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.810
Dock at Newport
ca. 1889
Etching on paper
4 15/16 x 6 15/16 in. (12.5 x 17.6 cm)
Signed in plate, lower right J. [in reverse] H.T.: Signed in plate, lower right, in reverse: J.H.T.
Provenance
Literature
Ryerson, Margery. "John H. Twachtman's Etchings." Art in America 8 (February 1920), pp. 93 ill. in b/w, 95-96, as Dock at Newport.
Baskett, Mary Welsh. "Prints." In John Henry Twachtman: A Retrospective Exhibition, by Richard J. Boyle, Mary Welsh Baskett, and Philip R. Adams. Cincinnati: Cincinnati Art Museum, 1966. Exhibition catalogue (1966 Cincinnati Art Museum), pp.33, 39 ill. in b/w, as Dock 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. 118–19 ill. in b/w, as Dock at Newport. (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. 236–37 ill. in color, as Dock at Newport.
Commentary

Mary Baskett notes that the plate for this etching was printed by Kimmel and Voight at the DeVinne Press, New York, for the February 1893 New York Etching Club catalogue. A review of the show described it as as “a sketch of part of the Long Wharf [in Newport] from the harbor.”[1] Almost the same scene appears in reverse in the oil painting, The Landing, Newport (OP.838). However, the Venetian-style building with an arched doorway and a tower with a pointed cupola in the etching are not featured in the painting and have yet to be identified. 

The impression of this etching in the Cincinnati Art Museum, illustrated here, is a lifetime print. 


[1] New York Times 1893–II

Selected Literature

From Ryerson 1920

[In Dock at Newport and Bridgeport (E.805), there are] lines full of the homely squareness and substantiality always characteristic of Duveneck's work. This is strange because Twachtman's painting does not resemble his master's at all." She further stated: "We see many of the characteristics of Twachtman’s oil in his etchings. The “Dock at Newport” is full of the delicate evanescent light effects he so loved, “the light and atmosphere enveloping the landscape being to him the charm and therefore the qualities most vital.” We see here too his sense of rhythm. He plays or he gently dances his values. It is darkest just where it make the print most beautiful to have it darkest and it grows lighter just where it will bring all into a harmony.