In 1907, Ryder moved to New York City, where he was represented for the rest of his career by art dealer William Macbeth. His landscapes were admired for their vigorous brushwork, and the degree to which he pushed representational elements towards abstraction. He became known for a palette of predominantly gray-green tones, eventually known as 'Ryder green'. Ryder created many works in oil and watercolor. Around 1910 he began making prints, including
lithographs,
etchings, and
drypoints. His best drypoints exhibit great economy of line. He opened a studio in the city in 1909, and the following year bought property in Wilton, New Hampshire. For the remainder of his life, he divided his time between New York and New Hampshire. In 1910, he traveled throughout New England, providing locales for many of his subsequent paintings. That year, future president
Woodrow Wilson and his wife
Ellen bought one of his landscapes,
Valley of Assisi, to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary. Ryder was a member of several art associations, including the American Water Color Society and the
Society for Sanity in Art. Among his awards were the
Paris Salon (honorable mention, 1907), the
American Water Color Society (gold medal), the
National Arts Club (gold medal), and the
New York Water Color Society (gold medal). He also received awards at the 1915
Panama–Pacific International Exposition and the
1937 Paris International Exposition. Ryder died in Wilton in 1949. His work is in the collections of numerous American museums, including the
Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), the
Corcoran Gallery of Art and the
National Portrait Gallery (Washington, D.C.), the
Art Institute of Chicago (Illinois), and the
Baltimore Museum of Art (Maryland). ==References==