On view

American Art
Wilmerding Pavilion
Philip & Nancy Anschutz Gallery

Landscape: Shinnecock, Long Island,

ca. 1896

William Merritt Chase, 1849–1916; born Williamsburg, IN; died New York, NY
y1939-35
In 1891, at the invitation of Jane Ralston Hoyt, Chase established the Shinnecock Hills Summer School of Art in Long Island’s exclusive Southampton, where Hoyt, a socially connected entrepreneur, sought to advance her real-estate interests. For over a decade, Chase taught a well-heeled clientele his impressionistic variety of plein air painting. Residing amid the dunes, he continued to produce his own art, which in response to the surroundings assumed a lighter tonality. Landscape: Shinnecock, Long Island is one of a group of similar scenes showing members of the artist’s family at rest or play. The carefully balanced image combines Chase’s favorite subject matter: landscape and the sympathetic depiction of the leisure class. Its emphasis on surface and finish over content and detail encapsulates his view that “Art transcends Nature.”

More Context

Handbook Entry

In 1878, after extensive training at the ­Königliche Akademie in Munich, William Merritt Chase returned to New York to begin a long and influential teaching career, first at the Art Students League and later privately. With the support of wealthy patrons like Mrs. Andrew Carnegie and Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt, in 1891 he founded the Shinnecock Summer School of Art in Long Island’s exclusive Southampton, where for over a decade he taught his variety of deftly produced plein air painting. Residing amid the dunes in a Stanford White-designed house, Chase prodigiously continued to produce his own art, which in response to his brightened surroundings assumed a lighter, brushier appearance, causing him to be increasingly identified more with American Impressionism than Realism. As with other American adherents of the style, Chase’s mode of Impressionism differed significantly from its French precursor, generally employing a higher-keyed, chalkier palette and eschewing the more theoretical and analytical aspects of the original’s approach to painting light and air effects. <em>Landscape: Shinnecock, Long Island</em> is a particularly successful example of a group of similar scenes showing members of Chase’s family at rest and play. The carefully balanced image combines in its small squarish format the artist’s favorite subject matter — landscape with the sympathetic depiction of the leisure class — rendered in a style whose emphasis on surface and finish over content encapsulates his view that "Art transcends Nature. One must paint what is behind the eye of the artist."

Information

Title
Landscape: Shinnecock, Long Island
Dates

ca. 1896

Medium
Oil on wood panel
Dimensions
36.3 × 40.9 cm (14 5/16 × 16 1/8 in.) frame: 65.7 × 69.5 × 8.9 cm (25 7/8 × 27 3/8 × 3 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Francis A. Comstock, Class of 1919
Object Number
y1939-35
Place Depicted

United States, New York, Long Island

Signatures
Signed in brown, lower right: Wm. M. Chase.
Culture
Materials

Ex-coll. Mrs. F. F. Adams, Milwaukee, WI (donor's grandmother).