| BOYD | From 1973 to 1975, creator of Paintings in the Studio: "Figure Supporting Back Legs" and "Interior with Black Rabbit" (4) |
| CHAIR | Inanimate object with a back, legs and often arms; or, a professorship (5) |
| HOOHA | Article supporting back-to-back housing causing fuss (3-2) |
| ARTIST | Creator of paintings |
| RENT | Studio figure? |
| ARTDECO | Style of design and interior decoration in Europe and the US in the 1920s and 1930s (3,4) |
| METSU | Thought to have trained in the studio of Gerard Dou, artist noted for paintings in the fijnschilder manner including Man Writing a Letter and The Cat's Breakfast (5) |
| WATERHOUSE | Artist whose mythology- or literaryinspired paintings in the Pre-Raphaelite style include The Lady of Shalott, The Mermaid and The Crystal Ball (10) |
| DUSTSHEET | Coverage displacing the impact of painting in the studies I abandoned, possibly (4,5) |
| ARTNOUVEAU | A style of painting in the style of Vanuatu ore (3,7) |
| PACING | Camels walk in a rocking motion called ___, meaning the front and back legs on the same side move forward at the same time. |
| CULOTTES | Word, from the French for "bottom, breeches", for a style of divided skirt covering one's pegs; or, the pantaloons of soft hair on a dog's back legs (8) |
| ANCHER | Artist whose paintings of everyday life in Skagen town include Sewing Fisherman's Wife, Harvesters and Interior with Clematis (6) |
| LUNGE | Basic attacking thrust in fencing, in which the front leg moves forward and the stationary back leg is straightened (5) |
| COMPO | Who did Bill Owen play from 1973 to 1999 in TV's Last of the Summer Wine? (5) |
| BETTYFORD | US First Lady from 1974 to 1977 who was also the Second Lady from 1973 to 1974: 2 wds. |
| LIBERTY | - Leading the People; one of Eugene Delacroix's paintings in the Louvre (7) |
| AUDUBON | John James ---, naturalist and artist noted for his paintings in the book Birds Of America (7) |
| FORASTART | Fixed star of painting in the first place (3,1,5) |
| ADAM | Architect who designed the library at Kenwood House, the Etruscan dressing room at Osterley Park and interiors of other buildings including Newby Hall and Syon House (4) |