“Pre-Raphaelite painter. Born in London, son of warehouse manager. Against the wishes
of his family, studied painting under Henry Rogers, a portrait painter, and copied
at the National Gallery and British Museum. Entered Royal Academy School in 1844
and met Millais who became his greatest friend. Later met Rossetti and through him
Madox Brown. In 1848-49, Hunt, Millais and Rossetti, together with W.M. Rossetti,
James Collinson, F.G. Stephens and Thomas Woolner, formed the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
In a revolt against the Academy and its teaching, they aimed to paint nature with
complete fidelity and noble ideas. During the following years Hunt painted some of
his best-known works. In 1854 he visited the Holy Land, where he painted ‘The Scapegoat’.
Visited the Middle East again in 1869 and 1873 to find the exact historical and archaeological
backgrounds for his religious pictures. Of all the Pre-Raphaelites, Hunt was the
only one who remained faithful to its original principles. He exhibited at the Royal
Academy from 1846 to 1874, Old Watercolour Society from 1869 to 1903, and at the
Grosvenor Gallery and New Gallery. Hunt’s large pictures tend to be over-elaborate
and crowded with detail, but he was also a masterly watercolourist. In 1905 he was
appointed to the Order of Merit. Buried in St. Paul’s Cathedral.”
(Biographical Source: Wood, Christopher. The Dictionary of Victorian Painters.)