Hurd, Peter – American Artist

Peter Hurd (1904 to 1984)

A regionalist painter known for his landscape, figure and genre paintings of New Mexico, Peter Hurd was especially focused on capturing light and atmosphere. His preferred medium was tempera on gesso panel, and many of his works depict the panoramic views he saw from his beloved ranch land as well as the mixed-blood and pure-blood people with whom he was most familiar – Indians, Mexicans and Caucasians. He was [...] Click here to continue reading.

Huntley, Victoria Ebbels Hutson – American Artist

Victoria Ebbels Hutson Huntley (American, 1900 to 1970)

Victoria Ebbels Hutson Huntley, a painter, muralist and printmaker better known for her work in the latter medium, was born in 1900 in Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, but lived in New York City from infancy until 1921.

She studied in New York City at the New York School of Fine and Applied Art, and at the Art Students League. Because she was still in grammar, [...] Click here to continue reading.

Hulme, James Sanford – American Artist

James Sanford Hulme (American, 1900 to 1974)

James Sanford Hulme was a painter, print maker and illustrator who lived for many years in White Plains, New York, and completed many serigraphs of his surroundings in Westchester County. Of special interest to him were local landmarks that he worked to preserve.He was born in Oklahoma and studied at the Art Institute of Chicago with Elmer Forsberg, whose specialty was print media. He also studied at [...] Click here to continue reading.

Hull, Marie Atkinson – American Artist

Marie Atkinson Hull (American/Mississippi, 1890 to 1980)

Early in her career, the talented Mississippi artist Marie Atkinson Hull assisted in her husband’s architectural firm by creating renderings of buildings he designed. As with the view of the French Quarter, Hull effectively combined her ability at watercolor with her knowledge of architectural drawing. Throughout her lifetime she traveled extensively and exhibited her work widely. At the annual New Orleans Art Association exhibition, Hull won a [...] Click here to continue reading.

Huet, Jean Baptiste – French Artist

Jean Baptiste Huet (French, Paris 1745 to 1811)

Jean-Baptiste Huet was the son of Nicolas Huet Le Vieux, and the nephew of Christophe Huet, both successful animal painters. He became the apprentice of Charles Dagomer, member of the Academie de St. Luc, and then became the student of Jean-Baptiste Leprince in 1764. He was received at the Academie Royale in 1768. In 1790 he was affiliated with the manufactures of Jouy, the Gobelins [...] Click here to continue reading.

Hudson, Grace Carpenter – American Artist

Grace Carpenter Hudson (1865 to 1937)

Grace Hudson was a native Californian, born in Ukiah in 1865. Her family lived in one of the few clusters of white settlers who inhabited an area largely dominated by local Native American tribes including the Pomos, a tribe that she would later devote a great deal of her artistic career to illustrating. Hudson taught painting in her hometown and also became an accomplished illustrator for Sunset, Cosmopolitan [...] Click here to continue reading.

Hudson, Charles Bradford – American Artist

Charles Bradford Hudson (1865-1939),

Charles Hudson was born in Ollsprings, Ontario, Canada on Jan. 27, 1865. He studied art in New York City and Paris and also served in the Spanish-American war under Theodore Roosevelt. He spent the majority of his career in the American West, mostly California, where he worked as an author, painter, illustrator, muralist and etcher.

Information courtesy of Cowan’s Auctions

Hubbard, Harlan – American Artist

Harlan Hubbard (American, 1900 to 1998)

Harlan Hubbard born in Bellevue, KY (across from Cincinnati) was an American artist and author who lived a life that Henry David Thoreau only experimented with. His father died when Harlan was only seven. Soon thereafter, his mother moved him to New York City to be with his two older brothers who were living there at the time. Hubbard received his art education from New York’s National [...] Click here to continue reading.

Howland, Alfred Cornelius – American Artist

Alfred Cornelius Howland (1838-1909)

Alfred Howland, of Walpole, New Hampshire, studied in Boston and New York and at the Royal Academy and was a pupil of Albert Flam (Dusseldorf) and Emile Lambinet (Paris). Howland was an Associate of the National Academy of Design and a regular exhibitor in New York, Paris and Munich.

Horton, William Samuel – American Artist

William Samuel Horton (1865-1936)

. Horton was born and raised in the American midwest. His family tried repeatedly to dissuade him from his artistic endeavors, and he ultimately severed all family ties. In 1892 he began his studies in Paris, and although he frequently returned to America, New York in particular, he remained closely associated with the French Impressionists – he especially enjoyed the company of Monet, Degas, and Pissarro, as well as that [...] Click here to continue reading.

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