George Hallowell
George Hawley Hallowell was a Boston-born American painter, illustrator, and stained glass artist associated with the Boston School, known for his atmospheric landscapes of northern forests, logging camps, and melancholic scenes across America, Canada, and Italy.[1][2] He studied and worked professionally in Boston, earning accolades like a gold medal at the St. Louis Exposition (1904) and praise from John Singer Sargent, who owned eight of his paintings.[2] Hallowell died of cancer in Boston at age 54.[1]
Boston, USA
Dec 5, 1871
Landscape painting
Watercolor
Oil painting