The Tile Club: Camaraderie and American Plein-Air Painting The Tile Club | Page 35

of these events, the Tilers celebrated the release of the much anticipated Harper’s Christmas, published both in America and England with amazing success. 124 This deluxe publication, printed on special paper, was graced with a beautiful cover design, Luna, by Vedder sur- rounded by a decorative border in mistletoe by Parsons. The issue included stories written by close friends of the Tilers (Mark Twain and Thomas Bailey Aldrich) and large drawings by club members, such as Chase’s The Burgomaster and Vedder’s Samson) which were particularly popular with the public. In fact, Vedder, in writing to his wife, reported that people were actually “cutting them out and framing them.” 125 The previous year the Tile Club had garnered international renown when an article appeared in the French publication L’Art (September 1881). The account focused on the publicity the group managed to generate for itself: “This unique organization peaked curiosity. From the outset, the Tile Club was in vogue. The stories which circulated, and illustrated journals which published exotic article after article, led the public to come to know the remarkable talent and appealing nature of the group.” 126 So widely publicized were the club’s activities that they caught the attention of Vincent van Gogh, who had seen both the Harper’s Weekly article and the special Harper’s Christmas issue. He wrote to his brother Theo in 1883: “At present there is a draftsman’s club in New York called the ‘Tile Club’ or the ‘Tile Painters.’” 127 Expressing his particular admiration for Abbey, van Gogh specifically men- tioned that he had a “little figure of a woman in the snow by him,” perhaps the reproduction of Winter that appeared in Harper’s Christmas (fig. 22). 128 In summary, van Gogh told his brother: “I write about it because I believe you will agree with me that not all Ameri- cans are bad. That, on the contrary, there are extremes Figure 22. Edwin Austin Abbey (American, 1852–1911), Winter, 1882, gouache on paper, 44 x 28 in., University of Cincinnati Fine Arts Collection, gift of the Engineering Class of 1923. Decorative Age or Decorative Craze? 29