Watts (1817-1904) Watts (1817-1904)

Watts (1817-1904‪)‬

    • 1.0 • 1 Rating

Publisher Description

In July of 1904 the eighty-seven mortal years of George Frederick Watts came to an end. He had outlived all the contemporaries and acquaintances of his youth; few, even among the now living, knew him in his middle age; while to those of the present generation, who knew little of the man though much of his work, he appeared as members of the Ionides family, thus inaugurating the series of private and public portraits for which he became so famous. The Watts of our day, however, the teacher first and the painter afterwards, had not yet come on the scene. His first aspiration towards monumental painting began in the year 1843, when in a competition for the decoration of the Houses of Parliament he gained a prize of £300 for his cartoon of Caractacus led Captive through the Streets of Rome. At this time, when history was claiming pictorial art as her servant and expositor, young Watts carried off the prize against the whole of his competitors. This company included the well-known historical painter Haydon, who, from a sense of the impossibility of battling against his financial difficulties, and from the neglect, real or fancied, of the leading politicians, destroyed himself by his own hand. In 1848 Watts had attained, one might almost say, the position of official historical painter to the State, a post coveted by the unfortunate Haydon; and he received a commission to paint a fresco of St. George overcomes the Dragon, which was not completed till 1853.

GENRE
Arts & Entertainment
RELEASED
1943
January 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
45
Pages
PUBLISHER
Public Domain
SELLER
Public Domain
SIZE
590.1
KB
Victorian Painting Victorian Painting
2018
Art & Letters July-Winter 1918 Art & Letters July-Winter 1918
2019
Dürer Dürer
2018
Miscellanies Miscellanies
2018
Miscellanies Miscellanies
1900
The Lonely Tower (Routledge Revivals) The Lonely Tower (Routledge Revivals)
2013
Watts (1817-1904) Watts (1817-1904)
2024
Watts (1817-1904) Watts (1817-1904)
2017