Jump to content

Hugh Goldwin Rivière

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugh Goldwin Rivière (1869–1956) was a noted British portraitist. He was one of seven children of Briton Rivière and was of Huguenot descent.

Examples of his work are held in a very wide variety of public collections, including the Victoria Art Gallery in Bath, Guildhall Art Gallery and Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Royal Shakespeare Company, Cheltenham Art Gallery, Gloucestershire County Council, and the Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter.[1] His portrait painting of Sir Squire Bancroft and several drawings and prints are in the National Portrait Gallery collection.[2] One of his best portraits is that of William Archibald Spooner, which hangs in the Hall at New College, Oxford, where Spooner was Warden; it can be found at *70 artworks by or after Hugh Goldwin Rivière at the Art UK site.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Hugh Goldwin Riviere paintings (slide show), BBC - Your Paintings. Retrieved 2014-01-06.
  2. ^ Search the Collection: Hugh Goldwin Riviere (1869-1956), National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 2014-01-06.
[edit]

Media related to Hugh Goldwin Riviere at Wikimedia Commons