In 1886 he returned to America. In 1890, he bought a farm in
Greenwich. He often painted and exhibited with fellow artist
Julian Alden Weir, and spent considerable time at the
art colony in
Cos Cob. His presence was vital to the colony, says art historian Susan G. Larkin: "Twachtman's temperament—by turns gregarious and introspective, restless and serene—was a major factor in preventing the Cos Cob art colony from becoming a backwater of nostalgic complacency. Ironically, his lack of commercial success contributed to his artistic independence, freeing him from the temptation of producing salable pictures according to a proven formula. His art, conversation, and teaching fueled the creative fires of his friends and students in Cos Cob." In addition to his oil paintings, Twachtman produced drawings in
pastel. He taught painting at the
Art Students League from 1889 until his death in 1902. Twachtman was close friends with
Julian Alden Weir and the two often painted together. In Connecticut his painting style shifted again, this time to a highly personal impressionist technique. Twachtman painted many landscapes of his farm and garden in Greenwich, often depicting the snow-covered landscape. He executed dozens of paintings of a small waterfall on his property, capturing the scene in different seasons and times of day. In the summers of 1900–1902, Twachtman visited
Gloucester, Massachusetts, another center of artistic activity in the era, and produced a series of vibrant scenes that anticipated a more modernist style yet to gain prominence in American art. Twachtman died of a
brain aneurysm on August 8, 1902, aged 49, at Addison Gilbert Hospital in Gloucester, Massachusetts. His works are in many museum collections including the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City; the
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; and the
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. ==See also==