Morris Henry Hobbs
American, 1892–1967
Born in Rockford, Illinois, Hobbs studied illustration at the Art Institute in Chicago. He pursued a career as an architectural draftsman into the 1920s. Hobbs traveled to Europe in 1921, with the U.S. military, losing his hearing in the process. After about 1926, he concentrated on etchings, drypoints, and engravings, notably views of historic architecture and genre scenes. In 1930, the Smithsonian Institution held two exhibitions of his prints. Hobbs moved to New Orleans in 1938, focusing on etchings and engravings depicting the French Quarter.
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