Harriet Hallowell was an expatriate American artist who lived in France for fifty years.
14 Facts About Harriet Hallowell
Harriet Hallowell was born in Boston to a Quaker family.
Harriet Hallowell was born in Boston on June 15,1873.
Harriet Hallowell's father was architect Lewis Morris Hallowell and her mother was Harriet Hawley Hallowell.
Harriet had a brother born in 1871, George Hawley Hallowell who was an artist.
Harriet Hallowell died in 1926 and the following year Harriet donated one of his works, St George and the Dragon, after Carpaccio, to the Fogg Museum of the Harvard Art Museums.
Harriet Hallowell, known for her work as a miniature painter, may have had her work exhibited in Boston in 1893 before her departure for France in 1894.
Harriet Hallowell worked as an artist and had a studio in Paris.
Harriet Hallowell often lived with her aunt, Sarah Tyson Hallowell and grandmother, Mary M Hallowell in Paris and the small town of Moret-sur-Loing, which is located six miles from Fontainebleu.
Harriet Hallowell's works were exhibited in the mid-1890s in France.
Harriet Hallowell exhibited Near Fountainbleu at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in 1901.
Harriet Hallowell continued to paint and remained active with the Paris chapter of the American Artists Professional League.
Harriet Hallowell exhibited her work with the American Women's Club of Paris and at the annual Salon.
Harriet Hallowell rejected offers from her relatives in the United States to leave France.