Watts’s Clytie was greeted with much acclaim when it was exhibited incomplete at the Royal Academy in 1868, where the critic Edmund Gosse hailed it as pioneering the New Sculpture movement. It was his first free-standing sculpture and the only work in this medium he exhibited during his lifetime. The Watts Gallery in Surrey has three versions, in bronze, plaster and terracotta, respectively. A marble version was purchased from Watts by Lord Battersea and was donated to the Guildhall Art Gallery in the City of London by Lady Battersea in 1919. A period plaster version was sold in these Rooms on 11 December 2011, lot 4, for £68,500. The present sculpture is number seven in an edition of nine cast under license from the Watts Gallery in 2013, by direction of the Trustees.
Clytie was an ocean nymph from Ovid's Metamorphoses who fell in love with the sun-god Apollo. He abandoned her and in grief she fasted for nine days watching her beloved drive his chariot across the sky. She became rooted to the spot and was transformed into a sunflower which turned its head to follow the sun moving across the sky from East to West. Watts’s contrapposto modelling captures Clytie metamorphosing into the flower with her head craning to catch a glimpse of Apollo.
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This bronze is in overall excellent condition. With a few miniscule pin-sized divots to the figure's proper left-side of her neck beneath her chin, which are in the making/casting and only visible upon very close examination. Ready to place.