Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Fine Art Tuesday

A perfect mid-1800s, Chesapeake Bay lunch: arsters and beer.

Andrew John Henry Way was born in Washington D.C. in 1826 and died in Baltimore, Maryland in 1888.

One of his patrons was William Thompson Walters, a wealthy banking, rail and steel magnet (I could not resist the pun). Walters was also a grape-grower and a collector of European-style, fine art. That is, pictures that was not solely focused on portraits, i.e. vanity; images that had "artistic" interest.

Consequently, many of A.J.H. Way's pictures are still-lifes with grapes in them.




 








6 comments:

  1. He certainly had flair. The only thing we own that is anything like those is a lovely little painting of a lemon being inspected by a snail. It sounds bonkers but it works a treat.

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  2. Nice coffee posting, sir. Seems the Patron of the Artist had some say in the subjects of his art.

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    1. "I'm not telling you what you can paint, Sir. I'm telling you what I will pay you to paint. Can you see the difference?"

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  3. What a grape way to start the morning ERJ!

    (I, too, cannot resist puns...)

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  4. Those are lovely grapes! I wonder if they were portraits of the favorite cultivars of the grape-growing magnate?

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    1. The huge cluster of red grapes is Schiava Grossa which was a darling of the greenhouse growers and is a parent of Muscat Hamburg which was hybridized in England in 1850.

      Muscat Hamburg still has a cult following and Schiava Grossa (also known as Trollinger) is still grown on significant acreage near Stuttgart, Germany.

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