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On the Way to Capua

Cecil Arthur Hunt (1873-1965)


Price
£2,750

Signed
Signed

Medium
Watercolour

Dimensions
11 ¾ x 16 inches

Exhibited
Royal Society of Painters in Water-Colours,1926, no 105 (purchased by A C Farrell for £18.18.0);
'Chris Beetles Summer Show', Chris Beetles Gallery, London, 1999, no 44;
'Italy 1800-2025: A Celebration of an English Love Affair', Chris Beetles Gallery, London, April 2025

In late summer 1925, Hunt and his wife, Phyllis, took the train to Rome and then, his friend, art critic and regular travelling companion, R H Kitson, collected them in his car.

The sketchbooks record visually that, they spent some days in Rome, then took a train to Tivoli and the glorious gardens of the Villa D’Este; on the journey he made a preliminary drawing of
Haystack on the Roman Campagna [also in this exhibition]. Then by car they travelled south of Rome through the Pontine Marshes via Sezze, Terracina, Itri, Minturno and then onto to Capua. The bridge Hunt has depicted in On The Way to Capua is probably the Porta Romana with its beautifully proportioned arches spanning the river Volturno just outside the town. From Capua, Hunt sketched a series of landscapes with a smoking Vesuvius and then motored down to the Amalfi coast via Positano, Amalfi, Atrani and Salerno before finally, in October, crossing the Straits of Messina to Kitson’s villa at Taormina.
(Sketchbooks 16 & 16a)


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