Signor makes a home on the Isle of Wight 1871-1875
G.F. Watts painting Ariadne, 1888-89 Watts Gallery
Lady Holland received an offer of forty
thousand pounds for the property where Little Holland House was built
upon. The property company proposed
building a new road that would cut through the house. When Watts heard this
news, he quickly realized his future was threatened; for this was his home.
Later on, he was given a six month notice to quit, ‘The uncertainty of the tenure
will fidget me out of the power of working.’ He decided to write to Rickards asking him to
fund a new house, in exchange for his pictures, so that he could complete his
projects. However, Rickards was unable
to financially support Watts’ proposal. Then Watts received a letter from his
good friend and Pre-Raphaelite painter, Edward Burne-Jones affectionately
called ‘Ned’ by friends, ‘I am doing a thing I never did before in my
life, answering a letter straight away-accept the proof of my affection . . . I
miss you very much for it has always been a real comfort to “run over” to
Little Holland House & grumble myself out to you . . . I am really at
present at the very lowest ebb of hope. Morris I see daily but that nightly
soul is dormant at present . . . is there to be no more Little Holland House? It
feels so sad as if one had come to another turn in life.’ The solution came in the form of one of ‘Signor’s’
(Watts’ nickname) closest confidantes, ‘Come to Freshwater and live near me at
Farringford!’ Tennyson said. Watts, without hesitation, went to fellow friend and architect,
Philip Webb. He wasted no time, and bought a plot of land to the west of
Farringford. Watts’s home would become one that he could share with the Prinseps;
he would be able to return their hospitality. Thoby Prinsep was now eighty
years old and nearly blind. His wife Sara’s health was deteriorating. Watts
hoped that the mild climate and sea breezes of the Isle of Wight would improve
both their health. On 27 February, 1872 Webb accepted the brief for a
three-story studio house. Tennyson told Watts, ‘Your house here promises to be a
very handsome one.’
The Briary photographed and used in a 19th century article
Two years later, in January 1874, Watts’ home
on the Isle of Wight, “The Briary,”
was named after the roses in the hedgegrows by the foot of High Down and looked
across the garden towards the sea. The three-storied red brick house had white
painted dormers, and two cypress trees that flanked the entrance to the drive.
Philip Webb recalled, ‘Light shone through the south-facing dining
and drawing rooms; especially in the ground floor suite of Thoby Prinsep, where
windows faced south and became the gathering place of friends and family.’ There
was a covered brick verandah for Thoby to sit under which enabled him to enjoy
the air in all types of weather. Watts had a thirty-foot studio, with a huge,
north window, stretching the length of the butler’s quarters, the housekeeper’s
and the kitchen. He curtained off the southern section below the gallery to
create a private sitting room. Outside, the lawns were laid out with terraces
of arching elm trees overhead. Blustering winds blew the sea air into the
garden making nightingales sing. Watts
painted, ‘A Study from My Window’ so
he could ‘examine & dwell upon beauties which are ever new.’
Freshwater, near Farringford by G.F. Watts, 1874-5, Watts Gallery
The Prinseps now treated The Briary as their
home while Signor went back to Little Holland House in Kensington to resume his
relentless portrait schedule finishing two full-length portraits. The process
of commuting back and forth between Kensington and the Isle of Wight began to
take its toll on Watts’ health. He was alone at Little Holland House sick with influenza
and longing for the sea air when he found out that The Prinseps had moved into
The Briary before the plaster dried and a man named Tyerman was still working
on the roof. Watts told Rickards, ‘I
have been losing a good deal of time & some temper in consequence.’ Thoby Prinsep on the other hand was
heard to say, ‘London workman are bad enough but in the country it is almost
impossible to get any thing done at all & quite impossible to get anything
well done.’ The following day,
he wrote to Lady Holland telling her he would give up Little Holland House at
the end of the year for no other person would wish to take it on. The Prinseps
were clearly better off in the country and by Easter Watts was back at
Freshwater, conversing with Alice Liddell about painting a portrait of her
father, Reverend Henry Liddell, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, commissioned by
the college to commemorate his twenty years in office.
Just as there was a gate on the path connecting
Mrs. Cameron’s home Dimbola to Tennyson’s home Farringford, so was a side gate
between Watts’ home The Briary in the garden that opened into a lane leading
over fields to Tennyson’s home Farringford, half a mile away. As one could
imagine, there were numerous comings and goings between the two houses: ‘Life
seemed to hum like some big wheel round the Cameron household.’ No islander or
tourist was saife from her. No Fisherman, no people gazing at the sea or down
the lanes. One would suddenly hear a loud voice, ‘I am Mrs. Cameron, perhaps
you have heard of me, you would oblige me very much if you would let me
photograph you.’ She was of a determined spirit and was known in reputation to
disarm all she came in contact with by considerable charm. These people she asked would find themselves modeling
in her photographic studio and it was Watts himself who would receive her
visitors! Watts loved to tell one story in particular when Julia Margaret
Cameron arranged to drive Tennyson, Thoby and himself to admire the view from a
new house in Freshwater, only to discover that the house was inhabited by a
German tenant, a count, who objected to this invasion in his home. Julia told
him, ‘the
greatest living poet, our greatest Indian legislator and the greatest living
painter.’ The count replied, ‘I
subscribe not to that opinion. In Germany have we very good painters.’
Watts continued to work from sunrise until
seven in the evening, rarely leaving the studio. He encouraged visitors to call
for lunch, or after six. There were still problems at The Briary and Watts
would write to Webb to complain with criticisms of the local workmen that were
brought in. Webb understood Watts’ perspective and was equally angry over their
London builder, Tyerman who was unprofessional, discourteous, and still owed
thirty or forty pounds. Webb employed an independent architect named Vinall to
examine Tyerman’s work and oversee further repairs. Webb wrote, ‘I
must beg you to release me from any further interferance in a matter which has
been so far from satisfactory to me. I have been made a fool of by a pack of fussy
old women who want to direct his house as they did his married arrangements.’ This all made Watts come to realize
how very much he preferred and needed a London base for his studio instead of
the commute to the Isle of Wight. Yes, the idea of living there was momentarily
a romantic one but a whim nonetheless. He also could not expect his patrons to
cross the Solent to his studio. Val Prinsep acquired a 245 foot extension to
his garden, and arranged to sublet to him for sixty pounds rent. When it came
time to build a new studio he chose the architect, Frederick Pepys Cockerell who
had designed Reginald Cholmondeley’s Kensington home in Palace Gate. According to his letter of 23 December to the
Academy, construction of the new house had begun. Cockerell’s plans were
completed in November but would not receive official approval until 9 January
1875. He could not sign the agreement until 15 July and the Memorandum of
Agreement between Val Prinsep and the Earl of Ilchester, relating its
construction on the 207 foot by 135 foot plot is dated 15 February. When Watts found out that old friend,
Rickards was preserving his letters it unnerved him. He implored his patron to
keep only those relating to business, ‘Being a lover of the beautiful its want of
music is distasteful to me. I confess I should like to have a fine name & a
great ancestry, it would have been delightful to me to feel as though a long
line of worthies were looking down upon me & urging me to sustain their
dignity. This I feel very strongly all the time feeling still more strongly
that to do good work in the world is a better thing than an accidental place in
society.’
SOURCE: G. F. Watts: Reminiscences By Mrs. Russell Barrington, New York, The
Macmillan Company, London,George Allen, 1905
Comments
Watts Chapel looks beautiful from photos I've seen of it. Lucky you to live near Limnerlease! Thank you so much for reading my article and commenting.
Email me at musingswriter@gmail.com. I would be happy to send you the sources with the letters between Rickards and Watts. Thank you so much for commenting and stopping by.
But this story tells us something else that I find fascinating. People shared access to their homes far more than we moderns might have expected. Friends and relaives were invited to share someone's hospitality more often and for longer than I had realised. Did the guests help out with money for the extra food, laundry, maids hired etc etc?
Initially, it was a good decision but too much commuting ;) I love your observation about sharing access to your home. Things are much different now that's for sure! Well, great question about the guests helping out etc., I know Dimbola, Farringford had full maid and cook staffs primarily made up relatives. In Watts's case, with The Briary, I did not come across any mention of maid staff or cooking just the usual late night parties and studio chat sessions Oh My! I could suggest, if you're interested in contacting Watts Gallery and having a look around their archives online. You might just find something!
Thanks for stopping by!