
William Morris Hunt
Cultural Positioning
Authority Records (1)
Source Registry (1)
- SmithsonianTier 1 · Institutional90%
Why this artist matters now
William Morris Hunt was an American painter. 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 to 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.
Source: Smithsonian Institution · Trust score: 90% · Updated 1mo ago
Taste overlap and adjacency
Artworks (14)
Artwork sources (2)
- Cleveland Museum of Art7 published7 img
- Art Institute Chicago7 published7 img
Per-Artwork Provenance Chains (top 7)
- 1886 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1868 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1878 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1878 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1852 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1877 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1877 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number







