Rebecca Couch
{{Short description|American painter (1788–1863)}}
{{Infobox artist
| name = Rebecca Couch
| image =
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| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1788|6|19|mf=y}}
| birth_place = Redding, Connecticut
| death_date = {{death date and age|1863|9|4|1788|6|19|mf=y}}
| death_place =
| nationality = American
| education =
| field = Painting
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| spouse = {{marriage|James C. Denison|1794|}}
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}}
File:Couch, Rebecca, Connecticut House, ca. 1800.jpgFile:Couch, Rebecca, View of Litchfield, undated.jpg
Rebecca Couch (June 19, 1788 – September 4, 1863) was an American painter.
Couch was born in Redding, Connecticut, the eldest daughter of Thomas Nash Couch and Abigail Stebbins Couch. She could have received training in watercolor technique, the medium for which she is most well known, in school.Rumford, Beatrix T., ed. American Folk Paintings, The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Center Series 11 (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1988), pp. 21-3, 77.
She married James C. Denison on October 17, 1794, and the couple moved to Lansingburgh, New York, where they lived until the 1820s. They had seven children. At an unknown date, the family relocated to Couch's hometown.Rumford, 1988, p. 22.
Two of Couch's paintings, executed in watercolor and ink, are in the collection of the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum, Williamsburg, Virginia. One of these works had been acquired from the collection of J. Stuart Halladay and Herrel George Thomas. According to the museum's catalog, a needlework picture on silk that she completed at age fifteen is the only other work by her that had been documented by 1988.
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Category:19th-century American painters
Category:American folk artists
Category:People from Redding, Connecticut
Category:19th-century American women painters
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