Dating Art historians, specifically
Harold Wethey, have debated the exact dating of
View of Toledo. There was some debate among art historians due to early literature that wrote about El Greco. The early literature that Walter Liedtke mentions in "Three Paintings by El Greco," suggests that the
View of Toledo was painted after 1600 and shortly before El Greco died in 1614. However, art historian Harold Wethey believes it was painted between 1595 and 1600 because of the similarities to El Greco's other piece,
Saint Joseph and the Christ Child. Wethey backs up this claim because
Saint Joseph and the Christ Child was completed between 1597 and 1599. Wethey also provides more evidence by pointing out the same techniques used in the background of
Saint Joseph and the Christ Child that one can see in
View of Toledo.
Significance of landscape Landscape paintings were rare among Spanish paintings of the
Renaissance and
Baroque periods. Due to landscape paintings being so rare, some speculate that
View of Toledo is actually from a larger painting. However, there has been no valid proof or confirmation to whether that is the case. The
Council of Trent's perceived ban against landscape painting lends credence to the idea that this work may stand as the first Spanish landscape painting of its time. == Description ==