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This painting was in the Twachtman estate, from which it was sold by Macbeth Gallery in 1919. Its purchaser was the novelist and playwright George Barr McCutcheon (1866–1928). In 1929 the painting, then titled A Breezy Day, was included in the 1929 sale of McCutcheon’s collection, following his death in the previous year. According to a note in the catalogue, it sold for $2,600 to the industrialist, philanthropist, and art collector Bartlett Arkell (1862–1947), who was president, beginning in 1893, of the Imperial Packing Company in Canajoharie, New York, which became the Beech-Nut Packing Company in 1900. Arkell founded the Canajoharie Library and Art Gallery in 1924, when the painting became part of that collection. The museum changed its name to the Arkell Museum in 2007.
The painting’s site is likely to be Branchville, Connecticut, where the Twachtmans spent the summer of 1888, near the home of Julian Alden Weir. There the artist turned from the scenes of peaceful mist-enveloped waterways of his French period, to create more dynamic images of rural New England.
- Museum website (arkellmuseum.org)