, c. 1910,
Metropolitan Museum of Art Posthumous misattributions In the 1920s, Lang's family sold her possessions and artworks. On a few of her paintings, including her portrait of Chase now at the Metropolitan Museum, her signature was cut away or erased and replaced with fraudulent Chase signatures. In the 1970s, the art historian Ronald G. Pisano identified a number of her works that had been misattributed to Chase. At the time, her portrait of her mentor was on exhibit and ranked among the important self-portraits in which painters "capture the essence of themselves." Pisano observed that the obliteration of her signatures "in such a wanton way is the ultimate crime that could be perpetrated against an artist."
Surviving works and papers Institutions that own her paintings include Lancasterhistory.org (
Japanese Print, portrait of Helen Thurlow, 1951.013), the
Tweed Museum of Art in Duluth (
Conversation in the Park, D62.x15), the Metropolitan Museum of Art (portrait of Chase, 1977.183.1), the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (portrait of J. Liberty Tadd , 1944.22) and the
Huntington Library, Art Collection, and Botanical Gardens (portrait of Mary Hunter Austin, AU 5464). The Huntington also owns a few of Lang's letters (AU 3451 and 3452), as does the Smithsonian's
Archives of American Art (Carnegie Institute, Museum of Art records, correspondence, Box 73, folder 73.46, and Macbeth Gallery records, reel 2606, microfilmed). Works by Chase that Lang collected include his portrait of the artist Baron Hugo von Habermann (Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 33–1599),
Lady in Opera Cloak (Grand Rapids Art Museum, 1935.1.4),
Self-Portrait (National Gallery of Art, 2014.136.15), and
Still Life (Fish from the Adriatic) (Chrysler Museum of Art, 71.847). In 1913, the Met had acquired
Portrait of a Lady in Black (Annie Traquair Lang) (Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1928-63-4) from Chase, but a few months after his death, his widow Alice reclaimed the painting and Lang later acquired it. Alice Chase replaced it at the Met with her husband's
For the Little One (13.90), a portrait of herself sewing clothes for one of the couple's 13 children. Five of Lang's paintings—the Tadd portrait;
Tea Time Abroad (c. 1912);
A Bit of Venice (1913); ''From Mr. Chase's Studio Window, Bruges, Belgium
(c. 1912); and Isabella Lothrop
(c. 1912)--have been featured in a Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts show, Women in Motion: 150 Years of Women's Artistic Networks at PAFA'' (July 8, 2021 – July 24, 2022). == References ==