My Winter Window Shelf caused Robert Strong Woodward some little trouble, but trouble of the sort an artist is glad to have.
The view from the little east window was a frequent subject of his paintings at the Southwick studio, particularly when winter weather kept him inside. (One's first impression on seeing the window is that it is far smaller than the paintings done from it). As so often in his life and career, RSW made a virtue of necessity, and profited from his enforced confinement by creating the unique window pictures. In this one he counters the snow and icicles outside with a warm array of books, a lavender bottle and a blue one, and on the right side, a red geranium with a fallen petal. The glass apple was a gift from his long time friends F. Earl and Ruth Williams.
RSW considered it one of his masterpieces, created in 1945 for Edward and Win Pettis, who were building a new home on River Road in Agawam, MA. RSW had met them in the mid-1930s through the Williamses, when Mr. Williams was principal at Agawam High School. In 1938 Mr. Williams took a new position as principal of the Gardner High School, and the Williamses moved to Gardner, MA. For all the distance, these friendships flourished: the Pettises were left two paintings in RSW's will, the Williamses three.
"Painted in 1945 - 6. The little east studio window back of my easel which I have painted so many times showing the winter orchard and icicles outside. Red geranium at the right, books, lavender bottle and glass apple to the left. Painted expressly for Mr. and Mrs. Pettis for the new home they are to build and at once bought by them. They loaned this canvas in the summer of 1947 to White and Wyckoff Mfg. Co who made a Christmas card in color out of it for their 1947 series. Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Pettis of 1120, River Road, Agawam, Mass., of course own this canvas."
The Pettises wanted to call their painting "Robert Strong Woodward's Winter Window Shelf." In a letter of November 18, 1945, RSW strove to dissuade them from it as "awkward and long and forced." He suggested the current title, pointing out that it "says the same thing after all, seems more wieldy and euphonious." RSW got his way (as one suspects he often did), gently cajoling them, "don't you, after all, feel satisfied with My Winter Window Shelf as a title for your painting? I hope you do."
The same letter was interrupted, coincidentally, by a visit from their mutual friends, the Williamses, who had brought another couple from Gardner to the studio. "The Murrays," he told Edward and Win, "fairly worshipped your window picture - so much so, it seems, they wouldn't buy anything else!" He told them that "Mrs. Murray gave a definite order for a window picture similar to yours, saying she will buy it the moment I make one. Although she wants a red geranium, she wants different accessories - i.e., suggests a red glass lamp in place of the lavendar bottle, etc. But she does want the Williams glass apple! What are we going to do about this? Do you mind? Of course no two pictures ever turn out exactly alike anyway - and I'll leave out the tin cup, the lavendar bottle - and will put in different books. It won't really be more like yours, than yours is like Mrs. Smith's!!"
RSW feigned exasperation: "I shan't show it here, anymore, anyway, because it is plainly preventing people from purchasing
anything else of mine! This isn't the first time, this fall, this has happened! And Mrs. Murray said this afternoon that if I'd make
another painting like your Winter Afternoon canvas, she would buy it at once!! - but I pointblank refuse to do that - so don't worry.
You seem to be making many people green with envy!"
(Mrs. R. R. Smith, also of Gardner, had bought In the Spring in 1945,
another scene out the same little east window. And Mrs Murray? She never did buy a window picture, but contented herself with a landscape
composed within the studio, The Home Road.
My Winter Window Shelf was to have been made into a Christmas card that year by White and Wyckoff, manufacturers of stationery in Holyoke, MA, but labor disputes forced a postponement. Mr. Arthur S. Paine of White and Wyckoff assured RSW that they "still very definitely wish to make a card from that beautiful canvas. When you turn it over to your friends can't you, won't you, ask them for me, if I may borrow it for two months, sometime next summer, when our business turmoil gets settled?"
Finally on May 9, 1946, Mr. Paine "came to the studio by appointment to talk over the matter [of the Christmas card], and to
choose another canvas from me, which he took home with him. It is but a technical point, in that its a rule of the company that two
paintings of an artist have to be submitted for choice. Mr. Paine said that in this case it was but a matter of form, as it is already
positively decided to use your canvas for their 1947 Christmas card - if you can lend it to them for reproduction. He is still wildly
enthusiastic about it, thinking it will be the most distinctive card they have ever had."
Of course the Pettises did loan their
painting, and the card proved to be a beauty, though the color reproduction is a little too reddish.
RSW always kept a special fondness for My Winter Window Shelf, sending playful "greetings to the window canvas and the
chalks - and my best to you" in a 1949 letter to the Pettises.
I love it too. When I was setting up housekeeping in my first
apartment, one of my best gifts was a framed copy of this painting - from the Purintons.
-Page updated, July 1, 2025
-Image captions by BCM