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Howard Everett Smith

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Howard Everett Smith

American, (1885–1970)
Howard Everett Smith was an American painter, portraitist, and illustrator. In 1899, his family moved to Boston. He attended Boston Latin School before continuing his art studies, first at the Art Students’ League in New York and then two years with Howard Pyle. Returning to Boston in 1909, he studied with Edmund Tarbell at the School of Art of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. The Paige Traveling Scholarship gave him the opportunity to travel and draw in Europe from 1911 to 1914. His illustrations appeared in Harper’s and Scribner’s between 1905 and 1913, and for several years he taught at the Rhode Island School of Design. From 1938 onwards he and his family lived in Carmel, California, where he expanded his interest in equine art, ranging from race horses to the pack horses in the Sierra Mountains. He completed an ambitious series of lithographs of the 107th Calvary Regiment, showing the horses as well as the mechanized transport. Smith joined the board of the Carmel Art Association, became active in the community and lived in Carmel until his death.


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