24041

JOHN HENRY HILL (American 1839-1922)

Currency:USD Category:Art Start Price:1.00 USD Estimated At:400.00 - 600.00 USD
JOHN HENRY HILL (American 1839-1922)
<B>JOHN HENRY HILL (American 1839-1922)</B></I><BR>Sunflower in a Landscape, 1895<BR>Watercolor on paper<BR>14.25in. x 19.5in. (sight size)<BR>Signed and dated lower right: 1895 JHH<BR><BR>John Henry Hill, son of the artist John William Hill, was born in West Nyack, New York on April 28, 1839. He studied painting with his father, a devotee of the Ruskinian Pre-Raphaelite aesthetic of truth in nature. <BR><BR>Hill first exhibited at the National Academy of Design in 1856 and was elected an Associate two years later. He exhibited watercolors, aquatints, and etchings to the National Academy through 1891, while also exhibiting regularly at the Brooklyn Art Association from 1865 to 1885. Both he and his father were founding members of the Association for the Advancement of Truth in Art, and their work was praised in <I>The New Path. </B></I><BR><BR>During 1864 and 1865, Hill spent about eight months in England studying the work of Turner. Upon his return, he went to Ashfield, Massachusetts, to join the American Pre-Raphaelite group that there. He soon after created 24 etchings meant to exemplify Ruskin's theories about the proper way to draw from nature, and published them in 1867 as <I>Sketches from Nature.</B></I> The following year, and again in 1870, he traveled to the West as a staff artist for a government surveying expedition headed by his friend and fellow Association member, geologist Clarence King. <BR><BR>In 1878 and 1879 Hill again visited England and the Continent, and at one point, followed an itinerary proposed by his friend, John Ruskin in a letter of March 26, 1879. <BR><BR>Hill first began to visit the Adirondack Mountains in the 1860s. He camped and sketched throughout the region, and from 1870 to 1874, lived in a cabin he called "Artist's Retreat" that he built on an island near Bolton's Landing, Lake George. With the death of his beloved father in September 1879, Hill returned home to West Nyack, where he continued to paint watercolors in his father's studio. In honor of his father, Hill published <I>An Artist's Memorial</B></I> in 1888, and he continued to promote his father's work and legacy by reproducing etchings, some of which he donated to The Metropolitan Museum of Art.<BR><BR>John Henry Hill's artwork is found in important public collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Brooklyn Museum of Art, New-York Historical Society, Columbus Museum of Art, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art. <BR><BR><Condition: lower right corner ripped, repaired rip top middle edge- otherwise good condition> <BR><BR><B>Important notice:</B> Heritage usually auctions material at the rate of 200-250 lots per hour. On some occasions eBay Live bid software or the Internet may not be able to keep up with the pace of the auction. We recommend placing a realistic absentee bid now as insurance to avoid disappointment. Occasionally the auctioneer may eliminate or reject an eBay Live bid, and the auctioneer may also reopen a lot after the close of the eBay live bidding (usually because we missed an audience bid), and may reject your bid even if it shows you as the winning bidder. By bidding via eBay Live, you agree that Heritage may award the lot to another bidder at its sole discretion under the circumstances described above or any other reasonable circumstances. Since eBay bids are not shown to us until we open the lot on the floor, we treat those bids just like floor bids. In most cases the floor responds before the eBay bid is presented to us, due to Internet lag time, so for consistency we have made it a policy that floor bids are always considered first over tie eBay live bids. Also please note that all Heritage lots purchased through eBay Live carry a 24.5% Buyer's Premium. Please make sure you read the Terms and Conditions before you bid.