
Catalogue Entry

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Based on descriptions in reviews and this painting's date, it was probably the work Twachtman exhibited as Silver Poplars in the sixth annual of the Society of American Artists in 1883. Reviewing the show, a critic for the New York Sun stated:
Twachtman’s "Silver Poplars" is more of a picture and is more interesting than any other landscape in the room because it fixes for some years at least, on the canvas a very transient and very beautiful natural effect which has not, to our knowledge been previously attempted. The subject is a green field at the back of an ordinary farm house in early spring. There is a row of leafless poplars to the left and another to the right. The sky is filled with a mist of fine drifting snow, not formed into flakes and overhead the white snow clouds, all on a slant, are hurrying by. From the way in which the picture has been painted it is doubtful whether it will last; but its success, for the time, is indisputable.
A writer in the Nation was less enthusiastic, commenting: "[Silver Poplars mostly depicts] a flat space of dull green paint, with some dirty gray rarified brush lines drawn through it and a space of ungraduated leaden gray above for a sky."
This work's title was recorded as Gray Day when it was exhibited at Babcock Galleries in 1930. It remained at Babcock until 1942, where that February it was included in a solo exhibition.