
Catalogue Entry
This is the most abstract representation of the view looking east from the porch of the Holley House in Cos Cob (see Glossary of Names), capturing a wintry day of mist combined with a light snowfall.
Across the mill pond, the low horizontal structure is the Palmer & Duff shipyard, which was no longer in operation (see OP.1513, fig. 1) The two verticals that intersect with it are inactive smokestacks and their reflections in the water.
In the 2005 exhibition catalogue, American Impressionism and the Beauty of Work, Susan G. Larkin observes that for this painting Twachtman "borrowed a strategy from a print in [J. Alden] Weir's collection, Hiroshige's Fukagawa Lumberyards." She states: "Like the Japanese printmaker, Twachtman depicted a work site when activity was muted by winter. Snow seems to muffle sound in both works. Twachtman also adapted some Japanese compositional strategies. The foreground focus on the parasol in the print becomes a calligraphic swirl of paint in Twachtman's oil."