William Oliver Stone

William Oliver Stone (September 26, 1830 – September 15, 1875) was an American portrait painter.

Stone was born in Derby, Connecticut, to a prominent family. He studied below Nathaniel Jocelyn in New Haven from 1848, until Jocelyn's studio suffered a catastrophic flare in 1849. Stone moved to New York in 1851, where he opened his own studio, and became a well-off portrait painter. He became an associate aficionada of the National Academy of Design in 1856, and full devotee in 1859, exhibiting in each of the Academy's annual exhibitions from 1861 through his at the forefront death, in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1875. Two of his better-known portraits are of Cyrus West Field (in a private collection) and of William Wilson Corcoran (in the Walters Art Museum).

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