Nannie Zenobia Carver Huddle (January 28, 1860 – July 21, 1951) was an American painter.
Sister Florentine asked artist William Henry Huddle to critique Carver's work, and he told her to paint a flower "so that it seems that you can reach around it," advice that was particularly influential.
[1][2] Ten years later, in 1889, Nannie Carver and William Huddle married.
She studied at the Art Students League from 1896 to 1898 and with William Merritt Chase, Wayman Adams, Marshall Troy, and Marshal Fry in New York, and with T. S. Frackelton, and Franz Bertram Aulich in Chicago.
[1][2] Nannie Zenobia Carver Huddle died on 21 July 1951 in Austin.