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GEORGE
FREDERIC WATTS
Collection of Letters in the Heinz archive & Library |

Dante Gabriel Rossetti
by G.F. Watts, c. 1871
NPG 1011 |
Gift
of portraits made by George Frederic Watts to the National Portrait
Gallery
In December 1895 Watts, who had
lately been appointed a Trustees of the National Portrait Gallery,
offered to transfer to the Gallery any portraits from his collection
that the Board might think suitable. The Gallery selected 17
portraits (NPG 1000 - NPG 1016), which were accepted from Watts
as a gift to the nation. Amongst the selection was Watts's portrait
of the influential painter and poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti (NPG
1011). Sir John Everett Millais, a fellow Trustee at the Gallery,
was absent from the meeting at which the gift was acknowledged
and wrote the following day to offer his thank to Watts.
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Matthew Arnold
by G.F. Watts, 1880
NPG 1000 |
Matthew
Arnold (1822-1888), poet and critic
The eminent Victorian poet Matthew
Arnold considered Watts to be 'the highest and singlest minded
artist of my acquaintance'. He sat to Watts for his portrait
during 1880. Arnold had to arrange his visits around his commitments
as an inspector of schools, as is indicated in the letters below.
In the last of these letters, he warmly congratulates the artist
on being offered a Baronetcy - an honour, however, that Watts
declined (see William Ewart Gladstone's correspondence with Watts
below).
- Letter from Matthew Arnold to G.F. Watts, dated 3 March (1880?), arranging a
time to call on the artist.
- Letter
from Matthew Arnold to George Frederic Watts, dated 25 May (1880?), arranging a time
to call on the artist.
- Letter
from Mathew Arnold to George Frederic Watts, dated 25 April 1881, concerning a visit to the
artist's studio.
- Letter
from Matthew Arnold to G.F Watts,
dated 15 April (1882?), arranging a time to sit to the artist.
- Letter
from Matthew Arnold to George Frederic Watts, dated 29 June (1885), congratulating
the artist on being offered a baronetcy.
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Samuel Augustus Barnett
by G.F. Watts, 1887
NPG 2893 |
Samuel
Augustus Barnett (1844-1913), divine and social reformer
Canon Samuel Augustus Barnett
was the founder and Warden of Toynbee Hall and Vicar of St Jude's
Church in Whitechapel. Watts painted the Canon's portrait in
1887 as a tribute to his work among the poor. However, he chose
not to display it for reasons explained in the first letter below.
None-the-less, Watts was a great admirer of Canon and Mrs Barnett's
work in the East End and in the second letter he discusses paintings
they might like to borrow for one of the exhibitions they organised
at St Jude's.
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Robert Browning
by G.F. Watts, 1866
NPG 1001 |
Robert
Browning (1812-1889), poet and husband of Elizabeth Barrett-Browning
Robert Browning, one of the great
poets of the 19th century, sat to Watts for a portrait that was
described in the Athenaeum in 1866 as 'one of the painter's
most nearly perfect pictures there is in this painting all the
higher qualities of portraiture'. G.K. Chesterton said it showed
'the head of a strong, splendid, joyful and anxious man who could
write magnificent poetry'. Browning was a great admirer of Watts's
work and a frequent visitor, sometimes in the company of his
sister, to the artist's studio.
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Julia Margaret Cameron
by G.F. Watts, 1850-1852
NPG 5046 |
Julia
Margaret Cameron (1815-1879), pioneer photographer
Julia Margaret Cameron was a
great friend and admirer of Watts, who for a number of years
lived with her sister Sara, Mrs Thoby Prinsep, at Little Holland
House. Watts painted her portrait in 1852-1854, a few years after
her return from Ceylon and in the early days of their friendship.
Cameron corresponded regularly with Watts and sought his advice
about her work. The artist returned her enthusiasm with an admiration
of her photographs, as is evident in his replies below.
- Letter
from Julia Margaret Cameron to George Frederic Watts, dated 3 December 1860, urging him to
paint a portrait of the poet Sir Henry Taylor.
- Letter
from George Frederic Watts to Julia Margaret Cameron, undated, assessing her recent photographs.
- Letter
from George Frederic Watts to Julia Margaret Cameron, undated, assessing her recent photographs.
- Letter
from George Frederic Watts to Julia Margaret Cameron, undated, assessing her recent photographs
and Tennyson's recent poems.
- Letter
from George Frederic Watts to Julia Margaret Cameron, undated, acknowledging receipt of her
photographs.
- Letter
from George Frederic Watts to Julia Margaret Cameron, dated 21 June 1865, giving an assessment
of her recent photographs.
- Letter
from George Frederic Watts to Julia Margaret Cameron, undated, giving a negative assessment
of her recent photographs.
- Letter
from George Frederic Watts to Julia Margaret Cameron, undated, giving an assessment of her
recent photographs and advising her to study the technique of
David Wilkie Wynfield.
- Letter
from George Frederic Watts to Julia Margaret Cameron, dated 19 October 1872, giving an assessment
of her recent photographs and advice on how to improve.
- Fragment
of letter from the artist George Frederic Watts to Julia Margaret
Cameron, undated, assessing
Cameron's recent photographs of Alfred Tennyson.
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Thomas Carlyle
by G.F. Watts, 1868
NPG 1002 |
Thomas
Carlyle (1795-1881), historian and essayist
The eminent historian Thomas
Carlyle was an early advocate for the study of portraiture and
supported the creation of a national gallery of portraits. He
sat to Watts himself in 1867-8, but he was an impatient sitter
whose restlessness unsettled the artist. Watts began 3 portraits
of Carlyle but only 2 were finished. Sittings continued for more
than a year, when the letter below was written, and the portraits
were not completed until 1869. Carlyle said of them: 'you have
made me like a mad labourer'.
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Sir Andrew Clark, 1st Bt
by G.F. Watts, 1893
NPG 1003 |
Sir
Andrew Clark, 1st Bt (1826-1893), physician
Sir Andrew Clark was President
of the Royal College of Physicians. He was a physician at the
London Hospital and had a considerable reputation as a teacher
of medicine. Watts asked him to sit for a portrait in 1892 and
the first 2 letters below record arrangements for an early sitting.
The portrait was completed in 1893, only a few weeks before Clark
died. Gladstone saw the portrait early the following year and
wrote in gratitude to Watts and described it as a 'living recollection
of the person represented'.
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Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke, 2nd
Bt
by G.F. Watts, 1873
NPG 1827 |
Sir
Charles Wentworth Dilke, 2nd Bt (1843-1911), politician and writer
The politician Sir Charles Dilke
commissioned Watts to paint marriage portraits of himself and
his wife. Sittings took place during 1872-3, although ill health
interrupted the artist's work during the autumn of 1872, as explained
in the first letter below. The portrait was completed, with the
aid of photographs, early in 1873. The artist explained by letter
that the photographs 'make one acquainted with peculiarities
and shorten the sittings necessary'. Watts charged Sir Charles
Dilke 300 guineas for his portrait.
- Typed
copy of a letter from George Frederic Watts to Sir Charles Wentworth
Dilke, 2nd Bt., dated
28 September 1872, postponing a sitting because of ill-health.
- Typed
copy of a letter from George Frederic Watts to Sir Charles Wentworth
Dilke, 2nd Bt., dated
1 January 1873, asking him to bring photographs to help with
the portrait.
- Typed
copy of a letter from George Frederic Watts to Sir Charles Wentworth
Dilke, 2nd Bt., dated
9 March 1873, confirming his price for the portrait.
- Typed
copy of a letter from George Frederic Watts to Sir Charles Wentworth
Dilke, 2nd Bt., dated
16 March 1873, acknowledging receipt of payment for the portrait.
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Frederick Hamilton-Temple-
Blackwood, 1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava
by G.F. Watts, 1881
NPG 1315 |
Frederick
Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava (1826-1902),
diplomat and administrator
Watts's painted a portrait of the diplomat Frederick Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood,
1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava in 1881, the year in which the
sitter was transferred as British ambassador from St Petersburg
to Constantinople. In the second letter below, Dufferin mentions
that he is sitting to a former pupil of Watts called Henrietta
Rae. She and her artist husband, Ernest Normand, settled in Holland
Park in the early 1890s, where they received advice from local
painters, including Leighton and Watts.
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William Ewart Gladstone
by G.F. Watts, 1859
NPG 1126 |
William
Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898), Prime Minister
William Ewart Gladstone sat to
Watts for an early portrait in 1859, as indicated in the first
letter below, when he was Chancellor of the Exchequer. The letters
recording later sittings, relate to a commission for Christchurch
College, Oxford, which was eventually withdrawn by the artist.
These letters reveal that Gladstone was unable to attend regular
sittings because of the pressures of work. Gladstone greatly
admired Watts's work and twice offered him a Baronetcy. On both
occasions Watts declined the honour.
- Letter
from William Ewart Gladstone to George Frederic Watts, dated 20 June 1859, cancelling a sitting
because of his commitments.
- Letter
from William Ewart Gladstone to George Frederic Watts, dated 11 May 1876, re-arranging a sitting
with the artist.
- Letter
from William Ewart Gladstone to George Frederic Watts, dated 15 June 1878, arranging a sitting
with the artist.
- Letter
from William Ewart Gladstone to George Frederic Watts, dated 23 May 1879, arranging a sitting
with the artist.
- Letter
from William Ewart Gladstone to George Frederic Watts, dated 24 June 1885, offering the artist
a baronetcy.
- Letter
from William Ewart Gladstone to George Frederic Watts, dated 9 October 1885, responding to
the artist's refusal of a baronetcy.
- Letter
from William Ewart Gladstone to George Frederic Watts, dated 21 February 1894, describing
his impressions of the artist's portrait of Sir Andrew Clark.
- Letter
from William Ewart Gladstone to George Frederic Watts, dated 26 June 1894, offering the artist
a baronetcy.
- Letter
from William Ewart Gladstone to George Frederic Watts, dated 25 May 1896, describing his pleasure
at hearing that the artist has been offered a Privy Councillorship.
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William Edward Hartpole Lecky
by G.F. Watts, 1878
NPG 1350 |
William
Edward Hartpole Lecky (1838-1903), historian and essayist
Watts painted a portrait of the
historian William Edward Hartpole Lecky in 1878. Lecky was a
regular visitor to Watts's studio in London on Sunday afternoons
and one of the few people to stay with the artist at Limnerslease.
Following the death of Thomas Carlyle in 1881, a committee was
formed to raise money for a memorial to the great historian.
In the letter below Lecky write to Watts to enlist his support
with the project. The statue, by Joseph Edgar Boehm, was unveiled
on Chelsea Embankment in 1882.
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Edward Robert Bulwer Lytton, 1st
Earl of Lytton
by G.F. Watts, 1884
NPG 1007 |
Edward
Robert Bulwer Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton (1831-1891), statesman
and poet
In the letter below, Watts refers
to a proposed dinner that was to be held in his honour at the
Grosvenor Gallery in January 1882. The dinner was suggested by
a committee of the artist's friends and admirers to coincide
with an exhibition of some 200 of his paintings at the Gallery.
However, Watts vetoed the proposal, and, as the letter indicates,
was reassured by the Earl of Lytton's approval of his decision.
Two years later, in 1884, Watts painted a portrait of Lytton,
who had been Viceroy of India from 1876 to 1880.
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Henry Edward Manning
by G.F. Watts, 1882
NPG 1008 |
Henry
Edward Manning (1808-1892), Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster
Cardinal Manning was one of the
most distinguished ecclesiatics of his day. He was created Roman
Catholic archbishop of Westminster in 1865 and Cardinal in 1875.
Described as a man of ascetic temper, he became in later life
an ardent crusader against alcohol. Watts painted his portrait
in 1881-2 and the Cardinal booked his sittings in the briefest
of letters, as illustrated in the examples below. According to
G.K. Chesterton the portrait made its subject look too like a
church and too little like a man.
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James Martineau
replica by G.F. Watts, 1873
NPG 1251 |
James
Martineau (1805-1900), Unitarian divine and writer
The poet Alfred Lord Tennyson
described James Martineau as the 'great metaphysician' and in
1872 proposed to Watts that he should paint his portrait, as
indicated in the first of the letters below. Sittings began within
3 months and the portrait was completed in 1873. Watts made a
copy for his own collection of portraits of famous men. Martineau
was principal of Manchester New College, before it moved to Oxford,
and the original portrait is now at Manchester College, Oxford.
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George Meredith
by G.F. Watts, 1893
NPG 1543 |
George
Meredith (1828-1909), novelist and poet
According to his wife Mary, Watts
was anxious to paint a portrait of George Meredith. Their neighbours
at Limnerslease, General and Mrs Palmer, invited the novelist
to stay with them in order that sittings might be arranged and
the painting was completed in 1893. Watts and Meredith, who first
met in the 1850s, enjoyed the renewal of their acquaintance.
In the second letter below Meredith refers to the portrait of
William Schomberg Robert Kerr, 8th Marquess of Lothian, which
Watts painted in 1861.
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John Stuart Mill
replica by G.F. Watts, 1873
NPG 1009 |
John
Stuart Mill (1806-1873), social philosopher
The politician Sir Charles Wentworth
Dilke commissioned Watts to paint a portrait of the eminent philosopher
and political economist John Stuart Mill in 1873. As the letters
below indicate, sittings commenced almost immediately and the
painting was finished shortly before Mill's death later that
year. A replica was painted at the same time. Helen Taylor, who
wrote to Sir Charles and Lady Dilke about the portrait, was the
sitter's step-daughter and an advocate of women's rights.
- Typed
copy of a letter from John Stuart Mill to Sir Charles Wentworth
Dilke, 2nd Bt., dated
9 March 1873, accepting a proposal to have his portrait painted
by George Frederic Watts.
- Letter
from John Stuart Mill to George Frederic Watts, dated 13 March 1873, agreeing a time
to sit.
- Typed
copy of a letter from Helen Taylor to Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke,
2nd Bt., dated 10 November
(1873), requesting a visit to see George Frederic Watts's portrait
of her step-father John Stuart Mill.
- Typed
copy of a letter from Helen Taylor to Emilia France, Lady Dilke, dated 20 November 1873, concerning
George Frederic Watts's portrait of her step-father John Stuart
Mill.
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Sir John Everett Millais, 1st Bt
by G.F. Watts, 1871
NPG 3552 |
Sir
John Everett Millais, 1st Bt (1829-1896), painter and President
of the Royal Academy
Watts painted a portrait of his
old friend, the great Victorian painter and founding member of
the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Sir John Everett Millais in 1871.
Millais refers to this portrait in the first of the letters below.
In the second letter Millais congratulates Watts on his statue
of Physical Energy, one of 3 castings of which is now in Kensington
Gardens. In 1896, Millais became President of the Royal Academy,
and in the last letter below he records his concerns about the
responsibilities of the position.
- Letter
from Sir John Everett Millais, 1st Bt. to George Frederic Watts, dated 7 May 1878, requesting permission
to have Watts's portrait of him engraved for a publication.
- Letter
from Sir John Everett Millais, 1st Bt. to George Frederic Watts, dated 6 April 1884, concerning Watt's
statue of Physical Energy.
- Letter
from Sir John Everett Millais, 1st Bt. to George Frederic Watts, dated 6 December 1895, thanking Watts
for the portraits he has given to the National Portrait Gallery.
- Letter
from Sir John Everett Millais, 1st Bt. to George Frederic Watts, dated 8 February 1896, concerning the
death of Frederic, Lord Leighton, and the Presidency of the Royal
Academy.
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Lady Dorothy Fanny Nevill
after G.F. Watts, 1844
NPG D9487 |
Lady
Dorothy Fanny Nevill (1826-1913), hostess, horticulturalist and
collector
Lady Dorothy Nevill, noted gardener,
collector and writer of memoirs, was the daughter of Horatio
Walpole, 3rd Earl of Orford. She was one of the most celebrated
hostesses of her day and her home, Dangstein in Sussex, became
a focal point for the literary and artistic circles in which
she moved. She counted Watts amongst her friends and he painted
her portrait in 1844. In the letter below he declines an invitation
to her house to meet people he describes as 'those who become
famous from accident'.
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Sir Anthony Panizzi
by G.F. Watts, c.1847
NPG 1010 |
Sir
Anthony Panizzi (1797-1879), Principal Librarian of the British
Museum
Sir Anthony Panizzi joined the
British Museum as assistant librarian in 1831. He was appointed
Keeper of printed books in 1837 and conceived the idea of reading
room and full catalogues. Watts painted his portrait, apparently
at the British Museum, in 1847. The original is in the Ilchester
Collection and Watts painted a replica, which was not finished,
for his own collection of portraits of famous men. He depicted
Panizzi in a typical pose, transcribing notes from an early printed
book.
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Cecil John Rhodes
by G.F. Watts, 1898
NPG 1407 |
Cecil
John Rhodes (1853-1902), imperialist and statesman in South Africa
Watts wanted to paint a portrait
of the South African statesman and founder of Rhodesia, Cecil
Rhodes, for his collection of portraits of famous men. He wrote
to Lady Dorothy Stanley, wife of the famous explorer Henry Moreton
Stanley, on this subject, as indicated in her letter below. She
encouraged Rhodes to contact the artist and sittings were arranged
immediately because of his imminent return to South Africa. However,
the portrait was never finished and Watts refused to let anyone
see it.
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George Robinson, 1st Marquess of
Ripon
by G.F. Watts, 1895
NPG 1553 |
George
Robinson, 1st Marquess of Ripon (1827-1909), Viceroy of India
George Robinson, 1st Marquess
of Ripon was born at 10 Downing Street whilst his father was
prime minister. He was governor-general of India, 1880-4, and
colonial secretary, 1892-5. Watts admired his colonial policy
and sympathetic attitude to America. He sat to the artist in
1895, as indicated in the first letter below. In his second letter,
he refers to the Order of Merit conferred on Watts. King Edward
VII established this order at the time of his coronation and
Watts was one of its first recipients.
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Frederick Sleigh Roberts, 1st Earl
Roberts
by G.F. Watts, 1898
NPG 1744 |
Frederick
Sleigh Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts (1832-1914), Field Marshal
Frederick Sleigh Roberts, 1st
Earl Roberts was probably the most popular military leader of
his time. He spent most of his career in India but he returned
home in 1893. Watts painted his portrait in 1898, the year before
he became supreme commander in South Africa, where he defeated
to Boers. Sittings were arranged during the summer and autumn
of 1898, as the letters below indicate. In the October of that
year, Roberts's wife and daughters visited the artist's studio
to see the finished portrait.
- Letter
from Frederick Sleigh Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts to George Frederic
Watts, dated 22 July
1898, arranging a sitting with the artist.
- Letter
from Frederick Sleigh Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts to George Frederic
Watts, dated 17 August
1898, confirming a sitting with the artist.
- Letter
from Frederick Sleigh Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts to George Frederic
Watts, dated 8 October
1898, arranging sittings with the artist and asking if his wife
and daughters may see the artist's portrait of him.
- Postcard
from Frederick Sleigh Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts to George Frederic
Watts, dated 9 October
1898, asking if the artist requires his uniform again.
- Letter
from Frederick Sleigh Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts to Mary Seton
Watts, dated 23 October
1898, describing what his wife and daughters thought of her husband's
portrait of him.
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Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess
of Salisbury
by G.F. Watts, 1882
NPG 1349 |
Robert
Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (1830-1903), Prime
Minister
Robert Cecil, 3rd Marquess of
Salisbury was a statesman of formidable intellectual authority
and a severe critic of radical ideas of progress. He was vigorous
in opposition to the Liberal government and twice became prime
minister, in 1885-92 and 1895-1902. Watts painted his portrait
in 1882, whilst he was in opposition, and the letters below probably
relate to sittings. The portrait depicts Salisbury in his robes
as the Chancellor of Oxford University.
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Anthony Ashley Cooper, 7th Earl
of Shaftesbury
by G.F. Watts, 1862
NPG 1012 |
Anthony
Ashley Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury (1801-1885), philanthropist
and social reformer
The eminent social reformer Anthony
Ashley Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury, spent much of his long
life defending and helping the poor and under-privileged. More
than any other individual, he highlighted their sufferings and
fought for social welfare: urging reform in factories, collieries,
education, housing, sanitation and asylums. Shaftesbury's portrait
was painted by Watts in 1862, and in the letter below he arranges
a time for a sitting.
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Sir Henry Taylor
by G.F. Watts, c.1868-1870
NPG 1014 |
Sir Henry Taylor (1800-1886),
poet, essayist and civil servant
Julia Margaret Cameron was a
great admirer of the distinguished poet Sir Henry Taylor, whom
she dubbed 'the Practical Poet'. She corresponded avidly with
Watts, whom she also admired, and in the letter below she urges
him to honour Taylor with a portrait. Taylor was a regular visitor
to Little Holland House, where Watts lived as a guest of the
Prinsep family. According to Mary Watts the portrait was painted
in 1868-70, but in a Grosvenor Gallery exhibition catalogue it
is dated 1882.
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Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson
by G.F. Watts, c.1863-1864
NPG 1015 |
Alfred
Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson (1809-1892), Poet Laureate
Alfred Lord Tennyson, whom Julia
Margaret Cameron described as 'our contemplative poet' in the
above letter to Watts, became Poet Laureate in 1850 on the death
of William Wordsworth. Like Cameron, Watts was a great admirer
of the poet and painted his portrait on a number of occasions
over a period of more than 30 years. 6 versions are documented,
the earliest of which, referred to in the first letter below,
was produced in 1857. The last recorded version was painted by
Watts in 1890.
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