C. P. Ream

Cadurcis Plantagenet Ream, also referred to as Carducius Plantagenet Ream (May 8 1838, Sugar Grove, Ohio - 20 June 1917, Chicago), was an American still-life painter who specialized in fruit. The currently handy art gallery and biographical sources are nearly evenly at odds as to what his actual first reveal was. Some meet the expense of both.

His father, Jonas Alexander Ream (1809-1882), a country lawyer, was originally from Pennsylvania. His younger brother, Morston Constantine Ream (1840-1898), also became a still-life painter. He first expressed an interest in art at the age of ten, and most sources indicate that he was self-taught. In the late 1850s, he displayed some of his first works at a photography shop owned by R. B. Douglas in Cleveland.[citation needed]

Around 1866, he moved to New York and sold some works at an auction in the Henry H. Leeds & Miner art gallery. In the 1870s he began a collaboration following the lithographer Louis Prang to Make a series of works under the title "Desserts". Later, he opened a studio similar to his brother, Morston.[citation needed]

Seeking supplementary markets, he moved to Chicago in 1878 and customary a studio with (Judge Freer?). He soon began to exhibit regularly at the Art Institute of Chicago. This led to showings at the National Academy of Design, the Brooklyn Art Association and the Royal Academy of London. He was one of the first artists to employ professional "boosters" to advertise his works and he held his own auctions. In the 1880s, he often travelled to Europe, which included some era at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich,[citation needed] spent as soon as his fellow Ohioan, Frank Duveneck.

In 1882, he married Maria Gatzmeyer, a Franco-German from Hanover, who was twenty-six years his junior. She and their only son apparently remained in Germany, where he spent at least three months out of every year.

In 1899, his painting "Purple Plums" became the first exploit by a local artist to be included in the surviving collection at the Institute. By 1900, he was hardship from merged health problems, including deafness. His last exhibit was at the Institute in 1909, when he became paralyzed in his right hand, probably from a stroke. By 1913, he was bedridden and remained as a result until his death.

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