WorkBunney's painting of San Marco served as the centre-piece of the extended museum at Walkley.
It was commissioned by Ruskin for the fee of £500 and paid for partly by the St Mark's Fund (1879-1883) (established to protect the treasures of Venice from harmful restoration).
Cook and Wedderburn record that it measured 7 feet 7 inches wide, and 5 feet high, and that 'the artist spent upon it no less than six hundred days' constant labour' (
Works, 10, p. lxiii).
The unusual level of detail captured by Bunney reflects the painting's intended function as an accurate architectural record.
ArtistJohn Bunney first encountered Ruskin in the 1850s, as a student at the Working Men's College in London. A brief biography is supplied by a fellow student called J. P. Emslie:
'The son of a merchant captain, Bunney had, when very young, made several voyages round the world. At an early age he took to drawing, but the death of his father compelled him to abandon art and apply himself to less attractive work. When I first joined the Drawing Class, he was engaged at a bookseller's, and was a hard-working student whose work was greatly admired by Ruskin.