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(American, 1833 - 1905)

Oldmixon, Chester County, Pennsylvania

1886
10 × 15 1/2 in. (25.4 × 39.4 cm)
2019.1
Purchased with funds provided by Mr. and Mrs. Rodman Moorhead and Morris and Boo Stroud, 2019

The distinguished Philadelphia landscape painter William Trost Richards bought a farm in Western Chester County in 1884, opening up new terrain, quite literally, for the artist. The farm, called Oldmixon, was located not far from present-day Coatesville, firmly within the Brandywine Valley. While his daughter and son-in-law ran a poultry business at Oldmixon, Richards set up a studio on the property, which boasted expansive views of hills, farmland, and wooded areas for the artist’s delectation. His work in Chester County contrasted sharply with his coastal New England scenes, evoking the pastoral turn of seasons rather than the dramatic clash of sea and rocks. The glare of the low-hanging sun in this watercolor is reflected in the stream below—water that will eventually flow into the Brandywine.

Not On View
Song of the Brook, No. 1
Joseph Boggs Beale
1902-1903
Song of the Brook, No. 6
Joseph Boggs Beale
1902-1903
Song of the Brook, No. 7
Joseph Boggs Beale
1902-1903
Song of the Brook, No. 8
Joseph Boggs Beale
1902-1903
Song of the Brook, No. 9
Joseph Boggs Beale
1902-1903
Five Bears
William Holbrook Beard
1869
Hillside Farm
Chauncey Foster Ryder
ca. 1880-1920
Landscape on Pond
Henry Pember Smith
late 19th century
Sunrise in the Alleghenies
Paul Weber
ca. 1853
The Puritan
Frank E. Schoonover
ca. 1898