 × 93 9/16 in. ( × cm). Francis Guy’s prospect of Baltimore meticulously records the city’s distinctive topographical features, from the cliffs of Jones Falls Valley and “Howard’s Elm” in the foreground to the dense cluster of buildings that stretches to the harbor front. The contrast between built structures and natural forms speaks to a landscape transformed by urban development. Many of the buildings are readily identifiable, including the octagonal Pantheon (left foreground), where Guy planned to exhibit panoramic paintings. His talent for rendering architecture also earned him commissions for “portraits” of the country estates of Baltimore’s gentry. American Art 1802-1803
Size: 3166px × 1579px
Photo credit: © BBM / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
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