
Catalogue Entry

Waterside Scene is a view looking west along the Newport's Long Wharf, as seen from the Jamestown side of the Narragansett Channel. The spire of St. Paul’s Methodist Church on Marlborough Street (built in 1806) is in the middle distance.[1] Twachtman rendered the same subject in his pastel, The Dock (P.804), but here he chose a more rectangular composition and rendered the scene from a greater distance. This seems fitting to his more vibrant result here, in which he used watercolor and gouache with precision rather than watery looseness to create a well-structured design. In the contour of the wharf on an upward curved trajectory, with other forms as clearly defined receding shapes, the image suggests his study of Japanese prints, such as Hiroshige's Cherry Blossoms on the Banks of the Tamagawa, 1856.
The first owner of Waterside Scene was the architect William Rutherford Mead (1846–1928), a partner in the architectural firm of McKim, Mead, and White. The work was part of Mead’s bequest in 1936 to the Mead Art Museum at Amherst College, where he graduated in 1867.
[1] The church was identified by Bertram Lippincott III, Librarian, Newport Historical Society, letter, March 1993.
- Museum website (http://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?museum=all&t=objects&type=all&f=&s=Twachtman&record=4)