Quick Reference

Time Period:
c. 1922

Location:
Unknown

Medium:
Pastel on Board

Type:
Landscape

Category:
Unknown

Size:
22" x 29"

Exhibited:
J.H. Miller Galleries, 1922

Purchased:
Unknown

Provenance:
NA

Noteworthy:

This hung with three other pastels and two oils at the one-man show held at the J.H. Miller Galleries in May of 1922 and well reviewed by Springfield critic Ernest Newton Bagg.

Related Links

Featured Artwork: October Maples


NO PHOTOGRAPH KNOWN TO EXIST


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RSW's Diary Comments


Woodward did not keep records of the pastels he called "chalk drawings."


Editor's Note:

From the name and the description below given by Ernest Bagg this scene is wooded area of maple trees in their yellow transition of foliage. Maple trees are unique in that they change in all three fall colors, yellow, orange, and red.

To the right ⮞ is October Flame, a painting of Woodward's much admired maple tree in Mrs. Griswold's pasture in all the colors mentioned. You can also check out Golden Month (1932), for golden views below ⮟.


Additional Notes


Springfield Union, May 15, 1922
Click on the image to read the whole article.

"... October Maples is an especially golden picture of a shaded sward needing only the Lincoln green uniforms of Robin Hood and his merry men to give it fitting animation ..." Springfield Union, May 15, 1922 by Ernest Newton Bagg



One last note, yellow is usually the first color of most trees and begins in late September, early October.


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