Frederick Hutchison


1871 - 1953 RCA

Frederick Hutchison Biography

1871 - 1953 RCA

Frederick William Hutchison was born in Montreal, Quebec in 1871. He studied at the Art Association School of   Montreal under William Brymner, the Chase School in New York City under   William Chase and in Paris at the Julian Academy under Jean-Paul Laurens and Benjamin Constant. In 1905, he moved to New York City where he taught at the College of the City of New York, first as a tutor for the department of art in 1906, then as an instructor of art in 1908. By 1920 he was Art Supervisor of the Townsend Harris Hall School where he remained until his retirement in 1939. Although Hutchison did some portraits, he preferred to paint colourful Canadian landscapes, especially the Hudson area and the Charlevoix County. While he was living and teaching in New York, he often returned to the family residence in Hudson Heights, where he settled permanently after he retired.

During his lifetime Hutchison gained some recognition. He was represented in Montreal by three important commercial art galleries: W. Scott & Sons, the Stevens Art Gallery and Watson Art Galleries. He had several one-man exhibitions with each of them as well as at The Arts Club and the Art Association of Montreal. Hutchison received further public recognition with his election to the prestigious National Academy of Design in New York in 1935 and to the Royal Canadian Academy in 1937.

He is represented in the following collections: National Academy of Design (Diploma work – “Mill on the Remy”), NYC; New York Athletic Club, NYC; Montreal Museum of Fine Arts; The Art Gallery of Ontario; the Provincial Museum of Quebec; The   Engineer’s Club, Montreal; the National Gallery of Canada (R.C.A. Diploma Collection); the Beaverbrook Art Gallery, N.B.; the Winnipeg Art Gallery,   Manitoba; the Mount Royal Club, Montreal; and the McGill University,   Montreal. Frederick W. Hutchison died in Hudson Heights, Quebec, at the age of 82.