Convalescence | Crocker Art Museum
Convalescence, 1873.
William Hahn (American, born Germany, 1829–1887)
Oil on canvas, 31 x 24 1/2 in. Crocker Art Museum Exchange, gift of Edwina V. Pfund, 2001.68.

Karl Wilhelm (William) Hahn painted scenes of 19th-century daily life, first in his native Germany and then in California. Born in Ebersbach, he studied at the Royal Academy of Art in Dresden and at the Düsseldorf Academy. His association with painters Julius Hübner and Emanuel Leutze in Dresden helped hone his talent for capturing human interaction.

Hahn met and befriended Californian artist William Keith and his wife during their 1869–70 sojourn in Germany. On the eve of the Franco-Prussian War, they left Europe together, traveling to Maine and then Boston, where Keith and Hahn shared a studio. They came to California in the spring of 1872.

Hahn continued to paint genre subjects in the San Francisco Bay Area, Sierra, and Monterey Peninsula for the next several years. In 1873, he completed another San Francisco scene, Convalescence. The subject and her guest are shown in a warm Victorian interior with San Francisco’s Temple Emanu-El and the First Congregational Church clearly visible through the parlor window.

Hahn spent 1878 in New York and exhibited at the National Academy of Design. In 1882, he returned to Europe on his honeymoon, settled in London, and died unexpectedly in Dresden in 1887.

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