Discouraged (Idleness)
by Irving Ramsay Wiles (1861–1948)26 x 36 inches
Signed lower right: Irving R. Wiles
Provenance
Private collection
[With] Bernard & S. Dean Levy, Inc., New York, New York
Private collection, acquired from above, by 1981
[With] Debra Force Fine Art, New York, New York
Private collection, New York, New York
Exhibited
(Possibly) The Detroit Club, Michigan, 1889, no. 1377
Society of American Artists, New York, New York, Twelfth Exhibition of the Society of American Artists, April 28, 1890–May 24, 1890
Debra Force Fine Art, New York, New York, New Yorkers and Their City, March 11–April 30, 2021
Literature
Catalogue of the Twelfth Exhibition of the Society of American Artists (New York: The Art Interchange Press, 1890), 26, no. 203.
Related Works
Interior of William Merritt Chase's Tenth Street Studio, oil on canvas, 26 x 36 inches, signed lower right; Private collection
The Student, 1910, oil on canvas, 30⅝ x 25¼ inches, signed upper left; National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
Her Leisure Hour, ca. 1925, oil on canvas, 27¼ x 22½ inches; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC
Note: In this work, Irving Ramsay Wiles depicts the studio of his mentor, impressionist painter William Merritt Chase, at the famed Tenth Street Studio Building. The unique building held studios for some of the most prominent nineteenth-century artists and Chase’s studio was well-known as a place of splendor—with rare objects, ornate rugs, and imported porcelain filling the space. Wiles surrounds the elegantly dressed figure with these wonderous items as she stares contemplatively ahead towards her canvas.
Artist Biography
A master of both portraiture and landscape painting, Irving Ramsay Wiles used an expressive palette and brushwork in the impressionist tradition.
By Nina Sangimino
I. Biography
II. Chronology
III. Collections
IV. Exhibitions
V. Memberships
VI. Notes
VII. Suggested Resources
I. Biography
Irving Ramsay Wiles was destined to become an artist; his father Lemuel Maynard Wiles was a landscape painter who studied under William M. Hart and Jasper Francis Cropsey. Shortly after Irving’s birth in Utica, New York, the Wiles family moved to New York City in order for