|
About Lemuel M. Wiles
Lemuel Maynard Wiles was born in 1826 in West Perry, New York, in the Genesee Valley. A noted landscape painter in the realist tradition of the Hudson River School, he did western landscapes, which resulted from travels in California and Colorado in 1873 and 1874.
He graduated from the New York State Normal School in 1847, studied art in Albany, New York, for three years with William S. Har. He later taught with Jasper F. Cropsey in New York City. From 1850 to 1857, his focus was on painting, but later he taught in the Utica public schools. His teaching is thought to have inspired his son, Irving, to become a famous portrait painter, and their close relationship magnified their individual careers.
In 1861, the Wiles moved to New York City, and three years later he opened his own studio in the same premises as occupied by Samuel F.B. Morse. His son Irving would later join his father under the same roof.
Wiles' trips in 1873 to 1874 to Colorado and California, including Yosemite and San Juan Capistrano, provided the inspiration for his large collection of western landscapes and sketches of cathedrals and church missions. Titles of works from that period include "Camp of the San Diego Indians" and "The Bridal Veil, Yosemite".
From 1876 to 1888, he was director of the College of Fine Arts at Ingham University in LeRoy, New York, and in 1893 initiated Peobody College's art department in Nashville, Tennessee. He was also the founder of the Silver Lake Art School in Ingham, near Perry. Irving Wiles joined his father in teaching summer classes at Peconic, Long Island in the late 1890s-early 1900's. Irving Wiles' portrait of his father and mother, Rachel, won multiple medals in the 1893 to 1901 period.
Lemuel Wiles died in 1905 in New York City. |
Paintings by Lemuel M. Wiles
| Storming the Fort |
| oil on canvas:18 x 30 inches |
| signed and dated 1878: lower right |
|
| |
 Click Picture to Enlarge
|
|