This painting was exhibited as October in the 1904 St. Louis International Exposition. Even if Twachtman did not assign the work's title, the image is suggestive of the fall season, in its golden and salmon-hued foliage, with some green vegetation on the ground that has yet to change. In fact, among Twachtman's stays at the Holley House in 1901, one began on October 9.
The work depicts a subject that Twachtman rendered in the winter and spring as well, a view from on or near the Holley House porch looking toward the store (at the left), which was adjacent to the Brush House, the building with an upper porch and double red chimneys (on the Holley House, see Glossary of Names).[1] In the work, afternoon sunlight illuminates the front facade of the store while the rest of the scene is bathed in a soft haze. The work's square format lends itself to an image in which architectural and natural elements blend together to form an aesthetic totality.
October remained in the artist's family after his death and was not in his 1903 estate sale. Perhaps it was held back by Martha Twachtman in order to send it to the St. Louis International Exposition in the following year. In 1907 she lent it to the memorial exhibition of Twachtman’s work at the Lotos Club. In 1909, the agent for the artist’s estate, Silas S. Dustin, assisted in the lending of the painting to the Alaska-Yukon Pacific Exposition in Seattle. The painting was purchased in 1910 by Twachtman’s friend, the artist, architect, and landscape designer Charles A. Platt (1861–1933) and was inherited by his wife. By 1962 it was owned by Walter Percy Chrysler Jr. (1909–1988), an avid art collector who established his first art museum in Provincetown, Massachusetts, in 1958. In 1971 he moved his collection to Norfolk, Virginia, where it became the basis for the Chrysler Museum of Art.
[1] Built between 1751 and 1784, the Brush House descended in the family of colonial settlers in Greenwich involved in the shipping trade and was occupied during Twachtman’s years in Greenwich by Joseph E. B. Brush (1833–1914), an eccentric, retired individual who lived alone. See Larkin 2001–I, pp. 119–25.
From Larkin 2001–I
Twachtman’s concern between architecture and setting is . . . apparent in October. The graceful elm at the left of the composition and the diagonal row of shrubs stood on the Holleys’ side of Strickland Road, just beyond the porch where Twachtman set his easel. In October, he showed the relation of the Brush House to the millpond, sheltered the old house behind a neat white fence, and shaded it with a pair of trees perfectly matched in size and form. The reality was not so pristine as Twachtman’s canvas suggests. Haphazardly maintained by Joe Brush, the house was shabby at best. The trees were not the same size or species; an elm stood near the millpond, an oak or maple near the porch steps. The fence was chicken wire stretched over a rudimentary wooden frame. Yet October celebrates an ideal of life in a country village [p. 120].
- Museum website (chrysler.emuseum.com)