Still Life with Vegetable by William Merritt Chase
A Fishmarket in Venice (aka Venetian Fish Market - the Yield of the Waters) by William Merritt Chase
Interior of the Baptistry at St. Mark's by William Merritt Chase
Topaz Grapes by William Merritt Chase
View near Polling by William Merritt Chase
The Moorish Warrior by William Merritt Chase
The Turkish Page by William Merritt Chase
Still Life With Watermelon by William Merritt Chase
Keying Up, The Court Jester by William Merritt Chase
The King's Jester by William Merritt Chase
A Seated Gentleman Smoking a Pipe by William Merritt Chase
Ready For The Ride by William Merritt Chase

William Merritt Chase

1849–1916 · American

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.

Key facts

Lived
1849–1916, American
Movement
Works held in
42 museums[1]

Biography

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.

Timeline

  1. 1878Painted "A Fishmarket in Venice (aka Venetian Fish Market - the Yield of the Waters)" aged 29.
  2. 1880Painted "Interior of the Artist's Studio (aka The Tenth Street Studio)" aged 31.
  3. 1885Painted "In the Garden (aka A Squatter's Hut, Flatbush or The Old Garden)" aged 36.
  4. 1889Painted "Portrait of a Lady in Pink (aka Lady in Pink Portrait of Mrs. Leslie Cotton)" aged 40.
  5. 1913Painted "Portrait of Clara Stephens Wearing a Hat with an Orange Ribbon" aged 64.
  6. 1913Painted "Gondolas along Venetian Canal (aka Gondola in Venice)" aged 64.

William Merritt Chase prints

Hand-finished archival prints from William Merritt Chase's body of work.

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Where to See William Merritt Chase

1 museum worldwide.

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  • Philbrook Museum of Art

    Tulsa, United States

    1 works

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Frequently Asked Questions

  • Who is william merritt chase?
    William Merritt Chase was an American artist who studied at the Royal Academy of Munich. After developing a technique influenced by Velazquez and the old Dutch masters, he became an important art teacher. He founded the Shinnecock Hills Summer School on Long Island in 1891, and was invited to join The Ten, the leading American Impressionist group, in 1902.
  • Who was william merritt chase?
    William Merritt Chase was an American artist who studied at the Royal Academy of Munich. After developing a technique influenced by Velazquez and the old Dutch masters, he became an important art teacher. His pupils included Georgia O'Keeffe, Edward Hopper, and Rockwell Kent.
  • Why is william merritt chase considered an eclectic artist?
    William Merritt Chase is not described as an eclectic artist in the provided biography or passages. However, the biography does mention that he adopted a luminous palette that anticipated Impressionism, and that he was invited to join The Ten, the leading American Impressionist group, in 1902.

Sources

Editorial draws on the following primary and tertiary references for William Merritt Chase.

  1. [1] museum Philbrook Museum of Art Used for: museum holdings.
  2. [2] book Beard, Lee, 1973- author, Butler, Adam, author; Van Cleave, Claire, author; Fortenberry, Diane, author; Stirling, Susan, author, Beard, Lee, 1973- author, Butler, Adam, author; Van Cleave, Claire, author; Fortenberry, Diane, author; Stirling, Susan, author - The Art Book_ New Edition, Mini Format Used for: biography.
  3. [3] book Hopper, Edward, 1882-1967, Edward Hopper : the art and the artist Used for: biography.
  4. [4] book Masterpieces of western art : a history of art in 900 individual studies from the Gothic to the present day Used for: biography.

Editorial overseen by Solis Prints. Sources verified 2026-06-12. Click a source for details, or hover over [N] in the page above to preview.

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