“World’s greatest cat painting” My Wife’s Lovers sold at Sotheby’s Tuesday
http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2015/19th-century-european-art-n09417/lot.40.html
Images of cats have gone viral long before the Internet, or even the computer, was a thing. A 19th century painting of cats that drew crowds and critical accolades in the analog era sold at Sothebys Tuesday for $826,000, almost three times the high pre-sale estimate.
My Wifes Lovers is a monumental 6-by-8.5-foot oil painting weighing 227 pounds, so heavy Sothebys had to construct a special wall to display it during the preview period. It was painted by Austrian artist Carl Kahler who specialized in horse racing scenes and had never painted a cat before he went to San Francisco in 1891. There he met Kate Birdsall Johnson, a wealthy philanthropist, art collector and animal lover who had begun buying fancy Angora cats during her travels in Europe in the 1880s and never stopped.
Mrs. Johnson invited Carl to Buena Vista, the Johnsons country estate near Sonoma and home of the oldest winery in California, still in operation today. (It wasnt actually a working concern in the decade plus the Johnsons lived there as they had no interest in wine production, but as aficionados of art and architecture, they did ensure the preservation of the original press house and winery so the estate could return to its proverbial roots after World War II.) There she commissioned him to make a portrait of 42 of her cats and Kahler got to work. He spent close to two years sketching individual cats in their many and varied postures.
Lore has it that the painting was given its exquisite moniker by Kates husband Robert, but that cant be true because he died in March of 1889 in Paris after a sudden illness struck him while he was traveling abroad. I imagine the name was Mrs. Johnsons idea, a tribute to her beloved husband, doubtless inspired by something he had often said about her feline companions. It reads to me like an old inside joke between a long and happily married couple.
The painting was finished by the spring of 1893
http://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/39239