Vote for Watts Gallery |
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Sunday, July 30 2006 @ 10:44 AM BST
Author: Fred. Views: 490
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When I lived in Guildford it was always a treat to visit
the nearby village of Compton. It was great for jumble sales, antique
shops and homely tea rooms � and The Watts Gallery.
Watching the
Restoration Village TV programme on BBC 2, I was surprised to see The Watts Gallery listed as one of the buildings under threat.
It always was a bit run down, a secret place you could take people and
watch their eyes light up as we ventured inside. The curator at the
time was Wilfred Blunt, brother of the famous spy Anthony Blunt, later
replaced by Richard Jeffries. It was built in 1903-4 by George Frederic
Watts and his second wife Mary in the Arts and Crafts style. His
short-lived first marriage was to the 16-year old actress Ellen Terry �
his famous portrait of her shows her smelling camelias, a flower with
no scent. Victorian symbolist and allegorical painting may not be
everyone's cup of tea, but this gallery, purpose built by 'England's
Michaelangelo' is a gem and my kind of museum, with its mixture of
important pictures (as well as the Watts, some lovely ones by Albert
Moore and Edward Burne-Jones I seem to remember) and domestic items
plus fabulous back studio rooms containing many maquettes and two
full-size plaster sculptures: Physical Energy (in Kensington Gardens, London and Cape Town) and Tennyson (outside Lincoln Cathedral), which we were sometimes allowed to peep into.
I visited the Gustave Moreau museum in Paris recently and in my
opinion, Watts gallery is the more important. Mary, as well as
repainting some of Watts' pictures after he died, to cheer them up,
started a pottery to help the local unemployed and the more talented of
them helped her to build the marvellous Art Nouveau memorial chapel in
the nearby graveyard, where GF is buried � a favourite subject of mine
to draw and paint. The outside of this remarkable red building is
covered in intricate Celtic designs in terra cotta; inside it is
decorated with angels in sumptuous blue, red and gold gesso. Well worth
a day out in Surrey. So vote now and save the Gallery!
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Dan Thompson
RAG