Artists
Name
![]() ![]() | Info | Years | Updated by | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hudson Jr., William | 1787 - after 1858 | Anonymous | 05/16/2012 | |
Hubbard, Richard William | ![]()
Richard
William Hubbard was a prominent member of the Hudson River School known for his
luminous, delicately-painted landscapes. Born in Middletown, Connecticut,
Hubbard attended Yale College before moving to New York City to pursue his
painting career. He trained under Samuel F.B. Morse at New York University and
spent two years in Europe studying... | 1817 - 1888 | Anonymous | 05/16/2012 |
Hubard, William James | 1809 - 1862 | Anonymous | 05/16/2012 | |
Howell, Parmenas | 1784 - 1808 | Anonymous | 05/16/2012 | |
Howe, Harry Hambro | ![]() Harry Hambro Howe was a marine artist who was born in Buckfield, Maine on August 16, 1886. Howe came from a family of artists. Both his grandfather, H. Howe, and his father, Captain T. Bailey Howe, were artists. T. Bailey Howe taught his son, Harry, how to paint. T. Bailey Howe was master of the Nantucket whaler, the Isabella. Harry H. Howe... | 1886 - 1966 | Anonymous | 12/22/2012 |
Howard, Joseph | 1789 - 1857 | Anonymous | 05/16/2012 | |
Howard, Hugh Huntington | 1860 - 1927 | Anonymous | 05/19/2012 | |
Hovenden, Thomas | ![]()
Thomas Hovenden (December 28, 1840 – August 14, 1895), was an Irish-American artist and teacher. He painted
realistic quiet family scenes, narrative subjects and often depicted African
Americans.
Hovenden
was born in Dunmanway, Co. Cork, Ireland. His parents
died at the time of the potato famine and he was placed in an orphanage at the
age of... | 1840 - 1895 | Anonymous | 04/08/2012 |
Hotchkiss, Thomas Hiram | ![]() Little is known about Thomas H. Hotchkiss's educational background. In 1853 Hotchkiss exhibited for the first time at the Rochester, New York, studio of Henry Johnson Brent. He soon relocated to New York City and began exhibiting landscape work at the National Academy of Design in 1856, and works within the circle of artists surrounding Asher B.... | c.1834 - 1869 | Anonymous | 12/22/2012 |
Horton, William Samuel | ![]()
A critic
for the Saturday Review (1928) wrote, "Mr. Horton has created a new world
on the beaches and one sees nothing in these animated scenes of customary
bathing pictures. T'were unmannerly to compare his
figures with paintings of Cézanne, for no robust, nature-loving
Englishman ever contemplated those limbs of Cézanne figures with any
real... | 1865 - 1936 | Anonymous | 05/16/2012 |