
Catalogue Entry
Probably painted in 1901, when Twachtman often boarded at the Holley House (see Glossary of Names), Country House in Winter, Cos Cob is a view from the Holley House porch toward the Brush House, at the right, and its adjacent store, at the left (see Brush House, Cos Cob, OP.1507, fig. 1).[1] As in Brush House, Cos Cob, Twachtman emphasized the solidity of the buildings standing together, their conjoined shape visible against the snow-covered landscape. However, his viewpoint was at a greater distance here than in Brush House, Cos Cob, as he stood across from Strickland Road, visible on a diagonal in the foreground (fig. 2). Before him were bare lilac bushes, winnowing his view and implying his role as a detached observer of the scene. Accordingly, within the square composition, he conveyed how the buildings seemed in accord with the landscape more so than in Brush House, Cos Cob, in which their contours are more pronounced.
Country House in Winter, Cos Cob belonged to the artist’s wife until 1907, when it sold to Charles R. Stanford, of Albany, New York. It subsequently passed through Macbeth Galleries four times before being purchased in 1931 by the Addison Gallery of American 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 Faxon, Berman, and Reynolds 1996
Twachtman's preference for solitary communion with nature is apparent in Country House in Winter, Cos Cob. The building pictured, a popular and often-painted motif, is the Brush House and store, which was one of the oldest structures in the seaside town. It was located next to the Holley House, an inn owned by Edward Holley where Twachtman and other painters used to board. With this image, he celebrated the season through an arrangement of subtle variations of white. In addition to the abstract flatness and passages of brilliant impasto, the chalky matte surface reflects the artist's previous work in pastels and his unusual painting techniques; he dried his canvases outside in the sunlight, for example, to reduce the oil and to create such effects.
From Larkin 2001–I
Twachtman probably set his easel on the porch to paint Country House in Winter, Cos Cob, a winter view of the Brush House. A contemporary photograph of two women on the Holley House porch, with the Brush House visible in the background approximates Twachtman's viewpoint. More on the Brush house . . . . In Country House in Winter, Twachtman subtly situated the Brush House within a rural village. The tumbledown stone wall and leafless bushes in the foreground were actually on the Holley property; beyond them lay the rutted road that ran between the “ancient sisters.” Another house is visible behind Brush’s [p. 119].
- Museum website (http://accessaddison.andover.edu/objects-1/info?query=Disp_Maker_1%20all%20%22Twachtman%22&sort=9&page=4)