Hunt was a landscape painter and watercolourist who was first associated with the Liverpool School of Painters, but later had a successful London career. His watercolours, which were praised by Ruskin, often combine Pre-Raphaelite precision with Turneresque atmosphere. He was the son of a Liverpool landscape painter, but although he was precociously talented in art his parents wished him to enter the church. He went up to Corpus Christi College, Oxford in 1848, won the Newdigate prize for poetry in 1851, and between 1853 and his marriage in 1861, held an Oxford fellowship. Meanwhile he had become an Associate of the Liverpool Academy in 1854, the year he also began to exhibit paintings at the Royal Academy, London. In 1856 Ruskin in Academy Notes praised one of his works thereas 'The best landscape I have ever seen in the exhibition for many a day - uniting most subtle finish and watchfulness of nature, with real and rare power of composition.' After his marriage Hunt moved to London, and devoted himself to painting. He was elected Associate of the Old Watercolour Society in 1862 and Member in 1864. He painted throughout Britain and also in France and Switzerland. His atmospheric studies were painted from nature but increasingly his finished watercolours were developed and elaborated in the studio.
The Artist; by descent to his daughter: Mrs Silvia Fogg-Elliot; to her daughter: Mrs Katherine Cowgill; to her daughter: Mrs Silvia Addington; to her daughter: Mary Addington; to 1998