Inscribed and dated “N.Y. 79,” this painting was illustrated with its present title in an 1880 article in Scribner's Monthly by William C. Brownell (fig. 1).[1] The scene depicts the oyster boats and boat-shacks located at the foot of West Tenth Street on the North/Hudson River. The boat-shacks were hybrids, consisting of structures built on boats that from the front were decorated storefronts, serving as the stores constituting the city’s oyster market (fig. 2). At the back, as portrayed here, they were plain and unadorned. This side can be seen in an image included in The Opening of the Oyster Season, a part of a montage illustrated in Harper’s Weekly in September 1882 (fig. 3).[2]
Twachtman probably created his image either from a boat on the water or from “the crooked pier at the foot of West Tenth Street,” a site mentioned in an 1879 article on the oyster market in Scribner’s Magazine. Charles H. Farnham's description of the locale in the article is well represented in Twachtman's scene. Farnham wrote that "the slip in the rear of the market" was an area "filled with pretty sloops" and observed: "The place is a net-work of masts and rigging, with here and there a basket hoisted by a tackle and a sail hanging in shaded folds."[3] In the work, Twachtman observed the scene from close to the water, and through the gradually receding pier, which cuts a diagonal line through the horizontal composition, he united the varied forms and angles of the boats and oyster shacks.
Twachtman exhibited this painting as Tenth Street Dock in the 1881 annual of the Society of American Artists. It was one of his three paintings in the show. A critic for the New York Times took notice of it, commenting:
Twachtman is a steady and consistent workman, whose landscapes and marines neither show advance nor retreat, contrary to the adage that in the arts there is no such thing as standing still. Perhaps the "Tenth Street Dock" is the most successful of the three here. It takes in enfilade the ends of oyster-barges that are moored in a basin at the foot of West Tenth-street; before them are at anchor several oyster-sloops of the picturesque Manhattan variety. The water is well rendered without deadness or niggling.[4]
To William C. Brownell the painting revealed that Twachtman had “broken from the painty quality of his Munich art, developing greater control but without losing the spontaneity that had been a hallmark of the realism of Munich.”[5]
Twachtman must have felt this work to be among the most significant from this phase in his career because he exhibited it in 1880–81 in Boston and New York, and it was probably the work he showed as Oyster Sloops, New York Harbor at the Inter-State Industrial Exposition in Chicago in November 1880.
[1] Brownell 1880.
[2] “Opening of the Oyster Season,” Harper’s Weekly 26 (September 16, 1882), p. 584.
[3] Charles H. Farnham, “A Day on the Docks,” Scribner’s Magazine 18 (May 1879), pp. 36, 39.
From Clark 1919
We recall a picture dated "N.Y. '79," in which fishing boats, with sails furled, are lying at the docks, the upright repetition of the masts contrasted by angular wooden houses in the background. In technique it is a veritable "tour de force." The painter never realized his subject with greater command of brush. The arrangement, which does not suggest deliberate composing, is nevertheless nicely calculated, and characterizes the subject with picturesque and striking effect. When we reflect that at this time Manet was startling his Parisian audience by his frank realization of the intimate life about him, we must recognize that the realism of Twachtman must have appeared most blatant to the blinking eyes of his American contemporaries.
- Museum website (artmuseum.princeton.edu)