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Harrison Bird Brown
American, 1831 - 1915
Harrison Bird Brown was a prominent American landscape painter born in Portland, Maine, whose work captured the natural beauty of Maine and the White Mountains with striking color and light. Beginning his career apprenticing as a sign and banner painter, Brown eventually devoted himself fully to fine art, becoming one of the leading figures of the Hudson River School realist tradition in New England.
By the late 1850s, Brown had established himself as a skilled artist known for his atmospheric depictions of coastal scenes around Casco Bay, Monhegan Island, and Grand Manan Island. His paintings, celebrated for their romantic and luminous qualities, earned him a strong regional reputation and the admiration of notable collectors such as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and John Greenleaf Whittier.
Brown served as president of the Portland Society of Art in 1892, a testament to his influence in the Maine art community. That same year, he relocated to England to be closer to family, where he continued to paint until his death in London in 1915. His legacy endures through his evocative portrayals of New England landscapes, many of which remain in major museum collections today.
By the late 1850s, Brown had established himself as a skilled artist known for his atmospheric depictions of coastal scenes around Casco Bay, Monhegan Island, and Grand Manan Island. His paintings, celebrated for their romantic and luminous qualities, earned him a strong regional reputation and the admiration of notable collectors such as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and John Greenleaf Whittier.
Brown served as president of the Portland Society of Art in 1892, a testament to his influence in the Maine art community. That same year, he relocated to England to be closer to family, where he continued to paint until his death in London in 1915. His legacy endures through his evocative portrayals of New England landscapes, many of which remain in major museum collections today.
