This may have been among the works Twachtman used in the course of creating his large oil, Windmills (OP.749), the key work in his 1886 solo exhibition at J. Eastman Chase's Gallery in Boston, where it was shown with the title of Hollandsch Diep. Depicting the same locale, an estuary to the south of Dordrecht formed by the Rhine and Meuse, this pastel features a windmill that resembles the largest mill in the oil (at the left), even in the position of its blades. Both works include patches of wildflowers, a velvety moist ground of high grass, and high translucent clouds in motion.
Based on its dimensions and subject matter, Landscape with Windmill was probably titled Mill in Holland in the sale of the works of Twachtman and Julian Alden Weir at the Fifth Avenue Art Galleries in February 1889. The work was one of two Dutch pastels in the exhibition; the other was a pastel shown was A Windmill, which is probably The Windmill (P.706).
At this point, in pastel, Twachtman emulated his oil painting method, building up layers of blended hues to produce an opaque surface, although here he left the orange-toned paper exposed for the path that recedes into the distance. He also used quick touches of color to render patches of grass and wildflowers, anticipating the approach more in keeping with the spontaneity of the Impressionist method that he would soon adopt.
Twachtman illustrated this scene in his etching Mill in Holland (E.702), simplifying and depicting the wildflowers closer to the picture plane and lowering the height of the windmill.
- Museum website (museums.fivecolleges.edu)