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LOT 65

After George Frederic Watts, OM RA

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Physical energy Height: 17 1/4in (36cm)

Physical energy
inscribed with title and stamped with foundry mark 'Morris Singer Founders London' (on the base)
bronze with green-brown patina
Height: 17 1/4in (36cm)

Provenance
Private collection, London (acquired late 1970s);
By descent to the present owner.

Primarily known as a symbolist painter, George Frederic Watts started training in sculpture at the age of 10 in the studio of William Behnes. He assiduously studied the Elgin Marbles, which he would later reference in his work.

Watts began work on his monumental sculpture of Physical Energy in 1883, and based the model on his other large bronze equestrian figure of Hugh Lupus, which he finally completed in 1883, after twenty years work. The Marquis of Westminster commissioned the portrait of Lupus to commemorate the first of the Grosvenors at Eaton Hall, and the composition was probably loosely based on equestrian elements of the Elgin Marbles, casts of which were found in the artist's studio.

Physical Energy can perhaps be seen as an embodiment of Watts ideals, expressing his personal views about the modern age and man's role within it. He depicted man as ruler of the natural world and yet at one within it, with the rider seeming to move as one with the horse although there is no doubt that it is he who is ultimately the master in complete control.

Physical Energy was the culmination of Watt's ambitions in the field of public sculpture and was finally cast in 1902 and exhibited at the Royal Academy that same year. The plaster model was part of the bequest to Watts Gallery after the artist's death in 1904. The bronze cast was gifted to the British Government and is standing now in front of the Rhodes Memorial in Cape Town, South Africa. A second cast from 1905 stands in Kensington Gardens, while a third cast from 1959, commissioned by the British South African Company, is situated on the grounds of the National Archives in Harare, Zimbabwe. The Watts Gallery commissioned a fourth cast in 2017 to commemorate the artist's 200th birthday.

Thomas Wren, who was Watts' assistant, achieved a reduction of the gesso model in the collection of Watts Gallery in 1914 at the request of Mary Watts and the gallery trustees. The plan was to make a series of casts for commercial purpose and these copies were to be retailed from the Watts Gallery, the Fine Art Society and other outlets. It is reported that Wren recalled that around fifty were to be cast by the Parlanti foundry but this venture was curtailed by the outbreak of war. Four reduction casts that bear the title and Watts' and Wren's signatures on the base are now known, one of which was sold at Bonhams London in 2014.

The present cast of the reduction, without Watts' and Wren's name and of a slightly later date, is part of a later series including one cast mentioned in a 1928 inventory of the Liverpool University Gallery and another (now lost) acquired by the Fogg Art Museum in 1929.

The iconic image of Physical Energy is being used as logo by Rhodes University, South Africa, and by Watts Gallery, Compton.

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Time, Location
07 Nov 2018
USA, New York City, NY
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Physical energy Height: 17 1/4in (36cm)

Physical energy
inscribed with title and stamped with foundry mark 'Morris Singer Founders London' (on the base)
bronze with green-brown patina
Height: 17 1/4in (36cm)

Provenance
Private collection, London (acquired late 1970s);
By descent to the present owner.

Primarily known as a symbolist painter, George Frederic Watts started training in sculpture at the age of 10 in the studio of William Behnes. He assiduously studied the Elgin Marbles, which he would later reference in his work.

Watts began work on his monumental sculpture of Physical Energy in 1883, and based the model on his other large bronze equestrian figure of Hugh Lupus, which he finally completed in 1883, after twenty years work. The Marquis of Westminster commissioned the portrait of Lupus to commemorate the first of the Grosvenors at Eaton Hall, and the composition was probably loosely based on equestrian elements of the Elgin Marbles, casts of which were found in the artist's studio.

Physical Energy can perhaps be seen as an embodiment of Watts ideals, expressing his personal views about the modern age and man's role within it. He depicted man as ruler of the natural world and yet at one within it, with the rider seeming to move as one with the horse although there is no doubt that it is he who is ultimately the master in complete control.

Physical Energy was the culmination of Watt's ambitions in the field of public sculpture and was finally cast in 1902 and exhibited at the Royal Academy that same year. The plaster model was part of the bequest to Watts Gallery after the artist's death in 1904. The bronze cast was gifted to the British Government and is standing now in front of the Rhodes Memorial in Cape Town, South Africa. A second cast from 1905 stands in Kensington Gardens, while a third cast from 1959, commissioned by the British South African Company, is situated on the grounds of the National Archives in Harare, Zimbabwe. The Watts Gallery commissioned a fourth cast in 2017 to commemorate the artist's 200th birthday.

Thomas Wren, who was Watts' assistant, achieved a reduction of the gesso model in the collection of Watts Gallery in 1914 at the request of Mary Watts and the gallery trustees. The plan was to make a series of casts for commercial purpose and these copies were to be retailed from the Watts Gallery, the Fine Art Society and other outlets. It is reported that Wren recalled that around fifty were to be cast by the Parlanti foundry but this venture was curtailed by the outbreak of war. Four reduction casts that bear the title and Watts' and Wren's signatures on the base are now known, one of which was sold at Bonhams London in 2014.

The present cast of the reduction, without Watts' and Wren's name and of a slightly later date, is part of a later series including one cast mentioned in a 1928 inventory of the Liverpool University Gallery and another (now lost) acquired by the Fogg Art Museum in 1929.

The iconic image of Physical Energy is being used as logo by Rhodes University, South Africa, and by Watts Gallery, Compton.

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Estimate
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Time, Location
07 Nov 2018
USA, New York City, NY
Auction House
Unlock