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

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Additional Images
Abandoned Mill, ca. 1888–89 (E.800). Fig. 1. Twachtman, Abandoned Mill, illustrated in Paintings in Oil and Pastel by J. Alden Weir, N. A., and J. H. Twachtman, Fifth Avenue Art Galleries, exh. cat. 1889. pp. 12–13.
Fig. 1. Twachtman, Abandoned Mill, illustrated in Paintings in Oil and Pastel by J. Alden Weir, N. A., and J. H. Twachtman, Fifth Avenue Art Galleries, exh. cat. 1889. pp. 12–13.
Related Work
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Keywords
E.800
Abandoned Mill
Alternate title: Old Mill, Branchville
ca. 1888–89
Etching on paper
5 x 3 1/2 in. (12.7 x 8.9 cm)
Signed in plate, lower left: JHT [Signed below plate, lower right, by the artist's son Alden: JHT per AT]
Provenance
Literature
Wickenden, R[obert] J. The Art and Etchings of John Henry Twachtman. New York: Frederick Keppel, 1921, pp. 32–33, 35 ill. in b/w, 48, as Old Mill, Branchville.
Baskett, Mary Welsh. John Henry Twachtman: American Impressionist Painter as Printmaker—A Catalogue Raisonné of His Prints. Bronxville, N.Y.: M. Hausberg, 1999, pp. 32, 100–101, ill. in b/w, as Abandoned Mill. (Baskett concordance).
Peters, Lisa N. "Catalogue." In John Twachtman (1853–1902): A "Painter's Painter", by Lisa N. Peters. New York: Spanierman Gallery, 2006. Exhibition catalogue (2006 Spanierman), pp. 230–31 ill. in color, as Abandoned Mill.
Commentary

Twachtman created this etching to illustrate a pastel, Abandoned Mill (P.800), included in an auction, held February 7,1889 at the Fifth Avenue Art Galleries, of his work and that of Julian Alden Weir (fig. 1). Although the etching was meant as a shorthand version of the pastel, in some ways it is more successful, in the clarity achieved by its geometry and sharpened value contrasts. 

The impression in the Hood Museum of Art, illustrated here, is a posthumous etching. It was among nineteen etchings reprinted for the 1921 exhibition at Frederick Keppel and Company, New York. According to Baskett, the printer was probably Peter Platt, a professional printer who produced etchings for Childe Hassam and John Sloan. 

Lifetime states (from Baskett 1999)

I. Before initials in plate.

II. With initials in plate at lower left: Fifth Avenue Art Galleries edition. 

Selected Literature

From Wickenden 1921

The foreshortened body of the Old Mill, with its open gable and heavy square timbering, runs towards a sluice-way, from which the stream spreads across the foreground to the right. There is again an almost Rembrandtesque fineness of line in the free use of the needle on this quaint little sketch [pp. 32–33].