William Walcot
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Westminster
Sold PRICE NOT ANNOUNCEDWilliam WalcotRead more
Dimensions: 6.25" x 11.75"
Orientation: Landscape -
Roman Forum
Sold PRICE NOT ANNOUNCEDWilliam WalcotRead more
Dimensions: 21" x 24.25"
Orientation: Landscape -
Spanish Bull Fight Seville
Sold PRICE NOT ANNOUNCEDWilliam WalcotRead more
Dimensions: 6.5" x 14"
Orientation: Landscape -
Temple of Minerva
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Dimensions: 10.5" x 12"
Orientation: Landscape
William Walcot 1874-1943
William Walcot was born at Lustdorf, near Odessa in a mixed Scottish-Russian family. He grew up in Western Europe and South Africa, returning to Russia at the age of 17, and studied arts and architecture under Leon Benois at the Imperial Academy of Arts in Saint Petersburg. Later, he attended art schools in Paris. Walcot’s career as an architect in Moscow lasted only six years.
In 1906, Walcot relocated to London where he was to become one of the most sought after English architectural illustrators of the 1920s and 30s. Walcot developed his own impressionistic style in gouache and watercolour which won numerous commissions from Edwin Lutyens, Herbert Baker and Aston Webb. He also engaged in printmaking, creating reconstructions of ancient Greek, Roman, Babylonian and Egyptian buildings.
He was elected to the Royal Society of British Artists in 1913, as an associate of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1916 and a Fellow of the RIBA in 1922. He was also an associate of the British School at Rome.