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  1. Matthew Cotes Wyatt (1777 – 3 January 1862) was an English painter and sculptor and a member of the Wyatt family, who were well known in the Victorian era as architects and sculptors. Early life. Wyatt was born in London, the son of the architect James Wyatt and was the brother of Benjamin Dean Wyatt, the architect.

  2. Matthew Cotes Wyatt (1777 - 1862) Painter and sculptor. Son of James Wyatt PRA. He sculpted the enormous bronze equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington which originally stood on the top of the Wellington Arch at Hyde Park Corner. Erected in 1846, it was taken down and moved to Aldershot in 1885.

  3. (1777 - 1862) Painter and sculptor Matthew Cotes Wyatt was the son of the architect James Wyatt. He enrolled at the Royal Academy Schools in 1800. Wyatt was never elected a member of the...

  4. Matthew Cotes Wyatt (1777-1862) was the son of James Wyatt the architect, and was a painter and designer as well as a sculptor. The elaborate base made for Bashaw reflects his abilities in the field of decorative arts.

  5. Biography. The youngest son of the eminent architect James Wyatt, Matthew Cotes Wyatt (1777-1862) was born in London, attended Eton and the Royal Academy Schools, and started out as an artist, doing decorative work and remodelling, and painting portraits and historical subjects, before turning to sculpture.

  6. Matthew Cotes Wyatt was the son of the architect James Wyatt, and was a painter and designer as well as a sculptor. The elaborate base made for Bashaw reflects his abilities in the field of decorative arts. In 1834 Wyatt held an exhibition of his works with Bashaw as the centrepiece.

  7. Description. One of the chief attractions of Frogmore for the royal family was the 35-acre (14.2-hectare) garden, in which they could walk, read and entertain. This view is from the garden front of the house and shows the artificial lake created by 1796, and some of the newly planted shrubs and trees.