50 years ago, this Maud Lewis painting bought a grilled cheese sandwich. Now it's up for auction
CBC
A Maud Lewis painting received as payment for a grilled cheese sandwich at a London, Ont., restaurant almost 50 years is expected to fetch up to $35,000 at auction.
The painting of a black truck travelling along a road is the work of one of Canada's premier folk artists, who died in 1970 in Digby, N.S., at age 69.
It was made for London artist John Kinnear, who took a shine to Lewis, then scraping by as an unknown, selling paintings by the side of the road for as little as $10 in her native Nova Scotia.
Kinnear used to regularly send Lewis paints and prepared boards, according to Irene Demas, who knew Kinnear when he and his wife Audrey were regulars at the downtown restaurant she owned with her husband Tony in the 1970s.
"They would have lunch in the front window and almost every day, they were there," Demas said. "We weren't really running a tab. I don't know how it worked out with my husband, but John and Audrey would have lunch and we would end up with a painting."
Kinnear was English, very reserved and, apparently, a creature of habit. Demas said he wouldn't eat anything else except grilled cheese sandwiches.
"He would not try anything else," said Demas.
"I was a young chef in my twenties, and the culinary world was changing and there were new things I wanted people to try, and I could not get him to eat anything except a grilled cheese sandwich."
Demas recalled one day when her husband Tony came into the kitchen where she worked to tell her Kinnear had brought a number of paintings and he wanted her to pick out the one she liked. She came into the dining room to find the colourful paintings on chairs and leaning against glassware on the tables.
"I just sort of stood back because it was very, very different from anything I had ever seen before," she said. "At first I thought: 'Is this some kind of joke they're playing on me? Did a child paint these? These are so primitive and child-like.'"
Kinnear told Demas the story of a "bird-like" woman he'd met in Nova Scotia, and started to help develop the struggling artist by sending her supplies and aiding her efforts to sell her paintings in Ontario.
"I really had a hard time picking a painting that I liked," Demas said. "I remember seeing the cats, the cows or oxen, and none of them caught my eye as much as this little black truck.
"I was pregnant at the time and I thought, 'Well, I'm going to have a boy and we can always hang this in his room,' so that's how we ended up with the little black truck.'"
It turns out Demas chose well, according to Ethan Miller, chief executive officer and auctioneer at Miller & Miller Auctions in New Hamburg, Ont., who said the painting is rare and a striking example of Lewis's work.