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During the 1890s, Twachtman's home and property in Greenwich was
his primary subject matter. Over the course of his years in Greenwich,
he had modified his home, changing it from a small, upright farmhouse
to a rambling, low-lying structure that was oriented with the lay
of the land and appeared unified with its site (Fig. 3).
For the front of his house, the architect Stanford White designed
a columned Tuscan portico, while a dining room was open to the sky
with vine trellises overhead (Fig. 4).
At the back of the house, the artist planted a garden, consisting
largely of wildflowers that grew freely on either sides of sunlit
paths and around an outdoor patio (Fig. 5). Through his property,
Horseneck Brook meandered (Fig. 6). The artist portrayed the brook
throughout the year, depicting it under ice in winter and emerging
during spring thaws. He painted the small pools that extended from
it, delighted in depicting a waterfall that cascaded just behind
his home (Fig. 7), and he built a white wooden latticed bridge over
it that became the subject for several works. A large pool gathered
to the southwest of his home became a place for his children to
row boats and another subject that he could explore in his art.
In his paintings, he continued his interest in soft tonal qualities,
but he adopted an Impressionist technique, painting with broken
brushwork and blending his colors directly on canvas. His introduction
to the new style came not only through seeing the work of French
painters in New York galleries, but also through friends such as
Theodore Robinson, who had spent time over the course of many years
in Giverny, France, where he was a close friend of Claude Monet.
An interest in structured compositions and a strong sense of design
also become apparent in Twachtman's Greenwich paintings.
In 1897 Twachtman was a founding member of the Ten American Painters,
a group of primarily Impressionist painters who broke from the Society
of American Artists. He continued to teach at the Art Students League
through the 1890s, bringing students to the Holley House in Cos
Cob (near his home in Greenwich), during the summers where he occasionally
resided. He spent the summers of 1900 to 1902 in Gloucester, Massachusetts,
where he joined his old friend Duveneck and other painters many
of whom started their careers in Cincinnati. For his Gloucester
works, Twachtman painted alla prima, returning to the bold painterly
style of his Munich years, but retaining the bright palette of his
Greenwich art. One-man shows of his paintings and pastels were held
in New York, Chicago, and Cincinnati in 1901. In the summer of 1902,
Twachtman died suddenly in Gloucester. Several of his colleagues
wrote at the time of Twachtman's modernity, the "great beauty
of design" in his work, and his ability to express the spirit
of the places he painted. Thomas Dewing wrote: "By the death
of John H. Twachtman, the world has lost an artist of the first
rank...He is too modern, probably, to be fully recognized or appreciated
at present: but his place will be recognized in the future."1
Twachtman's works are in numerous important private and public
collections including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York;
the Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio; the National Museum of American
Art, Washington, D.C.; the National Gallery of Art, Washington,
D.C.; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Brooklyn Museum, New
York; the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; the Hirshhorn
Museum, Washington, D.C.; the Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.;
the Cleveland Museum, Ohio; the Detroit Institute of Arts, Michigan;
the Nelson-Atkins Museum, Kansas City, Missouri; the St. Louis Museum
of Art, Missouri; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California;
and many others.
LNP
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T. W. Dewing, "John H. Twachtman: An Estimation," North
American Review 176 (April 1903), p. 554.
© The essay herein is the property of Spanierman
Gallery, LLC and is copyrighted by Spanierman Gallery, LLC, and
may not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission
from Spanierman Gallery, LLC, nor shown or communicated to anyone
without due credit being given to Spanierman Gallery, LLC.
For further information about John Henry Twachtman, see the bibliography
section on this web site.
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