| CANOVA | Italian sculptor in the neoclassical style who created Cupid and Psyche and a nude statue of Napoleon in the guise of the Roman god Mars (6) |
| TORSO | Word for a core, plant stalk or stump first, later the trunk of the human body; a nude statue of said corporal bole; or, a painting or a musical piece left short, truncated or unfinished (5) |
| SHERATON | 18th-century furniture maker noted for his designs in the neoclassical style |
| ALABASTER | Material for sculptor in the style of one tending the roast? (9) |
| CAPITA | Heads are those of Cupid and Psyche, inscribed "To Apollo" |
| OBELIX | Extremely strong sculptor in the Asterix cartoon series (6) |
| EDINBURGH | This Scottish capital city's aesthetic and political heart still lies in its small historic core, comprising the Old Town and the New Town. The medieval Old Town and the Neoclassical New Town were des |
| UNIT | A measure of alcohol intake; or, with "One", a group of British artists and sculptors in the 1930s including Frances Hodgkins, Henry Moore, Paul Nash and Ben Nicholson (4) |
| PARIS | International mecca for Black painters and sculptors in the 1920s |
| EROS | Sensitive over a winged nude statue? |
| FIGLEAF | Concealing device on nude statue (3,4) |
| ANNIGONI | 20th-century Italian artist in the old master tradition or style who gained prominence when he painted portraits of the Queen in 1955 and 1969 (8) |
| LEIGHTON | Victorian artist and former Royal Academy president who painted A Girl Feeding Peacocks, The Painter's Honeymoon, The Bath of Psyche and Flaming June (8) |
| CUPID | In Roman mythology, the husband of Psyche and father of Voluptas, goddess of sensual pleasure (5) |
| WYATT | Architect in the neo-Gothic style who designed Fonthill Abbey, the forth version of Belvoir Castle and remodelled parts of Windsor Castle (5) |
| ARMORYSHOW | The ?, International Exhibition of Modern Art as organised by the Association of American Painters and Sculptors in New York in 1913 |
| LOUIS | Neoclassical style in furniture, decoration and architecture in 18th-century France (5,5) |
| SEIZE | Neoclassical style in furniture, decoration and architecture in 18th-century France (5,5) |
| ADAM | Robert ---, 18th Century Scottish architect and designer who popularised a neoclassical style (4) |
| DUFY | French artist in the Fauvist style who painted Chateau and Horses,Open Window, Nice and Regatta at CowesA (4) |