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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Keywords
E.809
Yacht Dock
Alternate title: At Newport
ca. 1889
Etching on paper
8 1/8 x 11 7/8 in. (20.6 x 30.2 cm)
[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. 42, 46 ill. in b/w, 48, as At Newport.
Baskett, Mary Welsh. John Henry Twachtman: American Impressionist Painter as Printmaker—A Catalogue Raisonné of His Prints. Bronxville, N.Y.: M. Hausberg, 1999, pp. 116–17, ill. in b/w, as Yacht Dock. (Baskett concordance).
Commentary

This Newport etching depicts the same subject as the painting Pier (OP.839).  In each, Twachtman chose an angle on the receding pier that concurred with his chosen format, so that here, the pier is on a long and gradual diagonal that divides the picture plane evenly.   

This work was titled Yacht Dock at Bridgeport in Ryerson 1920, At Newport in Wickenden 1921 and Yacht Dock, Newport in 1966 Cincinnati Art Museum

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.

Selected Literature

From Wickenden 1921

[W]ith a few bravely drawn lines and well chosen accents, the artist again has suggested a maximum of air, light, and unlimited space. Here, too, Twachtman’s delight in the combination of horizontals and verticals is made evident in the docks, connecting piers, and the darker accents in the halls of the yachts and boats, from which rise the lightly drawn masts and rigging. The distant shore and sail-boats are marvels of delicacy and precision; in fact, as a piece of pure drawing where every line and accent contributes to produce the impression of life, air, and movement, as well as for justness of perspective affect, this etching has been rarely surpassed [p. 35)].