Yes, why not a standard Wisteria? I grow the plain purple 'common' kind that way. It is trained on a single steel star-dropper - 3 winged fence post, 3m long with one metre driven into the ground, even so the Wisteria has pushed the post over at an angle after 35 yrs. Every now and then the top growth gets top heavy and threatens to break off at some point in the umbrella of crown growth so I saw off a few of the bigger branches thus reducing the weight and the risk. This also rejuvenates the plant. It sprouts new growth EVERYWHERE, so I have to go back to rigorous removals and considered pruning. It's not that hard and much better than the huge out of control birds-nests one sees on many a shopping centre veranda, and on many a home pergola. I once advised in a garden planted in the 1870's - a white Wisteria planted at the time on a strong jarrah (hard-wood) pergola walk; the thing had possibly never been pruned. In that time it had climbed into nearby gum trees and a row of poplars for more than 200 ft, smothered numerous camellias, rhodo's and Japanese maples, and lifted the whole pergola clear out of the ground to the point that during a severe gale the whole mess - Wisteria, trees, shrubs and pergola came crashing down. I love my Wisterias, about to flower now, but they do need appropriate care even if you do have a 100 hectare garden!