Chalks & Crayons Gallery to view other drawings
Roads & Streets Gallery to view related pieces.
Landscapes & Views Gallery to view related pieces.
Pastures Gallery to view artwork.
Exhibition List for a complete list of events
• Woodward did not keep records of the pastels he called "chalk drawings."
There are four articles linked to the exhibition held in the home of Miss Anna Koch
of Greenfield, MA. Two clippings announced the event with dates and times, the third is a letter to
the editor of the Greenfield Gazette Recorder just following the show, and the last is its summation,
mostly listing what paintings were bought and who bought them a week after.
This painting,
Up the Pasture Road, was listed under another exhibit at the Koch home which
turns out to be an error. Dr. Mark
listed this and five other named paintings as its own, separate, exhibit the following year in 1929.
Enlarging the article to the right, you will see it is marked "11/30 1928," on the upper right hand side.
We have a policy of not creating an art work page unless we have something concrete to
establish its existence. This pastel clearly exists because of the writer's review.
What strikes
us most about the Gazette Recorder article is that it is dated a week before the exhibit, and yet, the
reporter has seen the work prior. This leads us to ask if the exhibit was set up a week before it opened
rather than the week of... or did the reporter get special access to the paintings at the artist's studio?
The three other articles below ⮟
The name of this pastel is curious to us. It could be a number of subjects. Our initial thought was that maybe it was the Keach Farm. It has a very long "road" (driveway) climbing the steep hill on the back of Koochaug (Snow) Mountain. The artist even made a painting in 1928 titled, The Three Barns of that road. But as the name indicates, it is of the barns that line the road and not the pasture to the left of them. Then we thought of the Heath (MA) Pasture and the lone Beech Tree sitting on Burnt Hill. If you have not noticed it, there is clearly a road in the pasture leading to and we imagine past the Beech Tree. The property is 160 acres after all. We settled on offering an example of Woodward's second favorite pasture, the Goodnow pasture, with its windy path at the foot of Purinton Hill in Buckland. It wouldn't hurt to check out the Fences, Gates & Doors Gallery with the several "over the mowing fence" themed paintings for more.
We do not know who Miss Anna Koch was exactly. We believe she was related to the family that own a grocery store, Koch's Food Store, in Greenfield, and another location in Turner Falls, MA. There could be more. We are looking into it. The exhibition held in her home in 1928 is not the only reference we have of Woodward's relationship with her. She is mentioned in his 1932 personal diary...
"Very cold with wind, but clear. Packed two pictures for N.A.D. taking all morning. "Out of N.E.
Soil" and
"Grandmother's Lamp". Greenfield in afternoon with Mother and Julia. Mother to Moore's while Fabian
and I bought Julia a dress! Saw Mrs. Koch and Mrs. Tullis on business. Letters all evening."
His mother
is Mary Strong. Her and Woodward's father Orion Leroy (O.L.) moved back to Massachusetts in the late 1920s and
where living with their son by 1932. His father having gone blind for some unknown reason. Julia is one of his
many cousins. The two were very close. She even worked from him for a period of time.