Description:

Irene Weir
New York / Connecticut / Missouri, (1858 - 1944)
The Lone Pine
oil on board
signed lower right.

Very slight loss due to scuffing mainly on left side.

From Wikipedia: Irene Weir was born to Walter and Annie Field Weir (née Andrews) in St. Louis, Missouri on January 15, 1862.[1][2] Weir came from a long line of artists and educators. Her grandfather Robert Walter Weir was an artist and an instructor at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.[2] Her uncles John Ferguson Weir was an artist and director of the School of Fine Arts at Yale and Julian Alden Weir, a leading figure in New York's art world.[3]


Chromolithograph by Weir
Weir attended Yale from 1881 to 1882 and was awarded a degree in fine arts in 1906 for cumulative artistic achievement rather than coursework.[2][4] She also studied in France, Spain, Holland, United Kingdom and Italy on two separate trips. On returning to the US Weir went on to teach art in New Haven, Connecticut before moving to teach in Brookline, Massachusetts, public school system. There she went on to become the director of art instruction. Weir also served as director of the Slater Museum School of Art in Norwich, Connecticut.[2][3][4][5]

In 1911, Weir became the director at the Ethical Teaching School and taught pottery, bookbinding, illustration, etching, illustration, sculpture, and painting.[6][7] In 1917, she founded the School of Design and Liberal Arts and served as director until 1929.[2] As an educator, she championed the idea that art should be for everyone and not just the elite and was enmeshed in everyday life.[8]

In 1923, she attended the École des Beaux Arts Américaine in Fontainebleau, France, and graduated in 1927.[2]

Weir's own works hang at Washington Cathedral, a prison in New York City, and Memorial hospital in New York as well as having been held in exhibitions from New York to London and Washington D.C.[1][2][9][10]

Weir was both an educator and active participant of the art organizations such as the National Society of Etchers, Independent Artists of America, the London Lyceum Club, and the Founders Group of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas. She was also director of the Art Alliance of America. She died from cardiovascular disease in 1944 in Yorktown Heights, New York.[1][2][5]

  • Dimensions: 23 1/2"H x 17 1/2"W (sight), 27"H x 21"W (frame)
  • Medium: oil on board

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June 4, 2022 11:00 AM EDT
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