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End of Winter

American Art Museum

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    Object Details

    Artist

    John Henry Twachtman, born Cincinnati, OH 1853-died Gloucester, MA 1902

    Luce Center Label

    Twachtman drew inspiration from his seventeen acres of land in Greenwich, Connecticut, and his paintings of the property express the emotional and spiritual comfort he found there. This image describes the beginning of the seasonal transition from winter to spring. Twachtman depicted bare trees and an icy, swollen brook, but allowed the brown primed canvas to show through his thinly applied paint so that a feeling of warmth and regeneration could emerge. Twachtman created many images of streams and brooks, and these ceaselessly moving bodies of water might have held a deeper significance for him. By the time Twachtman painted his Connecticut landscapes, American artists and intellectuals had been interested in Buddhism for more than two decades, and the artist himself had studied Zen philosophy and Japanese art. (Pyne, "John Twachtman and the Therapeutic Landscape," in Chotner et al., John Twachtman: Connecticut Landscapes, 1989) This may account for the meditative quality of his pictures, the sense of looking not at an actual landscape, but at an inward image of something seen long before.

    Credit Line

    Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of William T. Evans

    Date

    after 1889

    Object number

    1909.7.65

    Restrictions & Rights

    CC0

    Type

    Painting

    Medium

    oil on canvas

    Dimensions

    22 x 30 in. (55.8 x 76.3 cm)

    See more items in

    Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection

    Department

    Painting and Sculpture

    Data Source

    Smithsonian American Art Museum

    Topic

    Landscape\season\spring
    Landscape\Connecticut\Greenwich
    Landscape\river\stream

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/vk78136817b-36cb-411f-9e50-16519b8fc2d8

    Record ID

    saam_1909.7.65

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