Richard William Hubbard was one of a few painters of his generation with a college degree. A native of Connecticut, he was a member of the Yale University class of 1837 before going to New York,... Read full biography
Richard William Hubbard was one of a few painters of his generation with a college degree. A native of Connecticut, he was a member of the Yale University class of 1837 before going to New York, where he studied painting with Samuel F. B. Morse and possibly Daniel Huntington. While he also studied... Read full biography
Richard William Hubbard was one of a few painters of his generation with a college degree. A native of Connecticut, he was a member of the Yale University class of 1837 before going to New York, where he studied painting with Samuel F. B. Morse and possibly Daniel Huntington. While he also studied abroad during 1840 and 1841, he seems not to have ever exhibited a painting of a specifically European subject. He did, however, acknowledge a profound life-long admiration for Claude Lorrain. Hubbard... Read full biography
Richard William Hubbard was one of a few painters of his generation with a college degree. A native of Connecticut, he was a member of the Yale University class of 1837 before going to New York, where he studied painting with Samuel F. B. Morse and possibly Daniel Huntington. While he also studied abroad during 1840 and 1841, he seems not to have ever exhibited a painting of a specifically European subject. He did, however, acknowledge a profound life-long admiration for Claude Lorrain. Hubbard exhibited for over forty years at the National Academy of Design*, where he was elected an Associate in 1851 and an Academician in 1858. He also exhibited at the Brooklyn Art Association* on a regular basis from 1861 through 1886 and served as that... Read full biography
Richard William Hubbard was one of a few painters of his generation with a college degree. A native of Connecticut, he was a member of the Yale University class of 1837 before going to New York, where he studied painting with Samuel F. B. Morse and possibly Daniel Huntington. While he also studied abroad during 1840 and 1841, he seems not to have ever exhibited a painting of a specifically European subject. He did, however, acknowledge a profound life-long admiration for Claude Lorrain. Hubbard exhibited for over forty years at the National Academy of Design*, where he was elected an Associate in 1851 and an Academician in 1858. He also exhibited at the Brooklyn Art Association* on a regular basis from 1861 through 1886 and served as that group's third president. Like many of his peers, he sent works to the American Art Union* (1848-I852), the... Read full biography
Richard William Hubbard - Art for Sale (1 available)
Mount Moat, New Hampshire(?)
Type:Painting
Size:9.00" x 12.00" x 4.00"
Medium:Oil
Signed:Lower Left
Notes:
It has been suggested the scene is of Mount Moat New Hampshire