From 1963 to 1965 Hubbard taught at
Camberwell School of Art in London. He also worked as a designer, creating sets and costumes for
ballet companies including the
Dutch National Ballet and the
Royal Ballet,
tapestries for the
Said Business School,
Oxford, and the
National Visual Arts Gallery in
Kuala Lumpur. During his life, Hubbard had solo exhibitions at the
Museum of Modern Art in Oxford, the
Yale Center for British Art in
New Haven, Connecticut and at
Marlborough Fine Art in London. He was a member of numerous arts panels and boards, including for the Tate St Ives, Southwest Arts and Arts Council. Public commissions include paintings produced for the Royal Parks, Dorchester Hospital, and Smith and Nephew, as well those produced while artist-in-residence in New Harmony, Indiana. His work is represented in many private and public collections including the
Art Gallery of Ontario, the
Fitzwilliam Museum in
Cambridge, the National Visual Arts Gallery in Kuala Lumpur, the
National Gallery of Victoria, the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia, the
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in
Edinburgh, the
Tate Gallery, the
Victoria and Albert Museum and the Yale Center for British Art. ==References==