Hanson Puthuff
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Hanson Duvall Puthuff was a landscape painter and muralist. Born in Waverly, Missouri on August 21, 1875. Puthuff studied at the Art Institute of Chicago before moving to Colorado in 1889 to study at University of Denver Art School. He traveled to Los Angeles in 1903 and for 23 years worked as a commercial artist painting billboards while painting landscapes in his leisure. In 1926, he abandoned commercial art and devote full time to fine art and exhibitions. He is nationally famous for his lyric interpretations of the Southern California deserts. Puthuff died in Corona del Mar on May 12, 1972.[1]
Puthuff was one of the cofounders of the California Art Club and the Laguna Beach Art Association. He won awards in 1909 from the Alaska-Yukon Expo, a bronze medal at the Paris Salon in 1914, and two silver medals from the Panama-California Exposition in 1915. His works are exhibited in among other places, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art[2], and the Pasadena Art Institute. Many of his works are also cataloged in the Smithsonian American Art Museum art invetory.
[edit] External Links
Puthuff's Listing In The Smithsonian's SIRIS System