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Anna Mary Howitt

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Anna Mary Howitt
by Rossetti c. 1853
Born15 January 1824
Nottingham, England
Died23 July 1884 (aged 60)
EducationHenry Sass's Art Academy (London) and a private two-year apprenticeship under Wilhelm von Kaulbach (Munich)
SpouseAlaric Alfred Watts
Childrenno children
Parent(s)William Howitt (1792–1879)
Mary Botham

Anna Mary Howitt, Mrs Watts (15 January 1824 – 23 July 1884) was an English Pre-Raphaelite professional (history) painter, professional writer, women's rights activist and spiritualist. Following a health crisis in 1856, she exhibited rarely as a painter, but continued to work as a professional writer. She became a pioneering drawing medium. It is likely the term "automatic drawing" originated with her. She was involved in the married women property committee.[1]

Painter, writer and women's rights activist

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Anna Mary Howitt was born in Nottingham as the eldest surviving child of the Quaker writers and publishers William Howitt (1792–1879) and Mary Botham (1799–1888), but spent much of her childhood in Esher. She started to illustrate her mother’s literary work at the age of 10. When her father William Howitt showed her designs of the heads of The Seven Temptations to Henry Sass, the principal of the Sass’s Academy, several other artists, including his successor Francis Stephen Cary were impressed. The family moved to Heidelberg when Anna Mary was a teenager, as they felt Germany offered better educational options. In Germany she met famous German writers and painters such as the well-known history painter Wilhelm von Kaulbach who fired her to become a professional history painter. She also met the Swedish writer Frederika Bremer because her mother was learning Swedish and Danish to be able to translate the works of Bremer and Hans Christian Andersen. Bremer inspired Anna Mary's activism for the woman's cause. She returned to London with her family when her little brother Claude suffered a knee infection and her parents did not want to see his leg amputated. Her brother's untimely death in 1844 led to bouts of depression. A year later she met Barbara Leigh Smith, a landscape painter and women's rights activist, in Hastings. A network of young aspiring professional women artists was formed who tried to establish a 'Sisterhood in art' as an alternative to the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. These women included Bessie Rayner Parkes and Eliza Bridell Fox. [2] Howitt entered Henry Sass's Art Academy in London in 1846, where her contemporaries included the future Pre-Raphaelites William Holman Hunt, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Thomas Woolner but also her artistic sister Eliza 'Tottie' Fox. This was one of the few places where female artists could receive first-class tuition. Her art teacher and the head of the Sass's art school in Bloomsbury, Francis Stephen Cary, who had seen Anna Mary's illustrations she made as a 10-year old, personally paid for her fees when her parents went bankrupt. Cary even arranged sittings expressly for her.[3] One of these sittings -probably arranged by Cary for Howitt- was for a portrait of the American painter John Banvard who visited London in February 1849 to exhibit his panoramic Mississippi River Valley painting. Anna Mary painted this portrait in his apartment rooms in London.

In 1847 she illustrated her mother's book The Children's Year.[4]

An illustration for her mother's book The Children's Year

In 1850, Howitt accompanied her fellow artist Jane Benham to Munich, where she studied under Wilhelm von Kaulbach. She began to publish articles about the city that were later collected in her book An Art-Student in Munich (1853). The book was a succes in the UK and in the US.[3]

The New York Times (11 May 1854) wrote this about An Art-Student in Munich: "All that is peculiar to Munich, – its museums, galleries, festivals, and works of art, – or to German life, whether in high or low degree, and still more to the cultivation of the artist, is told in these pages with a beautiful earnestness and a naive simplicity, that have a talismanic effect upon the reader. It is one of those sunny works which leave a luminous trail behind them in the reader's memory."[5] Howitt, at this stage in life, was subjected to two influences,"connected on the one hand with the social and publishing circles of her parents, the hard-working pillars of the London literary establishment, and on the other hand with a group of forward-looking, feminist women of her own age."[6]

The younger group of her associates consisted of the Langham Place feminists, notably her close friend the artist Barbara Leigh Smith: these joined Rossetti's Folio Club. Howitt made her exhibition debut at the National Institution of Fine Arts in 1854 with a painting inspired by Goethe's Faust, Margaret returning from the fountain or Gretchen at the fountain. This painting was first refused by the board of the British Institution, a decision which outraged her friend and fellow artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti. In 1855 she exhibited two paintings. The first, The Sensitive Plant, in response to Shelley's poem 'The Sensitive Plant' and later called The Lady was shown at the same venue, the National exhibition of the Portland Gallery (also known as the Free Exhibition). Her second painting The Castaway (Royal Academy, 1855) was unusually daring in showing a woman who had sunk into prostitution. The Castaway was hung above the line so she drew less critical attention than other artists. In 1855 she formed a committee with her mother Mary Howitt, Barbara Leigh Smith, Eliza Fox, Bessie Rayner Parkes and several other professional women artists to collect signatures for a petition that would lead to the Married Women's Property Act 1870.[7] Family accounts record her distress over criticism from John Ruskin of her ambitious painting of Boadicea or Boudica which was also rejected by the Royal Academy. Ruskin sent his verdict in a patronising private letter: 'What do you know about Boadicea? Leave such subjects alone and paint me a pheasant's wing'. It crushed her spirit and led to a serious mental breakdown, probably also a psychosis. Her aspiration to be a recognized history painter was denied. Ruskin's attack came shortly after Effie Gray divorced him on the grounds of not 'consuming' their marriage. Anna Mary Howitt was a friend of John Everett Millais, Ruskin's protégé and Effie Gray's future husband. Howitt's subsequent mental breakdown may have contributed to her retreat from the professional art world, but her own account, published under a pseudonym in Camilla Dufour Crosland's Light in the Valley: My Experiences of Spiritualism(1857), suggests a neurological event, perhaps the onset of frontal lobe epilepsy.However, she did not cease to exhibit works. She carefully chose where she would exhibit her works in order to avoid patronising criticism. She exhibited From a window, a window special to her and Alfred, at the Society of Female Artists in 1857. This society, founded in 1855 for women artists made it possible for women who had great difficulty in obtaining a public showing of their works and a proper art eduction (Their education in the arts was limited and they had been excluded from the practice of drawing from the nude figure since the Royal Academy was founded) to find a public venue. This society is now known as the Society of Women Artists.

Marriage and spiritualism

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Spirit drawing by Howitt

In 1859, Howitt married a childhood friend and fellow spiritualist, Alaric Alfred Watts. Watts consistently supported Anna Mary. The couple moved to Cheyne Walk in Chelsea, a few doors away from Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Howitt continued to publish regularly, most often in the spiritualist press. She helped her husband, a revenue clerk, to dream his dream and to become a published poet just like his own father,Alaric Alexander Watts. With Alfred she co-authored Aurora: a Volume of Verse (1884). Her Pioneers of the Spiritual Reformation (1883) consisted of biographical sketches of the German poet Justinus Kerner and of her father William Howitt. Her spirit drawings are exceptional in their power and reveal her pre-raphaelite training. Their religious character is obvious, showing angels, the divine mother and child, and other such themes. She was seeking a female interpretation of religion and foremost of the divine motherhood. The Watts marriage remained childless. Yet Anna Mary Howitt always wanted to be in the presence of children, becoming 'a mother' to poor children when she was helping in soup kitchens and by teaching these children in later life.

Australian connection

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She remained close to her brother, Alfred William Howitt, who had emigrated to Australia, where he became an explorer and pioneering anthropologist. Acting as his de facto agent in England, she secured equipment, vetted texts, and maintained academic ties on his behalf.[8]

Though the whereabouts of her surviving oil paintings were still not known in 2019, a large number of Howitt's "spirit drawings" — images originated without her conscious control — remain in the archives of the College of Psychic Studies in London. Howitt was an inspiration to the artist medium Georgiana Houghton. With the expanding public interest in spirit-driven artists such as Emma Kunz and Hilma af Klint, Howitt's drawings are currently receiving greater academic attention.

Howitt's family was acquainted with the novelist Charles Dickens, who offered critical commentary on her writing.[9]

Anna Mary Watts died of diphtheria in 1884 at Mair am Hof in Teodone (Brunico) [de], during a visit to her mother in Tyrol (since 1919 part of Italy).[3]

See also

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English women painters from the early 19th century who exhibited at the Royal Academy of Art

Publications

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References

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  1. ^ In the preface to Glimpses of a Brighter Land (London, Baillière, Tindall, and Cox, 1871).
  2. ^ Elmbridge Hundred biography Retrieved 9 July 2011. Archived 23 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b c ODNB entry: Retrieved 9 July 2011. Subscription required.
  4. ^ Mary Botham Howitt; Anna Mary Howitt (1847). The Children's Year. Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans. pp. 3–.
  5. ^ Retrieved 9 July 2011.
  6. ^ Orlando Project introduction. Retrieved 9 July 2011. Archived 15 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ The text of the petition appears here: Retrieved 9 July 2011. The letter is signed by: Anna Blackwell; Isa Blagden; Elizabeth Barrett Browning; Sarianna Browning; Mrs. Cowden Clarke; Charlotte Cushman; Amelia B. Edwards; Eliza F. Fox; Mrs. Gaskell; Matilda M. Hays; Mary Howitt; Anna Mary Howitt; Mrs. Jameson; Harriet Martineau; Honble. Julia Maynard; Mary Mohl; Bessie Rayner Parkes; Mrs. Reid; Miss Sturch; Mrs. Carlyle; Miss Jewsbury; Mrs. Lovell; Mrs. Loudon; Miss Leigh Smith Archived 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Mary Howitt Walker (1971), Come Wind, Come Weather; a Biography of Alfred Howitt, Melbourne University Press. ISBN 978-0-522-83962-3.
  9. ^ "Anna Mary Howitt". www.djo.org.uk. Archived from the original on 22 February 2019.

External resources

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  • Rachel Oberter, Spiritualism and the Visual Imagination in Victorian Britain, PhD dissertation, Yale University, 2007
  • Black-and-white reproduction of AMH's 1849 portrait of fellow artist John Banvard (1815–1891): Retrieved 9 July 2011. Archived 18 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  • The text of An Art-Student in Munich online: Retrieved 9 July 2011.
  • The text of The Children's Year by Mary Howitt, illustrated by her daughter Anna Mary Howitt: Retrieved 9 July 2011.
  • A chapter on Anna Mary Howitt's travels in Munich in Heidi Liedke: The Experience of Idling in Victorian Travel Texts, 1850–1901. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018 Retrieved 17 August 2018.