KEYNOTE: Now available in a flexi format, this book is a magnificent survey of watercolour masterpieces from artists such as Turner, Blake, Constable, and Whistler. This beautiful volume documents an important moment in the history of the watercolour, as its practitioners moved from the tinted drawings to the creation of fully fledged works of art that rivaled oil paintings in their expressiveness and technical brilliance. With its rolling hills, cloud-laden skies and ever-shifting light, Britain was the perfect setting for such a revolution, as artists packed sketchbooks, brushes and paints, and headed for the countryside. Authors Wilton and Lyles document the evolution of the British watercolour, from the more classically inspired eighteenth-century landscapes to the vivid experiments in Naturalism and Romanticism, with their concomitant studies in light and atmosphere. Over 300 exquisite reproductions allow readers to appreciate the delicate colours and fine lines of these important works, while the authors' authoritative and eminently readable texts enhance the overall experience of witnessing the birth of an independent medium, and some of the most breathtaking examples of watercolours the world has ever known. AUTHOR: Andrew Wilton was the founding curator of the Turner Collection in the Clore Gallery and the Keeper of British Art at Tate, London. He is currently a visiting research fellow at Tate Britain and Honorary Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Royal Academy of Arts, London. He is the author of several works on Turner and British Romantic painting. Anne Lyles is a curator at Tate, London and a leading authority on the work of John Constable. ILLUSTRATIONS 389 illustrations *