Quick Reference

Time Period:
after 1929

Location:
Silo at Barnard farm
Patten District, Shelburne Falls, MA

Medium:
Chalk Drawing

Type:
Landscape

Category:
Barns, Lanscapes & Views

Size:
22 x 29

Exhibited:
Unknown

Purchased:
Unknown

Provenance:
NA

Noteworthy:

This is one of 3 known pieces of the same silo and view. Two are Chalk Drawings and the third is an unnamed oil.

Related Links

Featured Artwork: From High in New England

From High in New England

RSW's Diary Comments


Editor's Note & Commentary:

There are no diary comments regarding this subject for the following reasons. This subject has three versions we know of, however, two of them are chalk drawing in which Woodward did not keep any records, and the one and only known oil painting is not only unsigned but unnamed. The big question is why this seemingly typical subject for Woodward never got elevated to a satisfactory enough scene to paint, sign, name, and exhibit an epic version.

The 3 paintings of this scene:
Unnamed: High on a Hill, an oil
High In New England #2, a chalk drawing
From High In New England, a chalk drawing

Complicating matters more is the fact that there is ANOTHER chalk drawing by the same name of a completely different subject (to the right).

Forget the numbering. That has more to do with the website being aware of one painting before it learns there is another of the same name. Still, we could not tell you with any certainty which drawing that shares the same name came first, although, we believe the barn and silo scene was first and exhibited at the Myles Standish Gallery in 1929 from newspaper descriptions.



Additional Notes


A photograph of the silo and view from the farm in the painting.
A photograph of the Barnard's barn
and silo and view from the farm in the painting.

The scene is of David Barnard's farm at the end of Patten Road in Shelburne, MA, looking north toward Colrain and Vermont. The silo has now been removed and the 'whitewash' paint has faded back to gray barn boards.


Below are descriptions for, High in New England:

Boston Globe, May, 1929 by A. J. Philpott

"....High in New England is a gem. In it you look across the hilltops onto a wonderful sky. The whole thing is radiant."

New York Herald Tribune, Sunday, Sept. 3, 1933 by Royal Cortissoz

"Then there is a singularly vital pastel, High in New England, brilliantly technically and particularly impressive in its characterization of a scene, both beautiful and grim."


Given the details of the descriptions above, particularly the reference of looking "across hilltops onto a wonderful sky," one can only assume that it is this scene and NOT the one of the man raking the grass in front of his crumbling home in Rowe, Massachusetts. You must visit High in New England for, in my best Paul Harvey voice, the rest of the story...