Andrew John Henry Way
Still Life with Fruit on Silver Salver
Andrew John Henry Way was a portraitist and still life painter born in 1826 in Washington, D.C.. He died in 1888 in Baltimore, Maryland.
History
Way studied with artists John P. Frankenstein and Alfred J. Miller in the U.S. In 1850 he want to Europe and studied in both Paris and Florence. In 1859 he gained the attention of Emanuel Leutze and thereafter changed his focus to still life painting instead of portraits. In 1876, Way received a medal for excellence at the Centennial Exposition.[1]
In 1866, the art collector William Thompson Walters acquired property on Woodburne Ave near Govanstown (later became Saint Mary's). Walters was interested in growing grapes, and hired Andrew John Henry Way to paint a cluster of Prince Albert grapes.[2] The painting, Bunch of Grapes, is currently on view at The Walters Art Museum in Baltimore.[3]
A private scrapbook of Way's, housed at the South Carolina Historical Society, includes clippings from Baltimore newspapers about the Southern artist William Aiken Walker. Walker was known for painting African Americans after the Civil War. Way also completed small paintings of African Americans.[4]
References
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Johnston, William R., William and Henry Walters, the Reticent Collectors, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999, p. 48
Bunch of Grapes
Toldeano, R., William Aiken Walker: Southern Genre Painter, Pelican Publishing, 2007, p. 142.
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