The Bust has CLYTIE written on the bottom. The marble bust was displayed by its maker George Frederic Watts at the RA in 1868 and it shows a character from Ovid's Metamorphoses iv. 204, 234-56. It has sister busts in plaster, bronze and terracotta. Clytie was a sea nymph that fell in love with Apollo as she watched him drive his chariot across the sky everyday and stood immovable for 9 days and 9 nights until on the 10th she was turned into a sunflower, that follows the path of the sun everyday. The bust shows her metamorphosis with leaves and petals beginning to envelope her body, following Michelangelo's non-finito style and is used to suggest the struggle to find spiritual light. The photo looks professional and the bust itself currently resides in the Guildhall Art Gallery.