Mimi's Harvest
by Beverley Harper Tinsley
Buy the Original Painting
Price
$45
Dimensions
8.000 x 7.000 inches
This original painting is currently for sale. At the present time, originals are not offered for sale through the Beverley Harper Tinsley - Website secure checkout system. Please contact the artist directly to inquire about purchasing this original.
Click here to contact the artist.
Title
Mimi's Harvest
Artist
Beverley Harper Tinsley
Medium
Painting - Watercolor And Graphite
Description
A grouping of three sweet and delicious pears, simply waiting to adorn your kitchen or dining room wall. These shapely beauties are rich with gold, red, green and even subtle shades of violet. There is something about the juicy, and voluptuous pear that tempts us. Almost no fruit is as simply pleasing to look at.
According to The Myths Encyclopedia, online:
Fruit appears in myths from around the world. Often it is a symbol of abundance, associated with goddesses of fruitfulness, plenty, and the harvest. Sometimes, however, fruit represents earthly pleasures, gluttony, and temptation. Specific kinds of fruit have acquired their own symbolic meanings in the myths and legends of different cultures.
In Greek and Roman mythology, pears are sacred to three goddesses: Hera (Juno to the Romans), Aphrodite (Venus to the Romans), and Pomona, an Italian goddess of gardens and harvests.
The ancient Chinese believed that the pear was a symbol of immortality. (Pear trees live for a long time.) In Chinese the word li means both "pear" and "separation," and for this reason, tradition says that to avoid a separation, friends and lovers should not divide pears between themselves.
Read more: http://www.mythencyclopedia.com/Fi-Go/Fruit-in-Mythology.html#ixzz2EaCg3TrZ
CSU offer the following tips for growing pears:
Plant pear trees in full sun and in soil that drains well on a high point so frost gathering in low pockets will not damage the tree or the fruit. If fruit trees are close to the south or west side of a building, they can also bloom too early in the spring and be damaged by frost.
Most pear varieties must have a second variety close by for cross-pollination. Pear blossoms have a short season and the small amount of nectar the trees produce is not attractive to bees, so twice as many bees are needed as with other types of fruit trees for good pollination.
Pears grow in the sublime orchard of Alcinous, in Odyssey vii: "Therein grow trees, tall and luxuriant, pears and pomegranates and apple-trees with their bright fruit, and sweet figs, and luxuriant olives. Of these the fruit perishes not nor fails in winter or in summer, but lasts throughout the year."
The pear is such a well-loved object for the still life that there is actually an entire site dedicated to pears in art, call Pear-A-Thon. This is what they have to say:
We love pears. Their variety of color, their subtle and curvaceous shape, their leaning toward or away. And those stems! Words cannot describe the pert salute of a jaunty stem atop a luscious pear. As artists, we love to eat, draw, and paint pears. And it is to this, and this alone, that we have dedicated this website - the art of the pear.
Uploaded
December 9th, 2012
Statistics
Viewed 549 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 04/17/2024 at 6:29 AM
Embed
Share
Sales Sheet