Included with the title of On Normandy River in the artist's 1903 estate sale, this painting is most likely a view of Arques-la-Bataille, where Twachtman spent the summer of 1884. The large tree towering over the hills is probably one of the old-growth beech trees that even today can be seen in the countryside (see OP.722). In the work, Twachtman may have gazed at a low angle across the surface of one of the region's narrow rivers to explore the convergence in its surface of reflections from both the sky and land.
On Normandy River sold from Twachtman’s estate sale to the prominent collector of American paintings: John Harsen Rhoades (1838–1906), a dry-goods businessman and banker, who was the founder and president of the Savings Banks Association of the State of New York, as as well a founder of the Society of Art Collectors (with William T. Evans, Alexander Humphreys, and Frederic Bonner). At the time Rhoades purchased this painting, he already had another work by Twachtman in his collection, The River Front (identity unknown). Rhoades included the present painting in exhibition of his collection at the Lotos Club in 1905.
There are a few of his earlier pictures here, the delightful sea piece, “Near Ostend” [OP.610], painted in 1881; the “Normandy River” and “The Windmill—Holland,” which show that he was still satisfied with the limitations of studio light. These pictures make their appeal through delicate drawing and excellences of workmanship in general; they have a savor of originality, but in atmospheric quality they do not go beyond the ordinary standard of the day.