Minerva J. Chapman

Lady Knitting

Lady Knitting,11 x 8 inches
Mother and Child

Mother and Child,13 x 16 inches
Girl in a Wine Shop

Girl in a Wine Shop,12 x 8 inches
chapman

St. Sulpice,11.25 x 14 inches
chapman

Nature Morte, Still Life,12.5 x 16 inches
chapman

Cathedral Interior,16 x 12.5 inches
chapman

Portrait of a Moustached Man,
18 x 15 inches
chapman

Bottles and Shot Glass,17 x 12.5 inches
chapman

Still Life with Fruit and Pitcher,
14 x 7.5 inches
chapman

Still Life with Apples and Mirror,
24 x 20 inches
chapman

Studio Mantle, Still Life,
25.5 x 19 inches
chapman

Landscape with Boat on Shore, 30 x 41.75 inches
chapman

Flowers Atop Figural Sculpture,
Luxemburg, 15.5 x 12.5 inches
chapman

Fields and Village, France, 4.75 x 7 inches
chapman

Still life, Table Setting for Two,
11 x 14 inches
chapman

A Street Leading Toward
Montparnasse, 11.5 x 7.5 inches
chapman

A Building with Two Tiers,
12 x 9.5 inches
chapman

Hearth and Painting, 13 x 8 inches
chapman

Landscape With Country Cottage
8 x 10 inches
chapman

Apple Blossoms,
8 1/8 x 6 1/4 inches
chapman

Landscape, A Field,
9.5 x 12 inches
chapman

Still Life with Red Decanter, 13 x 16 inches
chapman

Pont In Paris,
14 x 11 inches
chapman

The Park in Bloom, Paris, 13.25 x 17.25 inches
chapman

Minerva's House,
17 x 11.25 inches
chapman

House Along a River, France,
7 x 4.25 inches
chapman

Church, France,
6 x 4.75 inches
chapman

Les Enfant,
3.5 x 2.5 inches
chapman

Still Life, Paris, 5.5 x 4 inches

Minerva Chapman (1858 - 1947) was a premier American painter who spent much of her life in Paris. She attended Mount Holyoke College. In her early twenties, she proceeded to Paris to pursue a distinguished painting career. From 1888-1920, in Paris, she earned the respect and admiration of fellow painters. She was among the first women to be invited into the official Salon and eventually became the first woman president of the International Art Union.

Chapman was exhibited widely in Europe and the United States, winning numerous awards and gold medals. She was a founding member of the miniature painting society. She studied with Annie Shaw, John Vanderpoll, J. P. Laurens, Robert Fluery, Charles Lasar, and Bouguereau. Her credentials were impeccable — a true American Impressionist.

Because of ill health, Chapman moved to California in the 1920's and eventually died in Palo Alto. Her vast estate was largely ignored under the poor custodialship of her brother, until relatives came to the rescue and purchased it from him. The family catalogued and restored the 700 works that remained and eventually began showing them in 1975. She has had retrospective exhibitions at the National Museum for Women in the Arts as well as several regional museums and art centers.

John Pence Gallery has represented the estate since 1985. Her works range in price from $2,200 to 45,000. The gallery is interested in acquiring work by Chapman.



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