Anna Mary Howitt, Mrs Watts (15 January 1824 – 23 July 1884) was an English
Pre-Raphaelite painter, writer, feminist and spiritualist. Following a health crisis in 1856, she ceased exhibiting professionally and became a pioneering drawing medium. It is likely the term "automatic drawing" originated with her.
Artist and feminist
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. The family moved to Heidelberg when Howitt was a teenager, as they felt Germany offered better educational options. Howitt showed early talent and entered
Henry Sass
Henry Sass (24 April 1788 – 1844) was an English artist and teacher of painting, who founded an important art school, Sass's Academy (later "Cary's Academy"), in London, to provide training for those seeking to enter the Royal Academy. Ma ...
's Art Academy in London in 1846, where her contemporaries included
William Holman Hunt,
Dante Gabriel Rossetti,
Eliza 'Tottie' Fox and
Thomas Woolner.
In 1847 she illustrated 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
Wilhelm von Kaulbach (15 October 18057 April 1874) was a German painter, noted mainly as a muralist, but also as a book illustrator. His murals decorate buildings in Munich. He is associated with the Düsseldorf school of painting.
Biography
...
. She began to publish articles about the city that were later collected into ''An Art-Student in Munich'' (1853), and appeared as serialised stories with her own illustrations in the ''
Illustrated Magazine of Art'' (1853–1854).
[ODNB entry]
Retrieved 9 July 2011. Subscription required.
/ref>
On ''An Art-Student in Munich'', ''The New York Times'' (11 May 1854) wrote, "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." Howitt was under twin influences at this stage in life, being "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."
The younger group of her associates consisted of the Langham Place feminists, notably her close friend the artist Barbara Leigh Smith
Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon (born Barbara Leigh Smith; 8 April 1827 – 11 June 1891) was an English educationalist and artist, and a leading mid-19th-century feminist and women's rights activist. She published her influential ''Brief Summar ...
: they 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''. Her painting ''The Castaway'' (Royal Academy
The Royal Academy of Arts (RA) is an art institution based in Burlington House on Piccadilly in London. Founded in 1768, it has a unique position as an independent, privately funded institution led by eminent artists and architects. Its pur ...
, 1855) was unusual in showing a woman who has sunk into prostitution. In 1856 she helped Leigh Smith to collect signatures for a petition that would lead to the Married Women's Property Act 1870
The Married Women's Property Act 1870 (33 & 34 Vict c 93) was an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom that allowed married women to be the legal owners of the money they earned and to inherit property.
Background
Before 1870, any money made b ...
. Family accounts record her distress over criticism from John Ruskin of her ambitious painting of Boadicea, which was also rejected by the Royal Academy. This 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.
Writer and spiritualist
Spirit drawing by Howitt
In 1859, Howitt married a childhood friend and fellow spiritualist, Alaric Alfred Watts. The couple later moved to Cheyne Walk in Chelsea, a few doors from Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Howitt continued to publish regularly, most often in the spiritualist press. With her husband 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. She remained close to her brother, Alfred William Howitt
Alfred William Howitt , (17 April 1830 – 7 March 1908), also known by author abbreviation A.W. Howitt, was an Australian anthropologist, explorer and naturalist. He was known for leading the Victorian Relief Expedition, which set out to es ...
, 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.
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 Society for Psychical Research at Cambridge University Library and the College of Psychic Studies in London. Howitt was an inspiration to the artist medium Georgiana Houghton
Georgiana Houghton (1814–1884) was a British artist and spiritualist medium.
Biography
Houghton was born in 1814 in Spain, in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, but later moved to London. She produced her first abstract works, then referred to as 'sp ...
. With the expanding public interest in spirit-driven artists such as Emma Kunz
Emma Kunz (1892–1963) was a Swiss healer, researcher, and artist. She published three books and produced many drawings.
Early life
Emma Kunz was born to a family of weavers in 1892 in Brittnau, Switzerland.
Career
Kunz was not a trained a ...
and Hilma af Klint, Howitt's drawings are receiving greater academic attention.
Howitt's family was acquainted with the novelist Charles Dickens, who offered critical commentary on her writing.
Anna Mary Watts died of diphtheria in 1884 at Mair am Hof in , during a visit to her mother in Tyrol (since 1919 part of Italy).
See also
;English women painters from the early 19th century who exhibited at the Royal Academy of Art
Publications
''An Art Student in Munich''
(1853)
''Aurora: A Volume of Verse''
(1875)
''The Pioneers of the Spiritual Reformation''
(1883)
References
External resources
*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
John Banvard (November 15, 1815 – May 16, 1891) was a panorama and portrait painter known for his panoramic views of the Mississippi River Valley. He was a pioneer in moving panoramic paintings.
Biography
John Banvard was born in New York and ...
(1815–1891)
Retrieved 9 July 2011.
*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, 201
Retrieved 17 August 2018.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Howitt, Anna Mary
1824 births
1884 deaths
English feminists
English women painters
Deaths from diphtheria
19th-century British women artists
19th-century English painters
English Quakers
People from Nottingham
British feminists
Drawing mediums
Quaker feminists
19th-century English women
Infectious disease deaths in Germany
Respiratory disease deaths in Germany