John Hubbard Rich. Because his family moved from Boston to Minneapolis, John Rich launched his career in America's Midwest yet he was born in Boston on March 5, 1876. During the period in which John... Read full biography
John Hubbard Rich. Because his family moved from Boston to Minneapolis, John Rich launched his career in America's Midwest yet he was born in Boston on March 5, 1876. During the period in which John Sloan was an illustrator for the Philadelphia Inquirer and Press, the slightly younger John Rich was... Read full biography
John Hubbard Rich. Because his family moved from Boston to Minneapolis, John Rich launched his career in America's Midwest yet he was born in Boston on March 5, 1876. During the period in which John Sloan was an illustrator for the Philadelphia Inquirer and Press, the slightly younger John Rich was similarly employed at the Minneapolis Times. In the evenings he attended art classes. Convinced of his talent, in 1898 his parents sent him to New York to study at the Art Students League. He worked... Read full biography
John Hubbard Rich. Because his family moved from Boston to Minneapolis, John Rich launched his career in America's Midwest yet he was born in Boston on March 5, 1876. During the period in which John Sloan was an illustrator for the Philadelphia Inquirer and Press, the slightly younger John Rich was similarly employed at the Minneapolis Times. In the evenings he attended art classes. Convinced of his talent, in 1898 his parents sent him to New York to study at the Art Students League. He worked there until 1902 under various teachers including Robert Blum, George Bridgman, Kenyon Cox, Frank Duveneck, and John H. Twachtman. The following three years of instruction under Edmund Tarbell at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston ended in... Read full biography
John Hubbard Rich. Because his family moved from Boston to Minneapolis, John Rich launched his career in America's Midwest yet he was born in Boston on March 5, 1876. During the period in which John Sloan was an illustrator for the Philadelphia Inquirer and Press, the slightly younger John Rich was similarly employed at the Minneapolis Times. In the evenings he attended art classes. Convinced of his talent, in 1898 his parents sent him to New York to study at the Art Students League. He worked there until 1902 under various teachers including Robert Blum, George Bridgman, Kenyon Cox, Frank Duveneck, and John H. Twachtman. The following three years of instruction under Edmund Tarbell at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston ended in his winning of the Paige Traveling Scholarship (in 1905) for two years of independent study in Europ... Read full biography
John Hubbard Rich - Artist Info
About John Hubbard Rich: Books
Books & Publications (28)
Publications based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
Santa Cruz Art League Statewide Art Exhibition Index, First through Twenty-Seventh, 1928-1957 (Publications in California Art, No. 12)
2015
Moure, Nancy Dustin Wall
547 pages
The Artists Bluebook 34,000 North American Artists to March 2005
2005
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