The Tile Club: Camaraderie and American Plein-Air Painting The Tile Club | Page 42

be numbered among America’s most noted Impres- sionist landscape painters. As teachers of outdoor painting, they would also have a profound effect on yet another generation of painters. In 1891, Chase estab- lished the first major school of plein-air painting in America, the Shinnecock Summer School of Art in Southampton, New York, on Long Island’s South Fork. About the same time, Twachtman began teaching summer classes at Cos Cob, Connecticut, shortly afterward to be joined by Weir, who five years later directed his own outdoor classes at his home in Branchville, Connecticut. In fact, the Tile Club provided an important social forum for its members, from the time they returned from their extensive studies abroad, sophisticated but penniless, to the time they emerged a decade later as successful artists who could resume their ties to the continent. In the closing paragraphs of A Book of the Tile Club, Earl Shinn aptly reveals the group’s very special nature: “The ideas…discussed were produced unaffectedly from the Vatican, the thieves’ quarter in London….The streets of Naples, Vienna, and Al- giers were about equally present in their minds; and Detail from: The Tile Club at Work, 1879, etching on paper. 36 THE TILE CLUB: Camaraderie and American Plein-Air Painting they assembled around their friendly table in coats from Oxford and from Madrid, in shoes half worn on the sides of Vesuvius and in galleries of Gibraltar… All these comrades, challenging each other by names that were meaningless to the cold world.” 145 Perhaps this statement, more than anything else, captures the essence of the Tile Club. Through their mutual experi- ence, perseverance, and most important, their art, they managed in one decade to establish a new and more cosmopolitan identity for American art, as well as a greater appreciation and respect for a new breed of American artist.