Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 716 – Higgins and Puthuff

Part 716: Higgins and Puthuff

Victor Higgins, A.N.A. (1884-1949) and Hans Duvall Puthuff (1875-1972) created a unique work of art for Sosman & Landis shop foreman, Charles E. Boyer during the early twentieth century.

Victor Higgins

Thomas G. Moses mentioned Boyer’s departure from Sosman & Landis in 1909. Four years earlier, he mentioned Higgins’ first departure from the scenic studio. In 1905, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Victor Higgins, one of our promising young men, quit to take up picture painting and started with a strong determination to win, and I think he will.” He did succeed, yet returned to paint theatrical scenery, time and time again. Moses records one of the returns in 1909.

Higgins, was a close friend of Thomas G. Moses, remaining close until Moses’ death in 1934. Higgins was born in Shelbyville, Indiana, leaving home and entering the Chicago Art Institute at the age of fifteen. It was during his time in Chicago that Higgins also began painting for the theatre. Higgins worked at Sosman & Landis alongside well-known artists such as Art Oberbeck, Fred Scott, Edgar Payne, Ansel Cook,Walter C. Hartson, William Nutzhorn, David Austin Strong, and Hans Puthuff. Higgins also worked for New York Studios, the eastern affiliate of Sosman & Landis. In New York, he painted with William Smart, Art Rider, and Al Dutheridge. While in New York, he also studied with Robert Henri, a leading figure of the Ashcan school of art before heading to Europe for further artistic instruction in Paris and Munich.

Victor Higgins
Victor Higgins

While traveling abroad, he sent Moses several postcards at the studio. By 1909, however, Higgins briefly returned to work for Sosman & Landis, decorating the interior for the American Music Hall in Chicago. In 1912 Higgins was still spending significant time in Chicago, Higgins exhibited artwork with the Palette & Chisel Club, earning national recognition and the Gold Medal in 1913. Other artistic awards received by Higgins included the Municipal Art League (1915), the Logan Medal of the Art Institute of Chicago (1917), and the first Altman prize for the National Academy of Design (1918). His work eventually became part of permanent collections of the Art Institute in Chicago, the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C., and the Los Angeles museum.

I am intrigued that Higgins, after all his fine art studies with various masters in Chicago, New York, Paris and Munich returned to periodically paint at Sosman & Landis. It says a lot about the camaraderie, especially in light of his traveling to California with fellow scenic artist for a sketching trip and their gifting a painting to the shop foreman.

Hanson Duvall Puthuff, Higgins’ co-worker and traveling companion, is nationally recognized for his paintings of Southern California deserts. Puthuff was considered as a member of the eucalyptus school of California landscape painters. Puthuff was a co-founder of the California Art Club and the Laguna Beach Art Association. An interesting side note is that Moses also belonged to the Laguna Beach Art Association.

Puthuff was born to Alonzo Augustus Duvall and Mary Anne Lee in 1875.  At the age of only two years old, Puthuff’s birth mother died and he was passed into the care of a close family friend – Elizabeth Stadley Puthuff. Elizabeth was a seamstress and young Civil War widow who became surrogate to the young child. He remained in her care until 1889 when he moved to Chicago to study at the Art Institute of Chicago. While in the Midwest he worked in Peoria, Illinois, painting murals in the city hall and local churches, and later moving to Denver where he worked in a variety of capacities, including that of a sign painter. This trip west continued, and Puthuff was soon working in California periodically. His work in Los Angeles included a variety of projects, such as billboard painting for the Wilshire Advertising Firm. His later focus of artistic study became the La Crescenta area around his home, the Sierras, and Arizona. It is noted that Puthuff received his first solo exhibition in 1904, yet continued to return to the scenic studio and paint.

Puthuff won awards in 1909 from the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, the same year that he worked with Higgins at Soman & Landis. He was also awarded a bronze medal at the Paris Salon in 1914. By 1915 he received two silver medals from the Panarama-California Exposition. Puthuffs works are now part of collections in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Laguna Art Museum, Laguna Art Museum, and Bowers Museum, as well as being catalogued in the Smithsonian American Art inventory. In 1926, Puthuff devoted himself to easel art, dying in Corona del Mar on May 12, 1972.

H. Puthuff
H. Puthuff
H. Puthuff
H. Puthuff

There is something to be said about artists who willingly bridged the scenic art and fine art worlds, keeping one foot in each studio. Did both Higgins and Puthuff only return to the scenic studio for a paycheck, or was it something more? Possibly to share the camaraderie of his fellow artists, and working on a communal project. There is something to be said about collaboration and a combined group effort; the joking and laughter of working with and near your fellow artists. Fine art is fulfilling, but often a solitary endeavor. Painting alongside others is an entirely different experience. It is the chatter, as well as the sharing of your soul. Talking about families, or other issues at hand forms that common bond, and possibly life-long friendships.

It is that wonderful feeling of being a creator within a community, just like a musician who plays in a band or orchestra. As Moses suggests in his memoirs, it was always more than studio work – they were a family.

To be continued…

Author: waszut_barrett@me.com

Wendy Rae Waszut-Barrett, PhD, is an author, artist, and historian, specializing in painted settings for opera houses, vaudeville theaters, social halls, cinemas, and other entertainment venues. For over thirty years, her passion has remained the preservation of theatrical heritage, restoration of historic backdrops, and the training of scenic artists in lost painting techniques. In addition to evaluating, restoring, and replicating historic scenes, Waszut-Barrett also writes about forgotten scenic art techniques and theatre manufacturers. Recent publications include the The Santa Fe Scottish Rite Temple: Freemasonry, Architecture and Theatre (Museum of New Mexico Press, 2018), as well as articles for Theatre Historical Society of America’s Marquee, InitiativeTheatre Museum Berlin’s Die Vierte Wand, and various Masonic publications such as Scottish Rite Journal, Heredom and Plumbline. Dr. Waszut-Barrett is the founder and president of Historic Stage Services, LLC, a company specializing in historic stages and how to make them work for today’s needs. Although her primary focus remains on the past, she continues to work as a contemporary scene designer for theatre and opera.

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