Walter Sickert
(1860-1942), PainterWalter Richard Sickert
Sitter associated with 21 portraits
Artist associated with 11 portraits
Painter. Born in Munich of Danish-Irish descent, Sickert originally intended to be an actor and never lost his interest in music-halls, theatre and popular culture. He attended the Slade School. He became pupil and assistant to James McNeill Whistler during which time he met Degas who was an important influence. At the centre of the Fitzroy Street circle from 1907, Sickert was a founding member of the Camden Town Group. His subject matter, ordinary people in everyday lives, caused outrage. His later paintings were based on photographs and newspaper cuttings.
by Philip Wilson Steer
oil on canvas, published 1894
NPG 3142
by Jacques-Emile Blanche
oil on canvas, 1898
NPG 4761
The Selecting Jury of the New English Art Club, 1909
by Sir William Orpen
oil on canvas, 1909
NPG 2556
by Walter Sickert
oil on canvas, 1935
NPG 3134
Walter Sickert; Thérèse Lessore
by Cecil Beaton
vintage bromide print on white card mount, 15 September 1940
NPG P869(21)
by George Charles Beresford
half-plate glass negative, 1911
NPG x6589
by George Charles Beresford
half-plate glass negative, 1911
NPG x6590
by George Charles Beresford
vintage copy print, 1911
NPG x132944
by George Charles Beresford
vintage copy print, 1911
NPG x132945
by George Charles Beresford
vintage copy print, 1911
NPG x132946
by George Charles Beresford
vintage copy print, 1911
NPG x132947
by Edward Drummond Young
print, 1922
NPG x13288
Thérèse Lessore; Walter Sickert
by George Woodbine, for Daily Herald
modern bromide print from original negative, 5 March 1934
NPG x74797
Walter Sickert; Thérèse Lessore
by George Woodbine, for Daily Herald
modern bromide print from original negative, 5 March 1934
NPG x74798
Walter Sickert; Thérèse Lessore
by George Woodbine, for Daily Herald
modern bromide print from original negative, 5 March 1934
NPG x74799
Thérèse Lessore; Walter Sickert
by George Woodbine, for Daily Herald
modern bromide print from original negative, 5 March 1934
NPG x74800
Walter Sickert; Thérèse Lessore
by George Woodbine, for Daily Herald
modern bromide print from original negative, 5 March 1934
NPG x70976
Comments back to top
We are currently unable to accept new comments, but any past comments are available to read below.
If you need information from us, please use our Archive enquiry service . Please note that we cannot provide valuations. You can buy a print or greeting card of most illustrated portraits. Select the portrait of interest to you, then look out for a Buy a Print button. Prices start at around £6 for unframed prints, £16 for framed prints. If you wish to license an image, select the portrait of interest to you, then look out for a Use this image button, or contact our Rights and Images service. We digitise over 8,000 portraits a year and we cannot guarantee being able to digitise images that are not already scheduled.
Lynda Mary Watts
03 July 2018, 11:41
I am very interested in the painter Walter Richard Sickert.
My mother-in-law always claimed that her mother had been given the diminutive name 'Chicken' and was painted by Sickert seated at a piano playing Tipperary. Her name was Emmeline Henrietta Cuming and she was born and lived in the St Pancras area of London near Regent's Park, from 1895 to 1918 when she moved to Portsmouth and married there. Her father Henry John Cuming ( my mother-in-law's grandfather) was a property manager at the Adelphi Theatre and Emmeline was a toe-dancer. Comparisons of Sickert's painting of Chicken show a marked similarity to Emmeline, especially in her wedding photograph taken in 1918. I believe my mother-in-law's claim to be correct as she would not have obtained this information elsewhere. Henry John Cuming's mother was Sophia Barratt (1866 to 1906) and I am wondering if there is a connection between her and the portrait of Mrs Barratt painted by Sickert.
I also possess a photograph of Emmeline as a young girl with three men in arm uniform. As far as I know Henry John was never in the army and I wonder if these uniforms may be theatrical costumes. I believe that the man on the right is Henry John Cuming, and am wondering if the man on the left may possibly be Walter Sickert.
I would be very grateful for any further information regarding Sickert's life in London in the period 1880 to 1920, and am happy to provide any other useful information on the family history.
Gill Barratt
07 January 2022, 19:09
Hi Lynda, I am a distant relative in that Sophia Barratt’s brother, William Henry is my g grandfather. Sophia and William’s aunt, Margaret Ellen Barratt married Frederick Ernest Pocock, an eminent surgeon who was invited by James McNeill Whistler to a private viewing in 1886. This fits with your story, as Sickert was a student of Whistler. As an aside, I am an artist