WILLIAM MERRITT CHASE (1849-1916)
WILLIAM MERRITT CHASE (1849-1916)
WILLIAM MERRITT CHASE (1849-1916)
WILLIAM MERRITT CHASE (1849-1916)
3 More
IN PURSUIT OF LIGHT: THE COLLECTION OF CAROL AND TERRY WALL
WILLIAM MERRITT CHASE (1849-1916)

An Interior (The Green Window Curtain)

Details
WILLIAM MERRITT CHASE (1849-1916)
An Interior (The Green Window Curtain)
signed 'Chase.' (lower right)
oil on canvas
24 x 24 in. (61 x 61 cm.)
Painted circa 1905
Provenance
Davis Gallery, New York (circa 1965).
Adelson Galleries, New York.
Acquired from the above by the present owners, circa 2005.
Literature
"Ten American Painters" in The New York Times, 15 March 1906, p. 9.
D. Davis, The Secret Lives of Frames: One Hundred Years of Art and Artistry, New York, 2007, pp. 206-207 (illustrated in color).
R.G. Pisano, William Merritt Chase: Still Lifes, Interiors, Figures, Copies of Old Masters, and Drawings, New Haven, 2010, vol. IV, no. I.46 (illustrated in color, p. 115).
Exhibited
Philadelphia, McClees Gallery, Exhibition of the Works of William M. Chase, March 1905, no. 6.
Boston, Vose Galleries, 1905, no. 6.
New York, Montross Galleries, Ten American Painters, 9th Annual Exhibition, March 1906, no. 4.
Boston, Museum of Fine Arts, Sargent, Chase, Cassatt: Master Paintings from a Private Collection, July-September 2006.
Montclair Art Museum, A Shared Love: Treasures of American Painting (1878-1919) from the Carol and Terry Wall Collection, May 2024-February 2025.

Brought to you by

Margaux Morel
Margaux Morel Associate Vice President, Specialist and Head of the Day and Works on Paper sales

Lot Essay

Chase’s interiors have been repeatedly acknowledged as some of the finest accomplishments of American Impressionism. The collector Duncan Phillips praised their evocative qualities, "Whether it is the sumptuous splendor of a Venetian palace, shades from the summer sun, or just perspective of rooms, in which one would like to live, the charm of a Chase interior is immediate. It is more than a trick of cool light on reflecting surfaces, mahogany tabletops and hard wood floors. It is a hint of once familiar moments long forgotten, a sentiment of the quiet dignity of a patrician home" (quoted in R. Pisano, William Merritt Chase, New York, 1982, p. 64). Indeed, An Interior (The Green Window Curtain) demonstrates Chase's masterful brushwork and command of light, with its shadowy passages contributing a meditative quality to the space. According to Pisano, "paintings such as this illustrate the artist's limitless scope. The painting reflects Chase's interest in exploring light, space, and form...In just a few brushstrokes Chase captures the light reflected on the doorknobs, the two doors, and the silver samovar on the table in the back" (op. cit., vol. IV, 2010, p. 115).

More from Impressionist & Modern Art Day Sale

View All
View All