The sketchiness of this small-plate etching suggests that Twachtman used its plate to sketch this view of Bridgeport's Inner Harbor on-site. However, it is unlikely that he used it as a basis for the painting to which it is related (OP.826) because the painting's orientation would have been the consistent with such a sketch. The more finished and reductive etching of the site (E.805) has the same orientation as the painting. This is due to its use as an illustration for the painting in the catalogue for the exhibition and sale of the work of Twachtman and J. Alden Weir, held at the Fifth Avenue Art Galleries, New York, in early February 1889.
There are quite a few differences between this image and the painting, which implies that Twachtman was challenging himself to see the locale anew in each instance. Some details are present here that are also included in the painting but not in E.805, such as the bulkheads rather than single pilings and the railing on the near shanty at the right (on the left int he painting). Yet here an onion-shaped dome in the left middle distance, indicating the presence of a church, is not present in any of the other Bridgeport scenes. A boat with a single mast ending the composition at the far left is omitted from the other images as well. The orientation and some of the details in this image are repeated in the large-plate version of the scene (E.807), such as the long diagonals of warehouses along the shore at the left.
Mary Baskett states: "Based upon imperfections near the center of the composition, there appear to have been problems with the etching ground or acid bath during the biting of this small plate. Some faint parallel lines of shading visible in the right half of the composition seem to relate to another subject that had been etched on the plate earlier. Twachtman apparently decided to abandon the plate rather than go through a laborious process of burnishing and rebiting."
The impression of this etching in the collection of the Hunterian Art Gallery, University of Glasgow, Scotland, illustrated here, is a lifetime print. The only other known impression of this etching belongs to the New York Public Library.
- museum website (collections.gla.ac.uk)