This
canvas was in English collections for centuries and has only recently been
returned to Italy and in particular to Milan, for which it depicts a nerve
centre of the city. The iconographic
importance of the painting lies in its ability to transmit the historical
stratification of the architecture of Piazza dei Mercanti, before the
upheavals and additions made between the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries. The vertical composition is unusual compared with solutions
commonly chosen to represent panoramas, but the close-up viewpoint and the
verticality serve here to enhance the contrast between the mediaeval Palazzo
della Ragione and the marble facade of the Palazzo dei Giureconsulti. The mass of shadow covering the monuments accentuates
the already clear vision of the architectural elements, making this painting
a fundamental element in the series of views preserved in the Pinacoteca, and
one of the most famous.