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  1. Watts moved to "Limnerslease" in Compton in 1891, and with his artist wife, Mary Fraser-Tytler, planned a museum devoted to his work, which opened in April 1904, just before his death. The architect of the Gallery was Christopher Hatton Turnor, an admirer of Edwin Lutyens and C.F.A. Voysey.

  2. Mary Seton Watts (née Fraser-Tytler) by Herbert Lambert. bromide print on card mount, early 1920s. NPG x1586. Find out more >. Buy a print. Buy as a greetings card. Use this image. Painter, designer, architect and architectural ceramicist; second wife of George Frederic Watts; daughter of Charles Edward Fraser-Tytler.

  3. Patrick Fraser Tytler, by Margaret Sarah Carpenter, exhibited 1845. ... Hog (sister of James Maitland Hog FRSE) on 30 March 1826 at Newliston and together they had 3 children, including Mary Stewart Fraser Tytler (1827–1887) who is buried in Grange Cemetery rather than in the family vault. Rachel died on 15 April 1835.

  4. Mary Seton Fraser Tytler fue una artesana simbolista, diseñadora y reformadora social británica.

  5. History. When Compton Parish Council created a new cemetery, local resident artist Mary Fraser-Tytler, the wife of Victorian era painter and sculptor George Frederic Watts, offered to design and build a new mortuary chapel.The Wattses had recently build a house, "Limnerslease", a few hundred yards away, now part of the Watts Gallery.Tytler was a follower of the Home Arts and Industries ...

  6. 7 de dic. de 2018 · A family affair: triple singleness and triangulated desire. Christina and Mary’s close bond in adult life can be traced back to childhood. Their widowed father Charles Edward Fraser Tytler, a civil servant and himself a writer of esoteric dissertations, encouraged them to pursue their creative interests. 6 Christina’s literary career, Mary’s artistic practice, and the sisters ...

  7. Mary Seton Watts, née Fraser-Tytler (1849-1948), after George Frederic Watts Hope signed 'Mary' (lower right) watercolour and bodycolour with gum arabic on paper 5½ x 3¾ in. (14 x 9.5 cm.) Provenance. Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 5 June 2007, lot 167, where purchased by the present owner.