Twachtman recorded having created this work in the summer of 1900, on a charcoal sketch (D.1424), on which he wrote: “All Gloucester through the tree.” This statement captures this painting well, because Twachtman did not paint the tree and the view behind it, but rendered both at once, and almost on the same plane. The painting is among the images he created of the view from East Gloucester's Banner Hill; the triangular form of the roof of the J. F. Wonson fish building can be seen between the tree branches (see Gloucester Harbor, OP.1403). Its shape is the reverse of the tree's, whose branches form an upward-facing triangle. Other aspects of the work, including boats and water, are interlaced with the branches and the canopy of the cherry tree's leaves—that the tree lacks cherries suggests that Twachtman rendered the work in the late summer when the cherries would already have been eaten by birds. Twachtman featured what appears to be the same tree in Gloucester (OP.1408), demonstrating the way his works so often are interconnected.
The title Wild Cherry Tree does not appear in the catalogues or reviews of Twachtman’s four 1901 solo exhibitions. However, it seems likely that this was the painting Twachtman displayed in New York and Cincinnati as Drying Shed, a title perhaps referring to the fish building. A critic for the New York Commercial Advertiser commented: "Drying Shed,’ . . . leaves the spectator in a pleasant state of guessing as to where the sheds are concealed, for the greater part of the composition is taken up with a tree, the drawing and construction of which is most peculiar."[1]
The painting was not included in Twachtman's 1903 estate sale, probably because Martha Twachtman held it aside for inclusion in the Ten American Painters Exhibition of that year, where it was shown as Wild Cherry Tree. The work was featured a year later in Twachtman's memorial exhibition at Knoedler Gallery. There its sale price of $800 was noted in a copy of the catalogue.
At some point before 1916, Wild Cherry Tree sold to the merchant and art collector Hugo Reisinger (1856–1914) as it was included in Reisinger’s estate sale that year, from which it was purchased by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, where it resides today.[2]
[1] New York Commercial Advertiser 1901.
[2] This painting is not listed in the Knoedler Dealer Stock Books database, Getty Research Institute.
one of Twachtman’s most vivid, rapid sketches.
From Public Ledger 1907
“The Wild Cherry Tree,” in name, a gem, if not the most precious gem of the entire exhibition. It presents a very young tree, a mere film of green mist supported and accented by graceful spirals of the slender branches. Through the tree, exquisitely veiled may be seen the landscape beyond.
From Lloyd 1907
Here is a picture of the blur and shimmer of sunlight, that drenches the colours and pales them, and to which the occasional shadow of a rock here or a roof there is not so much an effect of a cause as an incident of an effect. Then straight across the face of this loose-jointed picture stretches a congregation of shadowed blotches. This is the cherry tree. It seems done at haphazard, at a venture. Yet, the very air of the sun-drowned outdoor world is in such a painting's atmospheric perspective. If you try to pick out some off-hand stroke which might well have been omitted, you soon become conscious of the artfulness, the success of this strange, yet powerful, outdoor convention. Nothing is more difficult to reproduce the aspect of country seen through interposing foliage. Twachtman rendered it here in the quality of a veil across the light. As a veil across the background.
From Art News 1939
Wild Cherry Tree is told in the simplest and most direct means.
- Museum website (albrightknox.org)