Skip to content
The Historic New Orleans Collection
A historical painting of a woman in a green dress with puffed sleeves and elaborate hairstyle. She sits on a patterned red sofa, holding a young child with curly hair, dressed in a white-collared outfit. Both have calm expressions.

In Search of Julien Hudson

Free Artist of Color in Pre–Civil War New Orleans

edited and with an introduction by Erin M. Greenwald, with essays by William Keyse Rudolph and Patricia Brady

A carefully researched examination of the New Orleans–born 19th-century painter and his Creole world. 

Cover of the book In Search of Julien Hudson showing an illustration of a man with a beard in period attire. Text includes the title and subtitle Free Artist of Color in Pre-Civil War New Orleans and mentions essays by William Keyse Rudolph and Patricia Brady.

In Search of Julien Hudson: Free Artist of Color in Pre–Civil War New Orleans

HNOC 2010 
hardcover • 8" × 9½" • 128 pp.
70 color images; 7 b&w 
ISBN 978-0-917860-57-7

$35.00

Julien Hudson’s life is a striking example of the way true stories mutate and assume mythical qualities over time.

Julien Hudson, born in 1811 in New Orleans, was the son of a property-owning free woman of color and a white English merchant, ironmonger, and ship chandler. Hudson began painting in the mid-1820s, training first in New Orleans and later in Paris. Little is known about his personal life, outside of scattered details found in a handful of public documents and a pair of early 20th-century reminiscences by former student George Coulon and prominent Creole of color Rodolphe Desdunes. This carefully researched volume is the most thorough examination to date of Julien Hudson and his world.

A 19th-century portrait of a man with dark hair wearing a black coat, white shirt, and black cravat. The background shows a cloudy sky and a distant body of water.
A woman in traditional attire sits by a window holding a fan. The background shows a seascape with a ship on the horizon. She wears a shawl with intricate patterns and gazes towards the viewer.
A portrait of a person wearing a dark outfit with lace trim, a cream headscarf, and a jeweled earring. The individual is seated against a plain background, looking at the viewer with a composed expression.

 

Related Stories

View More
First Draft

Rolland Golden’s Paintings of Anguish and Hope after Katrina

First Draft

How Enrique Alférez Sculpted the Landscape of New Orleans

Related Collection Highlights

View More
Etching of a courtyard in New Orleans by Louis Conrad Rosenberg. The scene features tables, chairs, a large tree, a fountain at the center, and buildings in the background. There are people seated and walking, adding a lively atmosphere to the setting.

The Court of Two Sisters

A pictorial memento of the landmark restaurant’s history

Watercolor painting of a solemn sailor in uniform beside a grave with a cross. The headstone reads, In honor of those who served, and lists several names. The artwork is abstract with muted colors and blurred edges.

La Famil[l]e de Pajaud

The New Orleans–born visual artist pays homage to his roots in this subdued, impactful watercolor.

A woman kneels on the ground, shaping a large piece of stone or clay. She is surrounded by art materials and sculptures in an outdoor setting with a brick floor and plants in the background.

Lin Emery Papers

The renowned sculptor’s papers shed light on her process, dedication, and artistic evolution.

Related Virtual Exhibitions

View More
A painting depicts a street scene with two people. One sits on a bench outside a wooden building with a louvered facade. Another person stands near a doorway. The architecture features balconies and red-tiled roofs under a cloudy sky.
New Orleans Neighborhoods

French Quarter Life: People and Places in the Vieux Carré

Artistic impressions of New Orleans’s most iconic neighborhood

A vintage movie poster for Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte featuring a woman in a yellow dress dancing with a man in a suit. A ghostly choir stands in the background. The poster includes stylized text and a dramatic image of a womans face on the side.
Film & TV

From Cameo to Close-Up: Louisiana in Film

Explore how the picturesque scenery of Louisiana has provided the backdrop for films since the early 1900s.

Related Books

View More
Stay Connected

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

1959 210 o6 2024 06 05 202329 tavg