1893
watercolor on paper
According to a letter from John Alan Walker regarding A Northern Garden, "Wendt's watercolors are quite rare, and most probably the artist used this medium in his early years to expand and diversify his exhibition prospects. This 1893 watercolor has Wendt's concerns for growth, a natural motif in his early work, whereas his mid-1930's landscapes of barns are in disrepair, uniting in one emblem the Depression farms and his poor health. I suggest the farm is rural Michigan, because the greenhouses depicted suggest a climate of severe winters. Wendt is known to have traveled in Michigan often during his Chicago years, and in 1905 he had a one-man exhibit in Detroit."
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