Skapo Street in Vilnius
Author: |
Jan Gintowt–Dziewałtowski (1904–1980) |
Created: | 1930s |
Material: | canvas |
Technique: | oil |
Dimensions: | 46 × 36 cm |
Signature: | unsigned |
Skapo Street, with its picturesque arch, running between Pilies and Universiteto streets, is also popular in works of art. It is the narrowest street in Vilnius, with a 1.9-metre-wide road. Its name comes from Stanisław Skap, a royal secretary who lived in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 16th century and had a house there. In this picture by Jan Gintowt-Dziewałtowski (1904–1980), the street is pictured at a very romantic time of day, late on a winter’s afternoon. The cold blue nocturnal colours are warmed by a street lamp, and by the lights in small windows in the houses, which gives the Old Town a feeling of tranquillity and warmth. As in his other canvases, the artist combined different types of brushwork: he painted the walls, the roofs and the snow-covered cobbles with fine-coloured and vibrant brushwork; and he painted the sky quite evenly, thus emphasising the playfulness of the different textures.
Source: Law firm Valiunas Ellex art album VILNIUS. TOPOPHILIA I (2014). Compiler and author Laima LaučkaitėExpositions: “Vilnius. Topophilia. Views of Vilnius from the collection of the law firm Ellex Valiunas”, 5 October – 26 November 2017, National Gallery of Art, Vilnius (curator Laima Laučkaitė)