31 December: open from 10.00 to 15.00. 1 January: museum closed. 

William Merritt Chase shared the vogue for “japonisme” in European art and from the 1880s onwards began to include references to that culture in his own work. In addition to his activities as a collector of Oriental objects, he was also influenced by James Abbott McNeill Whistler who acted as a connecting link with Europe for American artists and with whom Chase spent the summer of 1885 in London.
When devising his compositions Chase repeatedly made use of objects such as the screen, kimono and magazine stand that can be seen here. The present painting is notably similar to Caprice in Purple and Gold no. 2: The Golden Screen that Whistler had painted more than twenty years earlier and which was known to many artists from reproductions in books and periodicals.

CM

19th Century19th Century - American painting. ImpressionismPaintingOilcanvas
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