Branchville is the artist’s largest known painting (slightly larger than Arques-la-Bataille—OP.731). In spite of its size, the work seems a plein-air sketch, conveying Twachtman's immediate response to the scene before him. The view has been identified as that looking west toward the hills from the front door of Julian Alden Weir’s home in Branchville, Connecticut. In the work, Twachtman flattened the perspective, creating movement across the picture plane with the curve of the road stretching up to the high horizon line. His focus was, nonetheless, on the foreground, which widens outward and is marked by the tree that rises visually above the hills. He thus emphasized that his attention was focused on what was near at hand, and on looking out at the landscape, rather than on traveling into it. In the painting, he expressed a sense of contentment in a familiar view, derived from one's home. In a pastel, Tree by a Road (P.816), he reduced the scene to its essential features: the tree and the road, summarizing what he associated most with this viewpoint.
This painting belonged to Weir, who seems to have returned it to the artist’s son Alden, by 1957. The painting was inherited by Alden’s son Eric, who lent it to the Cincinnati Art Museum in 1966.