1. Julian Burroughs Hatton III is an American landscape abstract artist from New York City.

1. Julian Burroughs Hatton III is an American landscape abstract artist from New York City.
Julian Hatton's vision is of "a nature that you can literally eat with your eyes, eye candy transposed onto the entire world," according to critic Joel Silverstein.
Julian Hatton then graduated from Harvard University in 1979 with a major in art history.
Julian Hatton studied with painter Fernando Zobel in Spain, returned with a portfolio, and was accepted.
Julian Hatton enrolled at the New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting and Sculpture from 1980 to 1982.
Julian Hatton exhibited at Manhattan galleries, including Elizabeth Harris Gallery, Kathryn Markel Gallery, Frederieke Taylor Gallery, Frank Mario Gallery, Jon Leon Gallery, Eighth Floor Gallery, Lohin Geduld Gallery and the American Academy of Arts and Letters Invitational Exhibit.
Julian Hatton has exhibited his artwork in Washington, Atlanta, San Francisco, Dallas, Charlotte, La Jolla, and Southwest Harbor and Belfast in Maine.
Julian Hatton's work was shown internationally at the Museum at Rochefort-en-Terre in Brittany, France.
Julian Hatton's paintings are in numerous collections, from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York to the Steve Wynn collection in Las Vegas.
Julian Hatton paintings are ostensible landscapes, but they are not landscape scenes, nor impressions of landscape.
For Julian Hatton, landscape painting is both a physical and a metaphysical exercise.
Julian Hatton's works are both microcosms and macrocosms, internal and external, of the body and outside the body.
Artist Barbara Rothenberg, an art teacher at the Silver Mine Guild Arts Center in New Canaan, Connecticut, and a follower of Julian Hatton's career, suggested that Julian Hatton's works were becoming more "abandoned" and that the artist was taking greater "risks".