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John Kelso Hunter
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John Kelso Hunter : ウィキペディア英語版
John Kelso Hunter

John Kelso Hunter (15 December 1802 – 3 February 1873) was a self-taught Scottish portrait painter and author of two books.
==Life==
Hunter was one of three children born to William Hunter and Isbald Logan; he had an elder brother George (born: 14/10/1801) and a younger sister Susannah (born: 27/10/1805). John was born at Dankeith, South Ayrshire, and he was a relation to the McCallums of Troon. His father was a gardener at a South Ayrshire estate owned by Lieutenant-Colonel William Kelso, he died when Hunter was 8 years old. As a young child, Hunter was employed as a herd-boy on the Kelsos' estate, and he was then apprenticed to a shoemaker. When his indentures expired, he settled at Kilmarnock. He taught himself portrait painting while continuing his work as a shoemaker.
Hunter moved to Glasgow, where he was employed alternately as an artist and a shoemaker. In 1847 he exhibited a portrait of himself as a cobbler at the Royal Academy, London; it was the only piece of his to be displayed there. He exhibited his painting "A Man's Head" at the Annual Exhibitions of the Royal Scottish Academy in 1849. After 9 years, he gave the Academy his formal self-portrait piece. He contributed three other works, "A Roadside Inn, Ayr" in 1868 and "From Above Port-Glasgow" and "Self Portrait as a Shoemaker" in 1872.
During 1861 and 1873, Hunter exhibited seven paintings at the Royal Glasgow Institute of Fine Arts:
* 1861 - 'Self Portrait'
* 1862 - 'Dreghorn, Ayrshire'
* 1871 - 'The Reader'
* 1872 - 'Loch Lomond, from Mount Misery' and 'Gourock - looking up the Clyde'
* 1873 - 'Self Portrait as a Shoemaker' and 'From Above Port-Glasgow'
In 1868 he published his first book, ''The Retrospect of an Artist's Life'', subtitled ''Memorials of West-Country Men and Manners of the Past Half Century''. Acquainted in his youth with many who had known Robert Burns, and with some of the heroes of the poet's verse, Hunter embodied these recollections in a volume entitled ''Life Studies of Character,'' printed in 1870. The book throws much light on the works of Burns, especially on the original of Dr. Hornbook, and faithfully describes the society into which the poet was born. Valuable notices are supplied of the song writer, Tannahill, and other minor poets of the north.
Hunter died on 3 February 1873 at Pollokshields, Glasgow.

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