
Catalogue Entry

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Fountain, World’s Fair is among the works Twachtman created for an illustrated deluxe history of the Columbian Exposition, a project that never came to fruition. He did not visit the Chicago fair, and based his images on photographs. Here his view seems to be looking west toward the Green Basin, where Frederick MacMonnies’s Columbian Fountain was situated at the western end of the Court of Honor, just in front of Hunt’s administration building. The low, horizontal form in the water is only vaguely like the shape of the grand Barge of State on which the figure of Columbia was seated on a high pedestal. While the railing of the fence around the fountain generally represents the enclosure circling the basin, the decorative planters do not appear in any existing photographs of the site.
In 1918 the artist’s wife inscribed the back of the work, “Sketch by John H. Twachtman [1893] Chicago, Martha S. Twachtman, 1918.” Despite this notation, Twachtman probably made this painting in 1894, when Robinson reported that he was struggling with his assignment for depictions of the fair.
When this painting was sold at the American Art Association in 1928, the catalogue described it as depicting “a green bassin at the World’s Fair, Chicago, with fountains bordered by statuary, marble vases, and centered with a marble group.” It was purchased from this sale by the noted dealer and modernist Albert E. Gallatin (1881–1952).