loading loading
John Henry Twachtman Catalogue Raisonné
An online catalogue by Lisa N. Peters, Ph.D., in collaboration with the Greenwich Historical Society

Catalogue Entry

enlarge
Related Work
loading
Keywords
OP.816
Road to Ridgefield
Alternate title: Rural Landscape
ca. 1888
Oil on panel
10 x 15 1/2 in. (25.4 x 39.4 cm)
Signed lower right: J. H. Twachtman–
Private collection
Provenance
(Fifth Avenue Art Galleries, New York, Twachtman–Weir sale, February 7, 1889, no. 26);
Edward W. Twachtman, the artist's brother, Cincinnati;
to his daughter Edith Minning Alexander;
by descent to her nephew DeWitt Gerstle, 1968;
by descent in the family.
Exhibitions
1889–I Fifth Avenue Art Galleries
Fifth Avenue Art Galleries, New York, Paintings in Oil and Pastel by J. Alden Weir and J. H. Twachtman, February 1–7, 1889, no. 26, as Road to Ridgefield, 10 x 15 1/2 in.
1892 Western Washington Industrial probably
Western Washington Industrial Exposition Company, Tacoma, Second Annual Exhibition of Oil and Water Color Paintings and Statuary, 1892, no. 133, as Road to Ridgefield.
Literature
Sun 1889–II
"Weir and Twachtman Pictures." Sun (New York), February 8, 1889, p. 3, as Road to Ridgefield.
New-York Tribune 1889–IV
"Art News and Comments." New-York Tribune, May 5, 1889, p. 14, as Road to Ridgefield.
Hale 1957
Hale, John Douglass. "Life and Creative Development of John H. Twachtman." 2 vols. Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio State University, 1957. Ann Arbor, Mich.: University Microfilms, 1958, vol. 2, p. 487 (catalogue G, no. 514), as Road to Ridgefield. (Hale concordance).
Commentary

When Road to Ridgefield was included in the 1889 sale of the work of Twachtman and Julian Alden Weir, held at the Fifth Avenue Art Galleries (see Exhibitions), it was noticed by a reviewer for the New York Tribune, who remarked: "Of the pictures which will be popularly called complete, the best example is the beautiful 'Road to Ridgefield,' a study of a gray and yellow road and buildings with accompaniments of green grass and foliage underneath a sky where 'the blue that comes after rain,' as the Chinese have it, shows between the lightest of white clouds. This might be called one of the more obvious landscapes, but the delicacy of its harmonious colors is by no means easily exhausted." 

The painting sold from the exhibition for $70, according to an article in the New York Sun. Twachtman depicted the same site, probably Nod Hill Road in Branchville, Connecticut, where Weir's home was situated, in the pastel, ’Neath Summer Skies, (P.801), and in another oil on panel, The House in Nodd (OP.815). In this instance, his viewpoint was along the diagonal of the road, with the buildings and land establishing an opposing triangular wedge at the left. Closer to the farm buildings than in ’Neath Summer Skies, he included more details, such as the stone wall and its gate entry. A tree that appears to the right of the barn in The House in Nodd is now behind it. In Windy Day (OP.817), another painting in the 1889 sale, Twachtman's viewpoint was possibly from the opposite side of the gate, looking toward the road.