Thursday, September 1, 2011

George Frederic Watts - Portrait of Edith Villiers, later Countess of Lytton






signed and dated l.r.: G.F.Watts/ 1862
oil on canvas
77 by 44cm., 30¼ by 17¼in.

ESTIMATE 30,000-50,000 GBP
Lot Sold: 111,650 GBP

Purchased by Charles Rickards, 1876;
His sale, Christie's, 2 April 1887, lot 16 (as 'The Countess of Lytton');
Agnew's, London;
Charles W. Carver;
Mrs R. H. Anderson;
Mary Lutyens (Mrs J. G. Links) granddaughter of the sitter and thence by descent

Manchester, Royal Institution, A Collection of Pictures and Sculpture: The Works of G. F. Watts, Esq., R.A., 1880, no. 46 (as 'Edith');
Royal Academy, Winter Exhibition, Works by the late George Frederick Watts, R.A., O.M. and the late Frederick Sandys, 1905, no. 19;
Manchester, City Art Gallery, G. F. Watts Memorial Exhibition, 1905, no. 31;
Newcastle upon Tyne, Laing Art Gallery, Special Loan Collection of Works by the Late G. F. Watts, R.A., O.M., 1905, no. 162;
Edinburgh, Royal Scottish Academy, Memorial Exhibition of Works by the Late G. F. Watts, R.A., O.M., 1905, no. 125;
Dublin, Royal Hiberian Academy, Watts Memorial Exhibition, 1906, no. 34;
Rome, International Fine Arts Exhibition, British Section, 1911, no. 105;
London, Arts Council of Great Britain, Hayward Gallery, 1981, no. 91;
London, National Portrait Gallery, G. F. Watts Portraits – Fame & Beauty in Victorian Society, 2004, no. 40

The Academy, Notes and Reviews, 21 October 1876, p. 417;
Hugh Macmillan, The Life-Work of George Frederic Watts, R.A., 1903, p. 87;
Catalogue of the Works of G. F. Watts, compiled by his widow, MS, c. 1910, vol. II, p. 165;
The Birth of Rowland: An Exchange of Letters in 1865 between Robert Lytton and his Wife, edited by their daughter, 1956, p. 116;
David Loshak, G. F. Watts and Ellen Terry, Burlington Magazine, 105, 1963, pp. 476-85;
Mary Lutyens, Edward and Elizabeth, privately published, 1996, not paginated;
Veronica Franklin Gould, G. F. Watts – The Last Great Victorian, 2004, p. 59

Watts had previously drawn Edith Villiers (1841-1936) and her twin sister Elizabeth as children. The two girls came out in 1860. Elizabeth married shortly afterwards, it was said to a man with whom Edith was herself in love. In May 1862, perhaps as a consequence of this romantic setback, Edith was feeling lonely and uncertain about the future. To comfort her, arrangements were made for her to go to Little Holland House so that Watts might paint her. This was not a commissioned portrait – Mrs Villiers, who had been widowed in 1843 and who depended financially on her brother-in- law the Earl of Clarendon, was not in a position to pay for the painting. Its informal and intimate character is owed to the warmth of affectionate feeling that the artist had for the twenty-one year old beautiful daughter of an old friend, and
the freedom that was permitted in the case of a portrait painted at the volition of the artist rather than at the behest of a patron. The painting remained in Watts's possession for fourteen years – hanging in the artist's adopted home Little Holland House – and only being sold in 1876 to the avid collector of the artist's works Charles Rickards.

The background to the painting is the wallpaper which decorated a room at Little Holland House and which appears in other Watts portraits. The representation of her undressed hair, which falls to her shoulders and breast, its lovely pale colour showing against the dark material and echoed by the gold of the braid, makes clear that this is a portrait of a woman who may be regarded as still in a state of adolescence and painted by someone who was privileged to observe her in her girlhood. According to the conventions of Victorian portraiture it was not permissible for women who were married to be shown with their hair loose, with associations of déshabillé which would not be considered appropriate to be seen by anyone except the woman's husband. A year later, in the course of his short lived marriage to Ellen Terry, Watts painted a series of portraits of her which have something of the same suggestion of physical intimacy.

Edith recalled sitting for the portrait: on the first occasion in May she was 'made to sit for about an hour and a half' in a studio that was uncomfortably warm. Then, in June, by which time the final arrangement of the portrait must have been arrived at, she described how 'they pulled down my hair and then made me sit to Mr Watts. It was such a bore'.

Further sittings took place at intervals in the course of the summer of 1862. Barbara Bryant, in her catalogue entry for the painting on the occasion of the 2004 National Portrait Gallery Watts portraits exhibition, calculated that about eight hours was spent on the painting. Watts painted confidently and with a secure and definite touch that seldom required elaborate revision and so therefore achieved works of this kind in relatively short periods. In this instance, he worked
on a canvas of a particularly coarse weave, the texture of which lends unity to the composition.

In 1864 Edith Villiers married Robert Lytton the son of the novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton. Lytton was a diplomat who served as viceroy of India (and whose duty it was to proclaim Queen Victoria as empress of India in 1877), and was later British ambassador in Paris. In addition has a writer of distinction, publishing under the nom-de-plume of Owen Meredith, a series of volumes of poetry. Robert Lytton was made 1st Earl of Lytton. He was himself painted by Watts in a portrait now in the National Portrait Gallery. Robert Lytton died in 1891, his wife Edith surviving him by forty-five years.

CSN

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Bulwer-Lytton,_1st_Earl_of_Lytton


1 comment:

Stephenph said...

This portrait used to hang at Homewood, Knebworth and is described by the composer,Elizabeth Luytens in her book "A Goldfidh Bowl, pub Casells, 1972, .."portaits of Edth and her sister Lady Loch by Watts,as young girls"