At a recent Weschler’s auction in Washington, D.C., Green-Wood’s  permanent residents did very well. The top lot of the auction was “A  Young Aspiring Sailor” by John George Brown (1831-1913), which soared to  $192,950. A  native of England, Brown studied painting there, then came to America  in 1853 and settled in Brooklyn. There he continued to refine his  technique and developed a specialization: sentimental paintings of  street children, often newsboys and bootblacks, which earned him  national fame. Brown explained his choice of subject: “I do not paint  poor boys solely because the public likes them and pays me for them, but  because I love the boys myself, for I was once a poor lad.” His art  made him a wealthy man and he invested in New York real estate. He was  elected president of the National Academy of Design in 1869 and served  as vice president of the Water Color Society. During the last ten years  of his life he stored many paintings in a safe deposit box, to be sold  by his family after his death, when, it was hoped, prices for his work  would increase. John George Brown is interred at Green-Wood in section 102, lot 10897.
The second highest price of the auction was $43,475. That amount was  paid for a Tiffany Studios favrile glass and gilt bronze 12-light “Lily”  floor lamp, dating circa 1910. It is shown above. Louis Comfort Tiffany  (1848-1933) was born  in New York City, where his father had founded of Tiffany & Co.,  the famous jewelry store, Louis Comfort Tiffany grew up immersed in art  and became famous for his pioneering work in stained glass.  Early  on, Louis expressed no interest in the family business and focused on  painting, studying with landscapist George Inness and creating  landscapes, still lifes, and genre scenes. With an interest in Islam and  art of the Far East, Tiffany studied Middle Eastern Art in Paris.  Throughout the 1870s, he exhibited his paintings widely. By 1875,  Tiffany had developed a method of putting a full range of colors into  glass, and that led to fame for the windows and lamps he created.  However, he did not completely forsake painting, and 1886, 1916, and  1917, he traveled West where he visited Yellowstone National Park;  dramatic landscape paintings resulted. Tiffany produced a broad range of  art: stained glass windows and lamps, Favrile blown glass, mosaics,  jewelry, metalwork, and enamels. Though the popularity of his work waned  in his later years and after his death, his work has undergone a  tremendous surge in popularity. Tiffany is interred in section 65/66, lot 619.