- Edward Leigh Chase
Infobox artist
name = Edward Leigh Chase
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birthdate = 1884
location =Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin
deathdate = 1965
deathplace =Woodstock, New York
nationality =
field =Drawing ,Illustration ,Painting
training = Art Students League
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works =
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awards =Edward Leigh Chase (1884-1965) was an American painter and
illustrator , and an early member of the Byrdcliffe experiment which gave rise to the artists' colony atWoodstock, New York . A gifted sketch artist andwatercolor ist, he was one of the group of young Art Students League humorists who called themselves theFakirs .Life and work
Edward Leigh Chase was born in
Elkhart Lake ,Sheboygan County, Wisconsin , the third child of Grace Metcalfe and chemist Charles Denison Chase. His family moved toSt Louis, Missouri , in 1885, when he was an infant, and he grew up attendingpublic school s there. Shunning regularcollege , he traveled toNew York City to studyart at the Art Students League. Among hisprofessors there was the painterWilliam Merritt Chase .Edward Leigh Chase – “Ned” to those who knew him – showed particular promise in his use of
pen and ink , and he soon turned his talent andwit tohumor . For fun and valuable practice, a group of irreverentpupil s at the League inManhattan createdparody illustrations mocking serious works of leading artists, among them their own professors, William Merritt Chase included. The students who participated in suchlampoon ing called themselves theSociety of American Fakirs ,wordplay on the fact that the fauxmasterpiece s they produced were fakes. The name implied as well that they fancied themselves magicians of a sort. With a wave of apen orpaintbrush , they could transform "legitimate" art into laughing stock. Among the Fakirs wereGeorgia O'Keeffe ,James Montgomery Flagg ,Man Ray ,Yasuo Kuniyoshi , and Ned Chase’s younger brother,Frank Swift Chase .Graduating from the Art Students League, the Chase brothers headed upstate to the
Catskill Mountains to join in an experimentalBohemian commune of a style, organized byRalph Whitehead in Woodstock, New York. Building their own clapboardstudios in the woods outside thevillage proper, they studied and worked together in what they saw as an artists’utopia , named Byrdcliffe. Ned Chase honed his skills in sketching and watercolor, and emerged a successful illustrator, albeit not of the caliber of his brother, Frank, who became alandscape painter of national renown. Later in life, Ned Chase painted fine equestrianportraiture of a classical style which he might have roundly excoriated as a "Fakir" in hisyouth .Edward Leigh Chase died in Woodstock in 1965, and is buried with other family members in the Artists' Cemetery there. His grandson is the
actor ,writer andcomedian Chevy Chase .ources
*Catalog of the Society of American Fakirs. Tenth Exhibition (New York: The Society of American Fakirs, 1901).
*"Fakirs Resurrected." "Time" Magazine, Monday, May 9, 1932.
*Parodies of the American Masters: Rediscovering the Society of American Fakirs, 1891-1914 (New York: Art Students League, 1993).
*Raymond J. Steiner. The Art Students League of New York: A History (Saugerties, New York : CSS Publications, Inc., 1999).
*Smithsonian American Art Museum , Peter A. Juley and Son Collection.
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