

Black and white illustration of an interior scene. The scene depicts a large room with a high ceiling and arches. The room has a balcony with a railing on the top. There are several people in the room. The people are wearing long clothes. There are columns and statues in the room. There is a large archway in the background. The archway has a sculpture in it. The walls are made of stone or brick. The floor is made of stone or tile. The image is labeled "VENISE" at the top and has a number "11" above it. The image has French writing at the bottom. The image is in a rectangular format with a white border. The image is a grayscale illustration.
Artwork Details
- Dimensions
- 637 × 893 px
- Museum Record
- View original
You May Also Like

Voyage en Italie en 1822

Interieur de l'Eglise

Mohammed II in the Aye Sophia

Subterranean Jail for the Stage

St. Mark's No. 2 (Venice) -- Interior

Picturesque Sketches in Spain: The Mosque, Cordova

Notable Buildings of the Middle Ages in Germany: Ruins of the Church of the Virgin with the Tomb of Genevieve and Siegfried, Count Palatine of the Rhine, in the Moselle Valley near Andernack

Egypt and Nubia: Volume I - Frontispiece, View under the Grand Portico, Philae

Architecture of the Middle Ages: In the Cathedral, Bruges

Architecture of the Middle Ages: Church of St. Gisors, Interior

Piazza San Marco, Venice

The Mosque, Córdoba

Presentation Scene (from Sketchbook)

Egypt and Nubia: Volume III - No. 36, Interior of the Mosque of the Sultan El Ghoree

Notable Buildings of the Middle Ages in Germany: St. Margaret's Chapel in the Imperial Castle at Nuremberg

Egypt and Nubia, Volume III: Interior of the Mosque of the Sultan El Ghoree

A View of the Inside of a Church

Saint Joseph Church, Madrid

Egypt and Nubia, Volume III: Interior of the Mosque of the Metwalys

St. Bartholomew's Church, Interior

In Stirling Castle or A Scottish Palace (Un Palais Ecossais)

Interior of St. Mark's, Venice

Egypt and Nubia, Volume I: View Under the Grand Portico of the Temple, Philae

Entrance to the French Capuchin Convent at Athens