Artist: George Frederic Watts (English, 1817-1904)
Medium: Antique etching on thick wove paper after the original by master etcher G. W. Rhead.
Signature: Signed in the plate lower left.
Dimensions: Image Size 5 5/8 x 8 1/2 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 15 x 15 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
The life his brawny, beery, herculean drayman, leaning against his shafts and sleepily casting grain to the pigeons, while his grand docile brutes stand patient and still. Watts studied animals with great care and to admirable purpose. In the background of broad horses there are chestnut leaves and red-brick wall, in harmony with the grandiose simplicity of the whole design.
George Frederick Watts, was an English painter and sculptor of grandiose allegorical themes. Watts believed that art should preach a universal message, but his subject matter, conceived in terms of vague abstract ideals, is full of symbolism that is often obscure and today seems superficial. Watts attended the Royal Academy sporadically between 1835 and 1837, exhibiting among other works “The Wounded Heron” (1837; Watts Gallery, Compton). He twice won competitions for the decoration of the Houses of Parliament, and although neither design was ever carried out in fresco, the prize money enabled him to go to Florence in 1843 and to visit Rome and Naples between 1843 and 1847; the most obvious Italian influence in his work is that of Titian. The most famous of his later works, “Hope” (1886; version in the Tate Gallery, London), is ambiguous and may be ironic in meaning. Although he tended to despise portrait painting, Watts completed many shrewdly observed portraits of his famous contemporaries, notably that of Cardinal Manning (1882; National Portrait Gallery, London). The house in which he died now contains a permanent collection of his works.