Hubert Vos

He studied at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels and with Fernand Cormon in Paris.

His second wife was Eleanor Kaikilani Coney, of Hawaiian, Chinese, and American descent.

The copies left in Korea hung in the Deoksugung Palace until all except the landscape of Seoul, were destroyed by fire in 1904.

[2][3] This was displayed at the Paris Salon, then acquired by Grenville L. Winthrop and given to the Fogg Museum at Harvard.

[4] In addition to portraits and landscapes, Vos is known for his interior scenes and still-life paintings of Chinese porcelains.

Self-portrait of Hubert Vos in 1922