[1] His work was shown at the Salon des Artistes Francaise from 1923 until 1929, and he had a one-man exhibition at Simonson Galleries in Paris in 1924.
[1] Hill returned to the United States in 1929, and worked as a portraitist in New York City before establishing a studio in St. Petersburg, Florida in 1932.
[3] Hill's works include the mural Long Staple Cotton in the Madison, Florida post office, commissioned by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts, and completed in 1937.
[citation needed] Hill's style has been compared to that of Thomas Hart Benton, who was New Deal muralist[2] as well as John Stuart Curry and Grant Wood.
[citation needed] A commission for work in a Clearwater, Florida courtroom was stopped by Judge John U. Bird in 1934 because he did not want "pictures of sunbathers with brassiere-type bathing suits hanging over my bench.
[2] He also painted a mural in the St. Petersburg Coast Guard building's wardroom depicting the service's history.
[3] Myers Fine Art and Auction House purchased George Snow Hill's estate in 1990.