GEORGE
FREDERIC WATTS
Collection of letters in the Heinz Archive & Library |
|
|
|
Introduction |

G.F. Watts,
self-portrait, c.1879
NPG 1406 |
The
Heinz Archive and Library holds a small collection of manuscripts
that relate specifically to British portraiture and, in particular,
to portrait painters represented in the collections of the National
Portrait Gallery. Amongst the collection are artists' diaries
and account books, studio ledgers and sitter books, which document
both the work and practice of portrait painters and provide lists
of portraits produced by them. Alongside these volumes, the Archive
& Library holds several private archives, comprising mainly
artists' correspondence, but also the papers of art historians
who have researched particular painters and donated their files
to the Gallery. One of the most important collections of correspondence
held by the Archive & Library is that of the great Victorian
portrait painter George Frederic Watts (1817-1904). |

Letter from G.F.Watts to Julia Margaret
Cameron, 21 June 1865, P125 |
The
Watts letters held by the Heinz Archive and Library were brought
together by the artist's second wife Mary Seton Watts (1849-1938),
whilst she was preparing her monumental biography of her husband,
which was published in 1912. As part of her research for this
project, she advertised for the loan of her late husband's letters
in the Athenaeum, Manchester Guardian, Times
and Spectator in July 1905 with the intention of making
copies for biographical research purposes. The correspondence
was arranged and pasted into 15 albums (of which 14 albums are
at the National Portrait Gallery). The collection includes both
original letters to and from George Frederic Watts and a great
many hand-written or typed transcriptions of his letters, made
either by Mary Watts or her correspondents. Most of the transcriptions
relate to privately owned letters, the present whereabouts of
which may be unknown. The albums also contain the covering letters
addressed to Mary Watts in response to her advertisements, and
these often provide further contextual information about the
exchanges between Watts and his correspondents, and other manuscript
material, including notes of conversations and reminiscences. |

G.F. Watts
by Julia Margaret Cameron, 1864
NPG P215 |
The
collection was originally deposited in the Watts Gallery at Compton,
however, it was removed during the 1970s and the albums and most
noteworthy letters were sold as separate lots at Sotheby's in
1979. The National Portrait Gallery acquired 14 of the original
albums (volume 6, which contained the letters of Frederic Lord
Leighton, is not part of the present collection) plus many of
the letters that were sold separately. The Gallery subsequently
obtained copies of other letters that were acquired for public
or academic institutions (most notably Princeton University)
and these have been incorporated into the collection. However,
the loose letters have not been returned to the albums from which
they were removed but are arranged alphabetically by name of
correspondent and stored separately in boxes. |

Letter from Mathew Arnold to G.F.
Watts, 15 April 1882 (?), 1000c |
The
bulk of the correspondence covers the years from 1847 to 1904,
however letters received by Mary Watts after her husband's death
have also been incorporated where appropriate. Although certain
of Watts's correspondents, in particular the Pre-Raphaelite artists,
are missing from the collection, the letters represent a broad
cross-section of the artistic and social circles in which he
moved and provide a unique insight to the man and his work. The
collection contains exchanges of correspondence with many important
Victorian figures including, amongst others: Matthew Arnold,
Robert Browning, Julia Margaret Cameron, Thomas Carlyle, William
Ewart Gladstone, Sir John Everett Millais, Cecil Rhodes, and
Alfred, Lord Tennyson. |

Opening from album 2, pp.82-83,
71 |
At
their shortest and simplest, the letters record appointments
for sittings and such everyday matters as invitations to dinner,
visits to and from friends, concert performances and other social
engagements. However, the collection also contains a number of
extensive series of letters with close friends, patrons and colleagues,
which represent an extremely important manuscript source of information
on the artist's life. These include 205 letters from Watts to
his principal patron, and Manchester businessman, Charles Hilditch
Rickards, in which he discusses his own work and comments on
that of his contemporaries; 66 letters to Mary Gertrude Mead,
who organised the exhibition of his paintings at the Metropolitan
Museum in New York 1884-1885; and 222 letters exchanged with
J. Scott Taylor of the North London Colour Works concerning technical
matters, including pigments, canvasses, paint stability, varnishes,
oils, brushes etc. |

Letter from William Ewart Gladstone
to G.F. Watts, 24 June 1885, 1126e |
Other
correspondence provides historical insights, such as Julia Margaret
Cameron's lengthy letter to her husband of the 25 May 1860, copied
to Watts, in which she describes life on the Isle of Wight; and
a series of 14 letters from William Ewart Gladstone, in which
he arranges sittings, praises Watts's work and twice offers him
a baronetcy (on both occasions declined). A number of letters
relate to portraits by Watts that are now in the collection of
the National Portrait Gallery, including Matthew Arnold (NPG
1000) and Thomas Carlyle (NPG 1002), and a selection of these,
together with the relevant portraits, are illustrated at the
Selected letters to and from George Frederic Watts relating to
the sitters in his portraits at the National Portrait Gallery
link above. |

G.F. Watts,
by Edward Steichen, 1903
NPG P168 |
The
collection of letters, as originally assembled into 15 albums
by Mary Watts, is listed in a general index inside the front
cover of volume 1. Each volume also contains a separate index
of its contents, which, because of the subsequent removal of
letters, is no longer entirely accurate. All of the original
letters to and from Watts have been catalogued and are included
in the card catalogue of autograph letters in the Heinz Archive
& Library. However, the bulk of the correspondence, represented
by hand-written and typed copies of letters, has not been catalogued
at this level. The correspondence can be consulted on an appointment
basis in the Public Study Room of the Heinz Archive & Library.
Indexes to the collection, arranged alphabetically by correspondent,
can be found at the above links: Index of letters to George Frederic
Watts and his wife Mary Seton Watts; Index of letters from George
Frederic Watts; Index of letters from Mary Seton Watts; and Miscellaneous
notes and papers. (Note: These indexes supersede a listing that
was supplied to the National Register of Archives by the Watts
Gallery prior to the removal and dispersal at auction of choice
autograph letters from the collection). |
|
Details
of other archive repositories that hold correspondence, notebooks
and sketchbooks relating to George Frederic Watts can be found
by searching the records of the National
Register of Archives. |
| |
Disclaimer |
|