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William Morris Hunt

William Morris Hunt (March 31, 1824 – September 8, 1879) was an American painter.

William Morris Hunt, 1879

Born into the political Hunt family of Vermont, he trained in Paris with the realist Jean-François Millet and studied under him at the Barbizon artists’ colony, before founding a similar group on his return to America. He became Boston's leading portrait and landscape painter, also working as a lithographer and sculptor. In 1871 he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician. Many of his works were destroyed in the Great Boston Fire of 1872. Another disaster was the deterioration of the stone panels in the State Capitol at Albany, New York, on which a number of his murals had been painted. This is believed to have led to his depression and presumed suicide.

Life and career

William Morris Hunt was born into prominence. The family of Hunt's father Jonathan Hunt, were among Vermont's founders and largest landowners; his mother's a family of wealth and prominence in Connecticut.[1] Hunt attended Harvard College but withdrew in his junior year.[2] Having been denied the opportunity to paint and draw by an overbearing father, Jane Leavitt Hunt resolved that her children would be given the chance to study the arts in the best academies—even if it meant moving to Europe to attend them.[3]

 
Portrait of William Morris Hunt by Emanuel Leutze (about 1845)

Following the death of his Congressman father from cholera in 1832 at the age of 44, Hunt's mother Jane took him and his brothers to Switzerland, the South of France and to Rome, where Hunt studied with Thomas Couture in Paris, coming under the influence of Jean-François Millet after being greatly inspired by Millet's The Sower at the 1851 Paris Salon. The Hunt family remained in Europe for a dozen years. During part of that time, William Morris Hunt and his brother Richard Morris Hunt shared an apartment at 1 rue Jacob, close by the École des Beaux-Arts, where William studied painting under Couture. "From the training and inspiration each of the brothers was to experience in the next several years in France would come great strides for each in his work," writes historian David McCullough. "'Mr. William Hunt is our most promising artist here,' reported Thomas Appleton to his father."[4] Hunt then spent the next two years under the tutelage of Millet in Barbizon before his return to the states.

The companionship of Millet had a lasting influence on Hunt's character and style, and his work grew in strength, in beauty and in seriousness. He was among the biggest proponents of the Barbizon school in America, and he more than any other turned the rising generation of American painters towards Paris.[5] About his influence, S.G.W. Benjamin wrote in a posthumous assessment of Hunt:

To the late William M. Hunt that we must ascribe ... the general impulse toward foreign styles now modifying the arts of design in this country. ... The power of Mr. Hunt was ... felt in directing a large number of young art-students to visit Paris, and eventually also Munich, at each of which the tendency has been for some years toward bolder methods in the technics of art. The result has been to introduce to [America] a truer perception of the vital importance of style in the present stage of our art, and to emphasize the truth that he who has anything to say will make it much more effective if he knows how to give it adequate utterance.[6]

After leaving Paris, Hunt painted and used his family connections to establish art schools in Newport, Rhode Island, Brattleboro, Vermont, the Faial Island in the Azores, and finally in Boston, where he became a popular portrait painter.

Before his lauded return to America in 1855, Hunt was married in Paris to Louise Dumaresq Perkins, daughter of Thomas Handasyd Perkins, Jr., a Boston merchant, philanthropist and patron of the arts.[7][8] Hunt was married to Ms. Perkins again upon his return to Boston in 1855, perhaps for legal reasons. Hunt was married for the second time in the influential King's Chapel in Boston by academic and clergyman Ephraim Peabody, shortly before Peabody's death in 1856.[9]

 
William Morris Hunt self-portrait, 1866

On his return, Hunt painted some of his most handsome canvases, all reminiscent of his life in France and of Millet's influence. Such works include The Belated Kid, Girl at the Fountain, Hurdy-Gurdy Boy, and others – but the public called for portraits, and it became the fashion to sit for Hunt; among his best paintings of this genre are those of William M. Evarts, Mrs Charles Francis Adams, the Rev. James Freeman Clarke, Senator Charles Sumner, William H. Gardner, Chief Justice Shaw and Judge Horace Gray.[10][2]

Many of Hunt's paintings and sketches, together with five large Millets and other art treasures collected by him in Europe, were destroyed in the Great Boston Fire of 1872.[10] Hunt owned many canvases by Millet, including Millet's The Sower, for which Millet somewhat unwillingly accepted a payment of $60 from Hunt.[11]

Among his later works, American landscapes predominated. In the summer of 1878, the year before his death, Hunt painted a series of sweeping views of Niagara Falls.[12] His later works also include the "Bathers: Twice Painted" and "The Allegories" for the Assembly Chamber of the State Capitol at Albany, New York, now lost due to disintegration of the stone panels on which they were painted[5] (some scholars trace Hunt's deepening depression that led to his suicide to his despair over the loss of the Albany murals).[13] His book, Talks about Art (London, 1878), was especially well received.

Nor did Hunt confine himself to oil painting. He was prolific, working as a lithographer and sculptor as well. From 1850 to 1877, the Vermont native was Boston's leading portrait and landscape painter; there was a backlog of Brahmins clamoring to be painted by him. Hunt is widely credited for having influenced the styles of Winslow Homer, Childe Hassam and John Joseph Enneking. Hunt's signature lively brushwork, partly derived from study of contemporary European painting, marked a new phase in 'oil sketching' that was carried on by Homer and others. Other friends and associates included artist Frank Hill Smith.[14]

"The greatest of Boston painters", writes art historian G. W. Sheldon in his American Painters, "and one of the few really great American painters, Mr. William Morris Hunt, was born in Brattleboro, Vermont." While a friend and student of Millet, "Hunt is an entirely original artist, and every picture of his is a spontaneous and independent product."[15] In a bit of art history revisionism, some scholars are now re-examining Hunt's powerful pull on other early New England artists, many better-known.[16] Hunt was an important figure in New England arts and society. Besides collecting himself, Hunt encouraged other Boston collectors to buy works by European artists such as Millet, Monet and others.

After one early exhibition of French artists at the Boston Athenaeum, including works by Millet and Rousseau, for instance, an art professor at Harvard had written a condemnation in a Boston newspaper. Outraged, painter Hunt fired back a response in The Boston Daily Advertiser. "It is not our fault we inherit ignorance in art," Hunt wrote, "but we are not obliged to advertise it."[17]

In 1867, for instance, Hunt and his wife sailed to Paris to attend the opening of the Exposition Universelle. In his lectures and art classes, Hunt attracted large numbers of students, many of them from prominent Brahmin families. The Boston philosopher and author William James studied with Hunt for a time, before turning away from painting to concentrate on his writing. In 1871 Hunt was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician.

Certainly Hunt's career owed a debt to Boston's intellectual ferment. A luncheon at his club on February 27, 1870, for instance, found these members of Hunt's circle dining together: Ralph Waldo Emerson; James Russell Lowell; Henry Wadsworth Longfellow; Edward Clarke Cabot; Martin Brimmer; Thomas Gold Appleton; William James; Francis Blackwell Forbes; and James T. Fields. Joining the group as guest was Erastus Brigham Bigelow, a founder of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[18]

William Morris Hunt died at the Isles of Shoals, New Hampshire, in 1879, apparently a suicide.[19] Hunt had gone to the New Hampshire shore to recover from a crippling depression. But he continued to work, executing his last sketch three days before his death. His body was discovered by his friend, New Hampshire poet Celia Thaxter.[20]

His brother Richard Morris Hunt was a celebrated architect.[21] Another brother, Leavitt Hunt, was a well-known photographer and attorney.[22] A fourth brother, Jonathan, was a Paris physician who also committed suicide.[23]

The William Morris Hunt Library of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts is named in honor of this painter.[24] (Hunt was a founding member of the Museum of Fine Arts' museum school). Following Hunt's death, his Harvard classmates and other Bostonians contributed to a fund to purchase many of his paintings and donate them to the Museum of Fine Arts.[25]

Aside from the Museum of Fine Arts, the Boston Athenaeum has a number of the artist's works in its collection, a gift of William Morris Hunt II.[26] Also owning works by Hunt are New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Louvre Museum in Paris, the Musée d'Orsay in Paris, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the Addison Gallery of American Art at Hunt's alma mater Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass., the Bennington Museum, Vermont, the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, the Currier Museum of Art in New Hampshire, the Harvard University Art Museums, Salem's Peabody Essex Museum, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and many others.

In accordance with a long expressed desire, William Morris Hunt was buried at Prospect Hill cemetery in Brattleboro, Vermont, beside other family members.[27] Two decades after Hunt's death, his former pupil Helen Mary Knowlton published her biography of the Boston painter entitled The Art-Life of William Morris Hunt.[28]

William Morris Hunt and his wife, the former Louisa Dumaresq Perkins, had five children.[29] Morris sat for a full-length portrait by the artist Emanuel Leutze in Düsseldorf in 1864. Formerly part of the collection of Col. Leavitt Hunt at Elmshome in Vermont, the location of that portrait is now unknown.

Gallery

See also

 
The Horses of Anahita, bas relief sculpture prefiguring Hunt's murals for the New York State Capitol, c. 1848, Metropolitan Museum of Art

References

Notes

  1. ^ The History of the Descendants of John Dwight, of Dedham, Mass., Benjamin Woodbridge Dwight, New York, 1874
  2. ^ a b The Class of 1844, Harvard College, Fifty Years After Graduation, Prepared by the Class Secretary Edward Wheelwright, John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, 1896
  3. ^ Art-Life of William Morris Hunt, Helen Mary Knowlton, Little, Brown and Company, Boston, Mass., 1899
  4. ^ McCullough, David (2011). The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781416576891.
  5. ^ a b Chisholm 1911, p. 938.
  6. ^ S.G.W. Benjamin, Art in America: A Critical and Historical Sketch, Harpers, 1880
  7. ^ Some Merchants and Sea Captains of Old Boston, State Street Trust Company (Boston, Mass.), State Street Trust Company, Boston, Mass State Street Trust Company, 1918
  8. ^ Thomas H. Perkins Jr.'s Beacon Hill home at 1 Joy Street was the venue for salons of Boston's intellectuals and society figures. Perkins, who had a country home in Brookline, also built one of the last private residences on Louisburg Square at 2 Louisburg Square.[1]
  9. ^ "Massachusetts Marriages, 1841-1915," database with images, FamilySearch(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NWBG-S1C : 7 December 2017), William M Hunt and Louisa D Perkins, 18 Oct 1855; citing , Boston, Massachusetts, United States, State Archives, Boston; FHL microfilm 1,433,014.
  10. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Vedder, Elihu" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 964–965.
  11. ^ Vermont: A Profile of the Green Mountain State, Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1937
  12. ^ Frank T. Pomeroy, Rudyard Kipling, Picturesque Publishing Company, Northampton, Massachusetts, 1894
  13. ^ William Morris Hunt, Portrait of Katherine Dean Hubbard, c. 1865, Pierce Galleries, Inc., piercegalleries.com
  14. ^ Frank Torrey Robinson. Living New England artists: biographical sketches, reproductions of original drawings and paintings by each artist. Boston: S. E. Cassino, 1888 Internet Archive
  15. ^ American Painters, G. W. Sheldon, Ayer Publishing, 1981
  16. ^ William Morris Hunt, 1824–1879, Sally Webster, Cambridge Monographs on American Artists, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1991
  17. ^ Masters in Art:A Series of Illustrated Monographs, Bates & Guild Company, Boston, Mass., 1908
  18. ^ Journals of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Waldo Emerson Forbes, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1914
  19. ^ Death of William Morris Hunt, The New York Times, September 9, 1879
  20. ^ Hunt was plagued throughout his life by periods of depression. Observers often noted that his mood would swing from exhilaration to abject sadness. Today he would probably be diagnosed as bi-polar.[citation needed]
  21. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 938–939.
  22. ^ William Morris Hunt painted his brother Leavitt Hunt in an oil entitled The Prodigal Son in 1840.
  23. ^ Annals of Brattleboro, 1681–1895, Mary Rogers Cabot, Vol. I, E.L. Hildreth & Co., Brattleboro, 1921
  24. ^ William Morris Hunt Library, Museum of Fine Arts, fenwaylibraries.org
  25. ^ The Harvard Register: A Monthly Periodical, Vols. I & II, Published by Moses King, Cambridge, Mass., 1880
  26. ^ Images of Children from the Collection of the Boston Athenaeum, www.tfaoi.com
  27. ^ Brattleboro, Windham County, Vermont, Early History with Biographical Sketches of Some of Its Citizens, Henry Burnham, Published by D. Leonard, Brattleboro, Vt., 1880
  28. ^ The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Vol. VI, Rossiter Johnson, The Biographical Society, Boston, 1904
  29. ^ The Gardiners of Narragansett, Caroline E. Robinson, Daniel Goodwin, Printed for the Editor, Providence, R. I., 1919

Sources

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hunt, William Morris". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 938–939.

Further reading

  • The Early Years of the Saturday Club, 1855–1870, Edward Waldo Emerson, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1918
  • Exploration, Vision & Influence: The Art World of Brattleboro's Hunt Family, Catalogue, Museum Exhibition, The Bennington Museum, Bennington, Vermont, June 23–December 31, 2005, Paul R. Baker, Sally Webster, David Hanlon, and Stephen Perkins
  • W. M. Hunt's Talks on Art, William Morris Hunt, Houghton, Osgood & Company, Boston, 1880
  • Exhibition of the Works of William Morris Hunt, December 20, 1879-January 31, 1880, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Alfred Mudge & Son, Boston, 1880
  • William Morris Hunt, artist biography, harrisantiques.com
  • Art-Life of William Morris Hunt, Helen M. Knowlton, Little, Brown and Company, Boston, 1899
  • American Artists Abroad and their Inspiration, Stula, Nancy, and Noble, Nancy, Lyman Allyn Art Museum, New London, Connecticut, 2004, 64 pages [2]

External links

william, morris, hunt, march, 1824, september, 1879, american, painter, 1879, born, into, political, hunt, family, vermont, trained, paris, with, realist, jean, françois, millet, studied, under, barbizon, artists, colony, before, founding, similar, group, retu. William Morris Hunt March 31 1824 September 8 1879 was an American painter William Morris Hunt 1879 Born into the political Hunt family of Vermont he trained in Paris with the realist Jean Francois Millet and studied under him at the Barbizon artists colony before founding a similar group on his return to America He became Boston s leading portrait and landscape painter also working as a lithographer and sculptor In 1871 he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician Many of his works were destroyed in the Great Boston Fire of 1872 Another disaster was the deterioration of the stone panels in the State Capitol at Albany New York on which a number of his murals had been painted This is believed to have led to his depression and presumed suicide Contents 1 Life and career 2 Gallery 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Sources 5 Further reading 6 External linksLife and career EditWilliam Morris Hunt was born into prominence The family of Hunt s father Jonathan Hunt were among Vermont s founders and largest landowners his mother s a family of wealth and prominence in Connecticut 1 Hunt attended Harvard College but withdrew in his junior year 2 Having been denied the opportunity to paint and draw by an overbearing father Jane Leavitt Hunt resolved that her children would be given the chance to study the arts in the best academies even if it meant moving to Europe to attend them 3 Portrait of William Morris Hunt by Emanuel Leutze about 1845 Following the death of his Congressman father from cholera in 1832 at the age of 44 Hunt s mother Jane took him and his brothers to Switzerland the South of France and to Rome where Hunt studied with Thomas Couture in Paris coming under the influence of Jean Francois Millet after being greatly inspired by Millet s The Sower at the 1851 Paris Salon The Hunt family remained in Europe for a dozen years During part of that time William Morris Hunt and his brother Richard Morris Hunt shared an apartment at 1 rue Jacob close by the Ecole des Beaux Arts where William studied painting under Couture From the training and inspiration each of the brothers was to experience in the next several years in France would come great strides for each in his work writes historian David McCullough Mr William Hunt is our most promising artist here reported Thomas Appleton to his father 4 Hunt then spent the next two years under the tutelage of Millet in Barbizon before his return to the states The companionship of Millet had a lasting influence on Hunt s character and style and his work grew in strength in beauty and in seriousness He was among the biggest proponents of the Barbizon school in America and he more than any other turned the rising generation of American painters towards Paris 5 About his influence S G W Benjamin wrote in a posthumous assessment of Hunt To the late William M Hunt that we must ascribe the general impulse toward foreign styles now modifying the arts of design in this country The power of Mr Hunt was felt in directing a large number of young art students to visit Paris and eventually also Munich at each of which the tendency has been for some years toward bolder methods in the technics of art The result has been to introduce to America a truer perception of the vital importance of style in the present stage of our art and to emphasize the truth that he who has anything to say will make it much more effective if he knows how to give it adequate utterance 6 After leaving Paris Hunt painted and used his family connections to establish art schools in Newport Rhode Island Brattleboro Vermont the Faial Island in the Azores and finally in Boston where he became a popular portrait painter Before his lauded return to America in 1855 Hunt was married in Paris to Louise Dumaresq Perkins daughter of Thomas Handasyd Perkins Jr a Boston merchant philanthropist and patron of the arts 7 8 Hunt was married to Ms Perkins again upon his return to Boston in 1855 perhaps for legal reasons Hunt was married for the second time in the influential King s Chapel in Boston by academic and clergyman Ephraim Peabody shortly before Peabody s death in 1856 9 William Morris Hunt self portrait 1866 On his return Hunt painted some of his most handsome canvases all reminiscent of his life in France and of Millet s influence Such works include The Belated Kid Girl at the Fountain Hurdy Gurdy Boy and others but the public called for portraits and it became the fashion to sit for Hunt among his best paintings of this genre are those of William M Evarts Mrs Charles Francis Adams the Rev James Freeman Clarke Senator Charles Sumner William H Gardner Chief Justice Shaw and Judge Horace Gray 10 2 Many of Hunt s paintings and sketches together with five large Millets and other art treasures collected by him in Europe were destroyed in the Great Boston Fire of 1872 10 Hunt owned many canvases by Millet including Millet s The Sower for which Millet somewhat unwillingly accepted a payment of 60 from Hunt 11 Among his later works American landscapes predominated In the summer of 1878 the year before his death Hunt painted a series of sweeping views of Niagara Falls 12 His later works also include the Bathers Twice Painted and The Allegories for the Assembly Chamber of the State Capitol at Albany New York now lost due to disintegration of the stone panels on which they were painted 5 some scholars trace Hunt s deepening depression that led to his suicide to his despair over the loss of the Albany murals 13 His book Talks about Art London 1878 was especially well received Nor did Hunt confine himself to oil painting He was prolific working as a lithographer and sculptor as well From 1850 to 1877 the Vermont native was Boston s leading portrait and landscape painter there was a backlog of Brahmins clamoring to be painted by him Hunt is widely credited for having influenced the styles of Winslow Homer Childe Hassam and John Joseph Enneking Hunt s signature lively brushwork partly derived from study of contemporary European painting marked a new phase in oil sketching that was carried on by Homer and others Other friends and associates included artist Frank Hill Smith 14 The greatest of Boston painters writes art historian G W Sheldon in his American Painters and one of the few really great American painters Mr William Morris Hunt was born in Brattleboro Vermont While a friend and student of Millet Hunt is an entirely original artist and every picture of his is a spontaneous and independent product 15 In a bit of art history revisionism some scholars are now re examining Hunt s powerful pull on other early New England artists many better known 16 Hunt was an important figure in New England arts and society Besides collecting himself Hunt encouraged other Boston collectors to buy works by European artists such as Millet Monet and others After one early exhibition of French artists at the Boston Athenaeum including works by Millet and Rousseau for instance an art professor at Harvard had written a condemnation in a Boston newspaper Outraged painter Hunt fired back a response in The Boston Daily Advertiser It is not our fault we inherit ignorance in art Hunt wrote but we are not obliged to advertise it 17 In 1867 for instance Hunt and his wife sailed to Paris to attend the opening of the Exposition Universelle In his lectures and art classes Hunt attracted large numbers of students many of them from prominent Brahmin families The Boston philosopher and author William James studied with Hunt for a time before turning away from painting to concentrate on his writing In 1871 Hunt was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician Certainly Hunt s career owed a debt to Boston s intellectual ferment A luncheon at his club on February 27 1870 for instance found these members of Hunt s circle dining together Ralph Waldo Emerson James Russell Lowell Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Edward Clarke Cabot Martin Brimmer Thomas Gold Appleton William James Francis Blackwell Forbes and James T Fields Joining the group as guest was Erastus Brigham Bigelow a founder of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 18 William Morris Hunt died at the Isles of Shoals New Hampshire in 1879 apparently a suicide 19 Hunt had gone to the New Hampshire shore to recover from a crippling depression But he continued to work executing his last sketch three days before his death His body was discovered by his friend New Hampshire poet Celia Thaxter 20 His brother Richard Morris Hunt was a celebrated architect 21 Another brother Leavitt Hunt was a well known photographer and attorney 22 A fourth brother Jonathan was a Paris physician who also committed suicide 23 The William Morris Hunt Library of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts is named in honor of this painter 24 Hunt was a founding member of the Museum of Fine Arts museum school Following Hunt s death his Harvard classmates and other Bostonians contributed to a fund to purchase many of his paintings and donate them to the Museum of Fine Arts 25 Aside from the Museum of Fine Arts the Boston Athenaeum has a number of the artist s works in its collection a gift of William Morris Hunt II 26 Also owning works by Hunt are New York City s Metropolitan Museum of Art the Louvre Museum in Paris the Musee d Orsay in Paris the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco the National Gallery of Art in Washington D C the Addison Gallery of American Art at Hunt s alma mater Phillips Academy in Andover Mass the Bennington Museum Vermont the Bowdoin College Museum of Art the Brooklyn Museum of Art the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh the Currier Museum of Art in New Hampshire the Harvard University Art Museums Salem s Peabody Essex Museum the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and many others In accordance with a long expressed desire William Morris Hunt was buried at Prospect Hill cemetery in Brattleboro Vermont beside other family members 27 Two decades after Hunt s death his former pupil Helen Mary Knowlton published her biography of the Boston painter entitled The Art Life of William Morris Hunt 28 William Morris Hunt and his wife the former Louisa Dumaresq Perkins had five children 29 Morris sat for a full length portrait by the artist Emanuel Leutze in Dusseldorf in 1864 Formerly part of the collection of Col Leavitt Hunt at Elmshome in Vermont the location of that portrait is now unknown Gallery Edit The Bathers 1877 The Metropolitan Museum of Art Portrait of Morris Hunt son of William Morris Hunt 1857 Boston Museum of Fine Arts Niagara Falls 1878 one of his last paintings Hunt s studio 1879 The Drummer Boy c 1862 Museum of Fine Arts Boston Wheaton Theodore King 1865 Gloucester Harbor circa 1877See also EditRichard Morris Hunt Leavitt Hunt Thaddeus Leavitt Jonathan Hunt Vermont Representative Jonathan Hunt Vermont Lieutenant Governor Jarvis Hunt The Horses of Anahita bas relief sculpture prefiguring Hunt s murals for the New York State Capitol c 1848 Metropolitan Museum of ArtReferences EditNotes Edit The History of the Descendants of John Dwight of Dedham Mass Benjamin Woodbridge Dwight New York 1874 a b The Class of 1844 Harvard College Fifty Years After Graduation Prepared by the Class Secretary Edward Wheelwright John Wilson and Son Cambridge 1896 Art Life of William Morris Hunt Helen Mary Knowlton Little Brown and Company Boston Mass 1899 McCullough David 2011 The Greater Journey Americans in Paris New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9781416576891 a b Chisholm 1911 p 938 S G W Benjamin Art in America A Critical and Historical Sketch Harpers 1880 Some Merchants and Sea Captains of Old Boston State Street Trust Company Boston Mass State Street Trust Company Boston Mass State Street Trust Company 1918 Thomas H Perkins Jr s Beacon Hill home at 1 Joy Street was the venue for salons of Boston s intellectuals and society figures Perkins who had a country home in Brookline also built one of the last private residences on Louisburg Square at 2 Louisburg Square 1 Massachusetts Marriages 1841 1915 database with images FamilySearch https familysearch org ark 61903 1 1 NWBG S1C 7 December 2017 William M Hunt and Louisa D Perkins 18 Oct 1855 citing Boston Massachusetts United States State Archives Boston FHL microfilm 1 433 014 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Vedder Elihu Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 964 965 Vermont A Profile of the Green Mountain State Federal Writers Project of the Works Progress Administration Houghton Mifflin Company Boston 1937 Frank T Pomeroy Rudyard Kipling Picturesque Publishing Company Northampton Massachusetts 1894 William Morris Hunt Portrait of Katherine Dean Hubbard c 1865 Pierce Galleries Inc piercegalleries com Frank Torrey Robinson Living New England artists biographical sketches reproductions of original drawings and paintings by each artist Boston S E Cassino 1888 Internet Archive American Painters G W Sheldon Ayer Publishing 1981 William Morris Hunt 1824 1879 Sally Webster Cambridge Monographs on American Artists Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1991 Masters in Art A Series of Illustrated Monographs Bates amp Guild Company Boston Mass 1908 Journals of Ralph Waldo Emerson Ralph Waldo Emerson Waldo Emerson Forbes Houghton Mifflin Company Boston 1914 Death of William Morris Hunt The New York Times September 9 1879 Hunt was plagued throughout his life by periods of depression Observers often noted that his mood would swing from exhilaration to abject sadness Today he would probably be diagnosed as bi polar citation needed Chisholm 1911 pp 938 939 William Morris Hunt painted his brother Leavitt Hunt in an oil entitled The Prodigal Son in 1840 Annals of Brattleboro 1681 1895 Mary Rogers Cabot Vol I E L Hildreth amp Co Brattleboro 1921 William Morris Hunt Library Museum of Fine Arts fenwaylibraries org The Harvard Register A Monthly Periodical Vols I amp II Published by Moses King Cambridge Mass 1880 Images of Children from the Collection of the Boston Athenaeum www tfaoi com Brattleboro Windham County Vermont Early History with Biographical Sketches of Some of Its Citizens Henry Burnham Published by D Leonard Brattleboro Vt 1880 The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans Vol VI Rossiter Johnson The Biographical Society Boston 1904 The Gardiners of Narragansett Caroline E Robinson Daniel Goodwin Printed for the Editor Providence R I 1919 Sources Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Hunt William Morris Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 938 939 Further reading EditThe Early Years of the Saturday Club 1855 1870 Edward Waldo Emerson Houghton Mifflin Company Boston 1918 Exploration Vision amp Influence The Art World of Brattleboro s Hunt Family Catalogue Museum Exhibition The Bennington Museum Bennington Vermont June 23 December 31 2005 Paul R Baker Sally Webster David Hanlon and Stephen Perkins W M Hunt s Talks on Art William Morris Hunt Houghton Osgood amp Company Boston 1880 Exhibition of the Works of William Morris Hunt December 20 1879 January 31 1880 Museum of Fine Arts Boston Alfred Mudge amp Son Boston 1880 William Morris Hunt artist biography harrisantiques com Art Life of William Morris Hunt Helen M Knowlton Little Brown and Company Boston 1899 American Artists Abroad and their Inspiration Stula Nancy and Noble Nancy Lyman Allyn Art Museum New London Connecticut 2004 64 pages 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Morris Hunt Works by or about William Morris Hunt in libraries WorldCat catalog http photography si edu SearchImage aspx id 5241 William Morris Hunt at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Morris Hunt amp oldid 1110715514, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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