Thomas Hiram Hotchkiss PRICE CHARTS
1834 near Hudson, New York - 1869 Taormina, Italy. Known for: Landscape-ruins and some figure painting.
Thomas Hotchkiss is considered one of the more poetic of the 19th-century landscape artists. A friend of the well-known Asher B. Durand, he first drew recognition in the late 1850s as a member of the... Read full biography
Thomas Hotchkiss is considered one of the more poetic of the 19th-century landscape artists. A friend of the well-known Asher B. Durand, he first drew recognition in the late 1850s as a member of the Hudson River School, and moved to Italy in 1860, where he was welcomed into the literary and... Read full biography
Thomas Hotchkiss is considered one of the more poetic of the 19th-century landscape artists. A friend of the well-known Asher B. Durand, he first drew recognition in the late 1850s as a member of the Hudson River School, and moved to Italy in 1860, where he was welcomed into the literary and artistic circles of the American community in Rome. His delicate paintings and watercolors of the Italian landscape and its ancient monuments are said to touch on many of the myths surrounding the 19th... Read full biography
Thomas Hotchkiss is considered one of the more poetic of the 19th-century landscape artists. A friend of the well-known Asher B. Durand, he first drew recognition in the late 1850s as a member of the Hudson River School, and moved to Italy in 1860, where he was welcomed into the literary and artistic circles of the American community in Rome. His delicate paintings and watercolors of the Italian landscape and its ancient monuments are said to touch on many of the myths surrounding the 19th century American experience in Italy. He was born near Hudson, New York, and was active in New York City where he was a member of the American National Academy and exhibited at the National Academy of Design. Sources include:. American Artist magazine.... Read full biography
Thomas Hotchkiss is considered one of the more poetic of the 19th-century landscape artists. A friend of the well-known Asher B. Durand, he first drew recognition in the late 1850s as a member of the Hudson River School, and moved to Italy in 1860, where he was welcomed into the literary and artistic circles of the American community in Rome. His delicate paintings and watercolors of the Italian landscape and its ancient monuments are said to touch on many of the myths surrounding the 19th century American experience in Italy. He was born near Hudson, New York, and was active in New York City where he was a member of the American National Academy and exhibited at the National Academy of Design. Sources include:. American Artist magazine. Peter Hastings Falk (Editor), Who Was Who in American Art
Thomas Hiram Hotchkiss - Charts
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