- Walter Gay
Walter Gay (
January 22 ,1856 -July 15 ,1937 ) was an American painter born atHingham, Massachusetts . He married heiress Matilda E. Travers, the daughter of prominentNew York City investor and co-founder ofSaratoga Race Course ,William R. Travers .In 1876 the couple moved to
Paris ,France where Walter Gay became a pupil ofLeon Bonnat . They lived in an apartment on the Left Bank and in 1907 purchased Chateau Le Breau on a three-hundred-acre walled park near theForest of Fontainebleau .Walter Gay received an honorable mention in the
Paris Salon of 1885; a gold medal in 1888, and similar awards atVienna (1894),Antwerp (1895),Berlin (1896) andMunich (1897). He became an Officer of the Legion of Honor and a member of theSociety of Secession , Munich. Works by him are in the Luxembourg, theTate Gallery (London), and theBoston and Metropolitan (New York) Museums of Art. His compositions are mainly figure subjects portraying French peasant life.When Walter Gay died in 1937 his obituary in
The New York Times described him as the "dean of American artists in Paris." The following year theMetropolitan Museum of Art held a memorial exhibition of his work.His widow remained at their home in France which was taken over by German officers following the
German occupation of France during World War II . A virtual prisoner in her own home, Matilda Travers Gay died there in 1943.References
*1911
* [http://www.19thc-artworldwide.org/spring_07/reviews/taub.shtml Walter Gay information at "Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide" published by the Association of Historians of Nineteenth-Century Art]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.