Collection
William Merritt Chase
Explore curated art prints selected for distinctive homes and considered interiors.
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Two Women on the Hillside - William Merritt Chase
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Study of a Japanese Model (Back View) - William Merritt Chase
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Nude with Kimono - William Merritt Chase
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The Nursery - William Merritt Chase
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The Turkish Page - William Merritt Chase
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The Old Road to the Sea - William Merritt Chase
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Portrait of Dora Wheeler - William Merritt Chase
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Portrait of My Daughter Alice - William Merritt Chase
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Dunes at Shinnecock - William Merritt Chase
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The Pot Hunter - William Merritt Chase
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A Friendly Call - William Merritt Chase
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The Bathers - William Merritt Chase
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The Old Book - William Merritt Chase
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Shinnecock Hills - William Merritt Chase
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Still Life with Flowers and Hummingbird - William Merritt Chase
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A Long Island Lake - William Merritt Chase
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Portrait of Harriet Hubbard Ayer - William Merritt Chase
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End of the Season - William Merritt Chase
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Hattie - William Merritt Chase
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Near Bay Ridge - William Merritt Chase
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Gray Day on the Lagoon (A Passenger Boat — Venice) - William Merritt Chase
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Gray Day on the Bay - William Merritt Chase
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Edward Everett Hale - William Merritt Chase
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Wind Swept Sands, Shinnecock, Long Island - William Merritt Chase
Print
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Artist Biography
William Merritt Chase
Chase briefly joined the Navy at eighteen. After three months on the USS Vermont and USS Portsmouth he wrote to his father asking to arrange a discharge. He went to art school instead, which was probably better for everyone.
He studied at the Royal Academy of Munich, came home with a technique influenced by Velazquez and the dark tonalities of the old Dutch masters, and became one of the most important art teachers in American history. His pupils included Georgia O'Keeffe, Edward Hopper, Charles Sheeler, Joseph Stella, Marsden Hartley and Rockwell Kent. The list reads like a syllabus for twentieth-century American art.
In 1891 he founded the Shinnecock Hills Summer School on Long Island, the first plein-air painting school in the United States. His friend Stanford White designed his summer house there, with an integral studio. He taught outdoors, painting the dunes and scrubland of the South Fork with a luminous palette that anticipated the Impressionism he would later formally adopt. He was invited to join The Ten, the leading American Impressionist group, in 1902.
His most famous still-life subject was dead fish: whole fish lying on a plate against a dark background, painted with the same tonal precision he brought to landscapes and portraits. The subject sounds monotonous but the paintings are extraordinary, each fish rendered as an individual study in colour and light.
He was not modest. He decorated his studio with antiques and costumes and posed for photographs wearing a top hat. He believed art was a serious profession that deserved serious presentation, which for Chase meant looking like he meant it.
He studied at the Royal Academy of Munich, came home with a technique influenced by Velazquez and the dark tonalities of the old Dutch masters, and became one of the most important art teachers in American history. His pupils included Georgia O'Keeffe, Edward Hopper, Charles Sheeler, Joseph Stella, Marsden Hartley and Rockwell Kent. The list reads like a syllabus for twentieth-century American art.
In 1891 he founded the Shinnecock Hills Summer School on Long Island, the first plein-air painting school in the United States. His friend Stanford White designed his summer house there, with an integral studio. He taught outdoors, painting the dunes and scrubland of the South Fork with a luminous palette that anticipated the Impressionism he would later formally adopt. He was invited to join The Ten, the leading American Impressionist group, in 1902.
His most famous still-life subject was dead fish: whole fish lying on a plate against a dark background, painted with the same tonal precision he brought to landscapes and portraits. The subject sounds monotonous but the paintings are extraordinary, each fish rendered as an individual study in colour and light.
He was not modest. He decorated his studio with antiques and costumes and posed for photographs wearing a top hat. He believed art was a serious profession that deserved serious presentation, which for Chase meant looking like he meant it.
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