![]() ![]() In 1865, Boughton married Katherine Louise Cullen (1845-after 1901), and they had an adopted daughter, Florence. George Henry Boughton, 1880s, albumen print, Department of Image Collections, National Gallery of Art Library, Washington, DC īoughton easily socialised in London artistic circles and was a member of the Arts Club (1869–96), of the Reform Club, the Athenaeum Club, the Burlington Fine Arts Club and the Grolier and Lotos Clubs in New York. ![]() His illustrated account of that journey was published in the Harper's Magazine as 'Artist Strolls in Holland', and published next year in London as Sketching Rambles in Holland (see bibliography).īoughton obviously took pleasure in writing: later he would participate in the publication of the 'English Art in the Public Galleries of London' providing the overview of George Morland's biography and work. "He was a useful and popular member of this body, and worked well as member of the council, as a 'hanger', and as a teacher in the schools." After the death of John Callcott Horsley, Boughton was elected a Director of the "Fine Art and General Insurance Company".Īmong his landscape paintings - views of England and Brittany in France. He was elected a member of the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours, an Associate of the Royal Academy (ARA) in 1879, and a Royal Academician (RA) in 1896. A London critic once declared that he "has learnt the secret of putting natural feelings into rustic figures, which has been almost entirely wanting to English painters." īoughton exhibited extensively in both Britain and USA, and was elected a member of the National Academy of Design in New York in 1871. In 1893, the edition of Washington Irving’s Rip Van Winkle and Sleepy Hollow was published in London with 53 illustrations by Boughton (see bibliography). ![]() īoughton illustrated Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poems. The Boughton painting is now part of the collection of the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. Then working as a minister, he gave a sermon inspired by the painting, and wrote about it to his brother Theo. Vincent van Gogh, who lived London in 1873–75, was much impressed by Boughton’s painting Godspeed! Pilgrims Setting Out for Canterbury. The Return of the Mayflower (shown at the Goupil Gallery, New York in 1871) was praised as "a picture which will live as long as the memory of the Mayflower itself lasts." In 1861 Boughton opened a studio in London, and, although living in England, nevertheless focused on subjects of early American Colonial history, and an American critic noticed that "for early history of this country his talents seems to be peculiarly fitted." His subject-pictures, such as the Early Puritans of New England Going to Church (1867), were especially popular. Pilgrims Going to Church (1867 New York Historical Society). From 1859–61 he studied art in France under Pierre Edouard Frère (1819–1886) and Edward Harrison May (1824–1887). and New York, but in the late 1850s he finally made a decision to move to Europe. Īfter coming back to the USA, Boughton exhibited his works in Washington, D.C. He concluded this period of his training with a sketching tour of the Lake District, Scotland and Ireland. In 1853, the American Art Union purchased one of his early pictures which financed six months of studying art in England. By the age of 19 he was recognised as a landscape painter and opened his first studio in 1852. At this early stage he was influenced by the artists of the Hudson River School. The family immigrated to the United States in 1835, and he grew up in Albany, New York where he started his career as a self-taught artist. George Henry Boughton RA (4 December 1833 – 19 January 1905) was an Anglo-American landscape and genre painter, illustrator and writer.īoughton was born in Norwich in Norfolk, England, the son of farmer William Boughton.
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