After studying in Venice for 3 years, Janez Šubic decided to travel the rest of Italy, going on to spend a significant amount of time in Rome (1874–1876). He made the journey in the company of his Czech companion Vojtĕch Hynais. They rode past Ferrare, Bologna, and Florence, pausing to take in the works of the old masters, about which Šubic’s teacher Janez Wolf had spoken. Along the way, they also had time to marvel at the Italian countryside and observe how it was changing.
They arrived in Rome at the beginning of December 1874. This cultural mecca, sought with zeal by so many artists over the centuries, left a huge impression on Šubic. Not much time passed from their arrival to the Eternal City to the beginning of 1875, when their first landscape and skyline paintings were produced, conceived of as unfinished works. Šubic used these etudes to study lighting and atmospheric conditions typical of the Mediterranean, both clear skies and storm clouds. These studies served as an important step in the development of landscape painting in Slovenian art.