George Henry Boughton. George Henry Boughton was an Anglo-American landscape and genre painter, illustrator and writer.
   Boughton was born in Norwich in Norfolk, England, the son of farmer William Boughton. The family emigrated to the United States in 1835, and he grew up in Albany, New York where he started his career as a self-taught artist.
   At this early stage he was influenced by the artists of the Hudson River School. By the age of 19 he was recognised as a landscape painter and opened his first studio in 1852.
   In 1853, the American Art Union purchased one of his early pictures which financed six months of studying art in England. He concluded this period of his training with a sketching tour of the Lake District, Scotland and Ireland.
   After coming back to the USA, Boughton exhibited his works in Washington, D.C. and New York, but in the late 1850s he finally made a decision to move to Europe. From 1859-61 he studied art in France under Pierre Edouard Frère and Edward Harrison May. In 1861 Boughton opened a studio in London, and, although living in England, nevertheless focused on subjects of early American Colonial history, and an American critic noticed that for early history of this country his talents seems to be peculiarly fitted. His subject-pictures, such as the Early Puritans of New England Going to Church, were especially popular. The Return of the Mayflower was praised as a picture whic
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