Walter SickertA book devoted to one of Britain's most prominent artists, Walter Sickert (1860-1942), who was a painter, draughtsman and graphic artist of merit. Much of his success is credited to his awareness of developments in European modern art. |
Contents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | 9 |
THE MAKING OF A REPUTATION | 15 |
THE RETURN TO LONDON | 39 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
admired appearance artist Bath Beaverbrook Art Gallery became Blanche Bonnard British Art Camden Town Group Camden Town Murder career Cézanne Charles Keene Cicely Hey City Art Gallery Clive Bell colour composition contemporary critical Degas Degas's depictions Dieppe domestic drawing earlier early Echoes England English art Ennui etchings Ethel Sands example exhibition figures in interiors Fitzroy Street French friends Gatti's Gilman Gore's Harold Gilman Highbury Hollandaise Islington Katie Lawrence Lady late Lazarus Lion Comique London Manet modern mood Mornington Crescent music hall music hall paintings National Gallery Nina Hamnett nude Oil on canvas Old Bedford Paris Peggy Ashcroft photographs Pissarro portraits portraiture Private collection realism Richard Sickert Roger Fry Royal Academy scenes seen Self-Portrait Sickert wrote Spencer Gore St Jacques St Mark's subject matter suggested Tate Gallery theatre pictures Thérèse two-figure Venice Victorian visited Walter Richard Walter Sickert watercolour Whistler Whistlerian young painter younger