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G.F. Watts: Portraits
Fame & Beauty in Victorian Society
Barbara Bryant
Foreword by Andrew Motion
As one of the great portrait
painters of the nineteenth century, George Frederic Watts (1817-1904)
is best known for his 'Hall of Fame' series showing the noted
contemporaries of his day. This series forms the cornerstone
of the National Portrait Gallery's collection in London, but
the wider importance of Watts's portraiture has never been fully
appreciated since many works are in private collections and some
have never been published. Timed to coincide with the centenary
of his death, this book is the first major study of this aspect
of Watts's work and provides a unique opportunity to see many
of the artist's grand full-lengths, often strikingly beautiful
and most hardly known, as well as the wide range of his portraits,
from society beauties to eminent Victorians, dating from the
1840s to the end of the century.
Watts was one of the celebrities
of Victorian London, counting Tennyson, Ruskin, the Pre-Raphaelite
artists and pioneer photographer Julia Margaret Cameron among
his friends. Much interviewed and honoured, he fostered his own
renown and participated in the creation of a considerable international
reputation. Such a modern notion of the artist's public image
is familiar to us today, but Watts forged this role for himself
in the interest of promoting his serious and high-minded art,
which crucially included his portraiture.
This handsome catalogue illustrates
and describes over sixty works by Watts, some seen for the first
time. The Poet Laureate Andrew Motion gives a fascinating account
of his experience of the artist's work in the introduction and
Barbara Bryant's text offers a wider view, exploring Watts's
entire career through his portraiture. The book presents new
perspectives on Watts as an innovative artist aware of the traditions
in portraiture yet also keenly alert to new artistic developments
like Pre-Raphaelitism and Symbolism.
Accompanied a major exhibition
at the National Portrait Gallery from 14 October 2004 to 9 January
2005.
Barbara Bryant is an art historian and writer who specialises
in the work of G.F. Watts. A major contributor to the exhibition
The Age of Rossetti, Burne-Jones & Watts: Symbolism in
Britain 1860-1910 at Tate Britain in 1997, she is the author
of the forthcoming Oxford Dictionary of National Biography's
entry on Watts, as well as other articles and essays on the artist
and on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British art.
Specification
280 x 240mm, 176 pages
110 illustrations
ISBN 1 85514 347 X
Special online promotion £10 (RRP £20 paperback)
ISBN 1 85514 354 2
Special online promotion £10 (RRP £30 hardback -
NPG Visitor Exclusive)
Published October 2004
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