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Miss May Prinsep. George Frederic Watts OM RA (23 February 1817 – 1 July 1904) was a British painter and sculptor associated with the Symbolist movement. Watts became famous in his lifetime for his allegorical works, such as Hope and Love and Life.
Physical Energy by George Frederick Watts, Visit Harlow A bronze equestrian reduction of Physical Energy dated 1914 , Bonhams, 4 June 2014 Object in Focus: G.F. Watts, Physical Energy gesso grosso model , Watts Gallery
Frederick Horsman Varley Art Gallery, Markham, Ontario, Canada; Vincent van Gogh – Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, and Van Gogh House, Drenthe, Netherlands; Andy Warhol – The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and the Andy Warhol Museum of Modern Art, Medzilaborce, Slovakia; George Frederic Watts – Watts Gallery, Compton, Surrey ...
Hope Second version of Hope, 1886 Artist George Frederic Watts Year 1886 (1886), further versions 1886–1895 Type Oil Dimensions 142.2 cm × 111.8 cm (56.0 in × 44.0 in) Location Tate Britain Hope is a Symbolist oil painting by the English painter George Frederic Watts, who completed the first two versions in 1886. Radically different from previous treatments of the subject, it shows a lone ...
The Minotaur, oil on canvas, 188.1 cm × 94.5 cm (74.1 in × 37.2 in), Tate Britain. The Minotaur is an 1885 painting by the English painter George Frederic Watts.It depicts the Minotaur from Greek mythology as he waits for his young sacrificial victims to arrive by ship.
Wikidata:WikiProject sum of all paintings/Creator/George Frederic Watts Q110683672 Wikidata:WikiProject sum of all paintings/Collection/Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums
Mammon, originally exhibited as Mammon.Dedicated to his Worshippers, is an 1885 oil painting by English artist George Frederic Watts, currently in Tate Britain.One of a number of paintings by Watts in this period on the theme of the corrupting influence of wealth, Mammon shows a scene from Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene in which Mammon, the embodiment of greed, crushes the weak through his ...
The following are houses of special interest: [1] 2, 2a, and 2b Melbury Road, designed by John Belcher for Thomas and Mary Thornycroft and their family, built 1876–7; 6 Melbury Road, designed by Frederick Pepys Cockerell for George Frederic Watts, built 1875–6; gallery extension by George Aitchison, 1878; demolished 1964 and replaced by a block of flats, Kingfisher House