Travels of a Scenic Artists and Scholar: Russell Smith’s Paint Studio

The 1858 Thalian Hall drop curtain is a significant artifact within the framework of American history. It is much more than an old piece of scenery created for a theater. This signed drop curtain is a large-scale artwork painted by a nationally recognized artist, one who left a substantial written legacy. Written records of Smith’s design, painting and installation of the curtain provide additional artistic provenance for the piece. Smith’s journal entries provide an extensive historical context not only for the 1858 drop curtain, but also theatre work at the time.

Smith’s memoirs give insight into the life of the artist, his art, and the shift in American theatre practices. Many of his journal entries were interpreted by Virginia Lewis and published in the book “Russell Smith, Romantic Realist.” Of Smith, Lewis wrote, “All through life he enjoyed talking and writing about his scenery work, and liked to explain his philosophy of scene painting, writing many thoughts into his journals.”

When Russell Smith painted the drop curtain destined for Wilmington, North Carolina, he was 46 years old. A well-known and established scenic artist, by this point in his career he had worked for three decades.

Of interest to me is Russell’s studio at Edgehill in Jenkintown, Pennsylvania. He built his studio specifically for painting drops that he sometimes referred to as the “painting room for the Academy of Music.” This provided better light and a quiet environment to focus on his painting. A private studio space was preferable to the traditional one used by most artists in the theater. Most often, scenic artists painted scenery on frames that existed in the theater that they were creating scenery for at the time. However, a theater space was often busy with the hustle and bustle of rehearsals and stage preparation prior to a production. As there were fewer people watching him work, it is likely that criticisms and “suggestions” were kept to a minimum – a benefit when working off site. Smith suffered from chronic headaches throughout his entire life; to create art in the peace and quiet of his own studio must have been a relief from the noise of a commercial space.

Of Smith’s studio at Edgehill, Lewis notes that a frame structure was attached to the wing of the stone house. Smith wrote: “After the refreshment of sleep I would lie an hour and plan in my mind my day’s work – contrive the composition, dispose the masses of light, shade and color; and go over more than once, in fact, think it out; so that when I came before the canvas after breakfast, I never hesitated or lost time rubbing out, but went straight forward, and by night there would often be a finished scene. Some of the other prominent scene painters, Coyle and Jones, for instance, would express their surprise at the directness and the speed with which I pushed forward. They knew not the cause. But even that speed would not satisfy some stage managers; and I have been induced to paint three entire scenes in forty-two consecutive hours, and they were not simple scenes, like a calm sea and sly, or a quiet lake and distant hills, but represented an encampment, fortifications and a City, for ‘Edward the Black Prince.’”

Smith followed a traditional design process that is still used by many artists today, myself included. The design starts with a pencil drawing, or a simple concept sketch. This initially defines the composition. From this preliminary sketch, a quick painting or study is produced in a slightly larger format. These early works evolve into a finished picture, or scale color rendering that will be used for full scale painted drop. As today, this design process verifies the direction of the composition at every step. Ideally, it prevents a flurry of recommendations and alterations after any on site installation.

Small sketch for the Russell Smith 1858 drop curtain at Thalian Hall in Wilmington, North Carolina. It is approximately 2″ high by 3″ wide – very small. Almost like a sketch on a bar napkin!
1858 drop curtain by Russell Smith shows the final composition, after it evolved during the design process.

However, beauty lies in the eye of the beholder; then, as now, the value of scenic art varies from one to another. In his memoirs, Smith commented that some perceived scenic art as “but a coarse kind of daubing, indeed an inferior trade; and no doubt much of it deserves no higher position-with its want of nature and extreme exaggeration of color. But the best poetry of the Drama justifies the grandest and most beautiful illustration; and if the audience would demand it and the painter could bring to his great canvas sufficient genius a wide experience of nature and mastery of execution, where would lie its inferiority? And how much less would his power of instructing and pleasing be than a painter who strived to do so in the space of a yard or square foot? This was always my estimate of my profession; and I ever strove to sustain it by avoiding all false color, glitter and exaggeration of every kind, whilst striving to represent the most beautiful features of nature, I could see with reverential love of truth. The material, canvas and color, I used were also genuine as that of the best oil pictures; and as I painted in my own painting room, out of town, I was freed form the injudicious dictation of prompters, stage-managers, etc., who care little for real good art and are justly blamed for their shortcomings of the Stage, but who always justify themselves by saying. ‘The business must pay, and therefore it is our duty to give to the public what they want to see.’”

To be continued…

Travels of a Scenic Artists and Scholar: The Russell Smith Curtain, April 23, 2019

I spent much of yesterday examining a drop curtain painted by William Thompson Russell Smith (1812-1896) in 1858. At the time of installation, a local newspaper placed his work alongside that of other scenic artists whose work hung in many prominent New York theaters.

The Russell Smith curtain hanging at Thalian Hall in Wilmington, North Carolina

On October 7, 1858, the “Daily Herald” in Wilmington, North Carolina, reported, “There are many theatres there [New York], but none which possesses even a decent drop curtain as a work of art. Take the great Lyric Temple on Fourteenth Street, what have we there? A large masse of elaborate drawing, a pile of impossible architecture, devoid of the poetry and charm of color, and feeble in light and shade. Again at Burton’s there is an extensive canvass, the subject the town of Miessen, Saxony, celebrated for the clay which forms the world famous Dresden china, treated in a tame and common place style. At Laura Keene’s there is another mass of incongruous architecture, with great plethoric Shakespeare in the centre, at whose feet are some figures of sitting boys holding scrolls, having the appearance of very uncomfortable seat, and dangerous liability of slipping off. At the Broadway, the subject is an allegory, something of Shakespeare-for the Bard of Avon is unmistakably there-but what is about, must ever remain as inscrutable as the Egyptian Sphinx. Then at Wallack’s and the Bowery, we have one, a view on the Hudson, the other the Falls of Niagara, neither possessing a single feature entitling them to rank as works of art. The province of art, as of poetry is to expand the mind, and prepare it for the reception and diffusion of elevated ideas and reflection. And in this respect, has Mr. Smith well chosen his subjects. There are doubtless, who would have preferred a local, or national subject for a drop curtain.

“Without desiring to ignore the beauty of American scenery, or importance of many of our historic annals, let us fairly place the picture before us in the balance, and find out what are its superior attractions and intellectual teachings.

“Americans must bear in mind, that–nationally–we are but infants. We present to the world the nucleus of a great Future, the artist has portrayed the customs and great beauties of the great Past. Therein lies the lesson.

Detail of Russell Smith’s 1858 curtain
Detail of Russell Smith’s 1858 curtain

“On the banks of a beautiful river–an arm perhaps of the fair [Argean]–rises a majestic Temple of the Doric order, grand and imposing in its proportions, pure in details. On the steps of the portico a mystic ceremony is taking place. The Seers, are invoking the protection of the Gods on some favored warrior, perhaps, who is evidently about to embark on a warlike expedition, indicated by the fleet of gallies ‘peacefuly slumbering’ on the golden waters.

Detail of Russell Smith’s 1858 curtain

“When the eye has thoroughly scanned and surveyed the varied beauties of the pictures; then let the mind enquire who were those people who related such imposing edifices, sailed on such gorgeous gallies; and lived in a land of perpetual sunshine?

“As we said before, the picture is a perfect study and well worthy of an extended visit….We predict an entire success to Mr. J. F. Marchant and the new Theatre.”

The fact that this curtain still exists is unbelievable when considering that much of the original scenery was repainted over the years, and then replaced multiple times when the stage was enlarged and repeatedly renovated. The drop itself was widened, shortened and “tweaked.” Regardless of the alterations, Smith’s original design and painting radiate from the fabric.

When looking at the overall history tied to both the curtain and the theater, it is remarkable that anything remains of Smith’s painting. This significant cultural artifact disappeared and reappeared over the years, yet kept returning home. The drop curtain now permanently hangs in the lobby, greeting each new patron who arrives to see a performance at Thalian Hall.

Russell Smith’s curtain at Thalian Hall in Wilmington, North Carolina
Russell Smith’s curtain at Thalian Hall in Wilmington, North Carolina

I am going to devote the few posts to what I discovered yesterday about the drop curtain and the prolific artist who painted it. Simply put, this curtain is a national treasure.

To be continued…

Travels of a Scenic Artists and Scholar: Wilmington, North Carolina, and Scenic Artist Russell Smith

 

My daily blog follows the life and times of Thomas G. Moses (1856-1934), a prolific scenic artist who worked for sixty years behind the curtain line. In 1931, he compiled a typed manuscript that recorded many of his projects over the years. In the early 1990s when I compiled an index for both this typed manuscript and Moses’ scrapbook, I vowed that one day I would go though his writing, line by line, and expand on each specific event and project mentioned by the artist. I am on year 1909.

I have examined not only his work and that of his contemporaries, but also Moses’ predecessors; scenic artists from previous generations who paved the way for the painting techniques employed not only by the artist, but also at the Sosman & Landis studio. One of Moses’ scenic art predecessors was William Thompson Russell Smith (1812-1896).

Smith was integral in the training of Moses’ one time business partner and life-long friend, Walter Burridge. At one time, Burridge worked at various Philadelphia theaters, many the old stomping grounds of Smith. It was the strong recommendation of Smith who supported Burridge’s employment at the Academy of Music, in Baltimore. Burridge was hired to paint some of the scenery for that venue during his early career.

Smith was mentioned in numerous publications over the years, including the article “Curtain and Scene Painting,” published in the “St. Louis Post-Dispatch,” 21 Jan. 1884, page 8. The article reported, “The other first-class curtain painters of the country do not number more than half-dozen. All enjoy national reputations, and their services are in demand to the other.” The article listed those they held in highest regard, including “Russell Smith, formerly of the Academy of Music, Philadelphia, makes a specialty of landscapes.”

Like Moses, Smith left a legacy that extended far beyond examples of his art for the stage or fine art galleries. Smith left a detailed written account of his life, family and projects. In 1856, Virginia E. Lewis wrote “Russell Smith, Romantic Realist.” She does a wonderful job chronicling Smith’s life while incorporating segments of his words. About a year ago, I decided that it was Smith’s scenic art career that I would explore after completing the life and times of Moses. Smith’s generation of scenic artist defined American scenic art techniques, infusing old world artistry with a new spirit. Moses’ generation further developed and shaped the field of subsequent schools of American scenic art.

I am in Wilmington, North Carolina, to give a presentation on 19th century scenic art and historical painting techniques. My trip began after a conversation with D. Anthony “Tony” Rivenbark at the League of Historic American Theater’s national conference last July. He is a nationally recognized theatre historian and Executive Director of Wilmington’s Thalian Hall. Tony shared an image of their extant drop curtain painted by Smith in 1858. Although it is no longer used during performance, the painted curtain has been conserved and is prominently displayed at the Thalian Hall Center for the Performing Arts. Here is a link to the theater: http://www.thalianhall.org/#map

Painted curtain by Russell Smith, 1858.

I am looking forward to seeing it in person today.

To be continued…

Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 726 – Advertising for Sign Painter, 1909

 

Part 726: Advertising for Sign Painter, 1909

Sosman & Landis seldom posted want ads for labor. I have encountered only a few over the years. Often the ads were seeking individuals who possessed basic trade skills, seamstresses and carpenters to fill basic positions without any specialized interests. However, in 1909, there were numerous advertisements placed in the “Chicago Tribune” for sign painters. Here is one example from the “Chicago Tribune” on January 6, 1909 (page 4)

“WANTED-MALE HELP

Sign Painter-First Class. Up to date, on advertising curtains; good chance for young man to learn scene painting business.

SOSMAN & LANDIS CO., Scene Painting Studio, 236-238 Clinton-St.”

Ad placed in the Chicago Tribune, 6 Jan. 1909, page 14.

There are a few things to consider about in regard to the 1909 Sosman & Landis ad. The first is that 1909 is a peak period for Masonic theatre production at the Sosman & Landis Studio, even though fraternal scenery only made up about 25% of all projects. Hundreds of Scottish Rite drops, flats, set pieces, and props are being designed and manufactured in Chicago before they ship to various locations. In 1909, their main studio was swamped with work, as was their second “annex” studio. The production of Masonic scenery requires the studio’s most experienced artists to produce, leaving much other work to second-rate artists employed in the shops.

Other Studio projects included the production of massive scenic spectacles for the Ringling Brothers’ circus. As with Masonic scenery, the production of grand circus spectacles necessitated the use of topnotch artists on staff. In addition to high-end scenery for prestigious clients, there remained endless orders of stock scenery for small town opera houses, vaudeville theaters and music halls. In addition to roll drops, wings, flats, interior box sets and drop curtains, there was the continued demand for advertising curtains. Also referred to as Ad Drops, these compositions required artists to paint hundreds of characters in various fonts, filling the numerous advertising spaces. Although lettering requires skill, it was a trade mastered by many individuals at the time. Various levels of artists painted signage that ranged from commercial billboards to daily placards.

It would make no sense to place any scenic artist on a lettering project that could be completed by any sign painter, temporarily hired off of the street. Sign painting also required skilled artisans, but not with the same training and intuitive sense necessary for figure painting, draperies, landscapes, or other scenic illusions.

What the 1909 Sosman & Landis want ad also suggests is a possible spike in requests for Ad Drops. In the past, I have explored the origin and evolution of advertising curtains, especially those produced by Lee Lash in San Francisco, Philadelphia and New York (see past installments # 578-584). From 1900 through the 1920s, the design and manufacture of advertising curtains was big business that generated massive profits for many studios. For example, when Lee Lash had advertising curtains in 1700 American theatres, it resulted in an annual income of $250,000 (“Star-Gazette,” 4 March, 1973, page 7).

In many cases, studios directly collected the revenue from clients for their advertisements prior to the creation of an Ad Drop. No upfront loss for materials. This also allowed studio to place Ad Drops “free of charge” while even generating income for the theater. Free drop, free installation and possible revenue! The only requirement on the theater’s behalf was that they lower and display the advertising curtain at certain times specified in the contract. This was similar to out current advertisement slots for television programs. Furthermore, the position of advertisements in spaces, as with specific times for television and radio ads, varied in price that was dependent on placement.

In looking at the big picture of theatrical manufacturers during the early twentieth century, the increase in the demand for advertising curtains harkens back to a bustling economy and the expansion of products and services.

To be continued..

Happy Easter!

Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902. The scene was refurbished by Becker Bros. studio in 1927 and delivered to the Scottish Rite in Peoria, Illinois.

Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.
Scenery by Toomey & Volland, ca 1902.

 

 

Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 725 – The Fort Wayne Scottish Rite, 1909

Part 725: The Fort Wayne Scottish Rite, 1909

Postcard of the Fort Wayne Scottish Rite

The Toomey & Volland studio of St. Louis was also installing scenery and stage machinery in Scottish Rite theaters during 1909. One example was the Scottish Rite in Fort Wayne. Here is the article published in the Kansas City Kansas Republic on Dec. 2, 1909.

Illustration accompanying newspaper article about the opening of the Fort Wayne Scottish Rite, 1909

“Finest Cathedral.

Scottish Rite Temple in Fort Wayne is Dedicated.

Masons of High Degrees at Exercises Attending Opening of $200,000 Temple-Has a Fine Banquet.

Fort Wayne, Ind. –The new Scottish Rite cathedral in Fort Wayne, costing about $200,000, and said to be the finest in America, was dedicated on the evening of November 17 in the order from most of the larger cities of the far east and middle west. The dedication was preceded by a banquet-room. At which 1,000 plated were laid. The banqet-room of the cathedral fills the entire ground floor and is one of the largest and most ornate halls in the west.

Owning to the illness of Sovereign Grand Commander Samuel C. Lawrence, 33, of Boston, the master of ceremonies was Barton Smith of Toledo, 33, puissant lieutenant grand commander, assisted by John Corson Smith, 33, grand minister of the state. William Geake, 33, of this city, commander-in-chief of the Fort Wayne Sovereign Consistory, assisted in the dedication.

The dedication was held at the regular time of the fall meeting of the consistory for the Valley of Fort Wayne, and 300 took the Scottish Rite degrees. Degrees were given from the fourth to the Thirty-second. Heretofore this valley had no jurisdiction beyond the eighteenth degree, and the degrees from the 19 to 32 were conferred here for the first time. As the consistory has already nearly 1,100 members, the Fort Wayne consistory has become one of the largest in the country.

The cathedral, which was designed by Mahurin & Mahurin of Fort Wayne, is a at Clinton and Washington streets, in the residence section, with the handsome First Presbyterian church across the street. It is built of Bedford stone on all sides and is thoroughly fireproof, being finished within with concrete floors, marble stairways and wainscoting, and iron balustrades. Some rooms are finished in Cuban mahogany, but there is very little inflammable material anywhere. The heating is by steam and the lighting by electricity.

The cathedral is three stories high, with a spacious basement. The ground floor will be the banquet and ballrooms, with galleries. The social rooms are on the second floor, which is also provided with quarters for the ladies. There is also a room for the Mystic Shrine. The third floor is occupied by the consistory auditorium, which is arranged on the stadium plan with tiers of opera chairs rising steeply, so that those in the rear seats can all see the work on the large floor below. There are seats for nearly 600 in this auditorium. The organ loft is in the north and at the south end there is a spacious stage provided with scenery, the work of a St. Louis firm.

The proscenium arch is elaborate with the designs and emblems of the several degrees. The decorative design and color scheme were the work of a Chicago firm. The organ was made in Rock Island at a cost of $6,000.”

Here is a link to the Consecration and dedication of the Scottish Rite Cathedral, Valley of Fort Wayne, Indiana, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, November 16, 17, 18, 1909, on the Internet Archive:

https://archive.org/details/consecrationdedi00unse/page/n7

Consecration and dedication of the Scottish Rite Cathedral, Valley of Fort Wayne, Indiana, 1909
Consecration and dedication of the Scottish Rite Cathedral, Valley of Fort Wayne, Indiana, 1909

This building on the corner of Washington and Berry Streets no longer exists. In 1953, the Fort Wayne Scottish Rite bought the Mizpah Shrine building on the corner of Ewing and West Berry. Constructed in 1925, the Shrine building had a seating capacity of 2,400 that hosted a variety of non-Masonic events and has quite and interesting history. Unfortunately, the Fort Wayne Scottish Rite left this home too when St. Francis University purchased the structure in 2012. Here is an article about the Shrine building, second home to the Fort Wayne Scottish Rite: http://historycenterfw.blogspot.com/2012/01/scottish-rite-history-in-fort-wayne.html

To be continued…

Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 724 – The Temple Theatre in Rochester, 1909

Part 724: The Temple Theatre in Rochester, 1909

Sosman & Landis delivered stock scenery, an asbestos curtain and a drop curtain to the Temple Theatre in Rochester, New York, in 1909. The Temple Theater was located just across the street from the popular Lyceum Theatre on Clinton Street. This was the same year that they also delivered Masonic scenery to Scottish Rite theaters in Winona, Minnesota, Kansas City, Kansas, Dallas, Texas, Atlanta, Georgia, and Memphis, Tennessee.

Postcard of the Temple Theatre in Rochester, New York.
The Temple Theatre across from the Lyceum Theatre in Rochester, New York.

On September 22, 1909, and advertisement for the Cook Opera House was placed in the “Rochester Democrat and Chronicle,” noting that it was “to be succeeded in November by the Temple Theatre as Rochester’s Home of International Vaudeville” (page 16). As the Cook Theatre, it was the present home of “J. H. Moore Vaudeville” (Democrat and Chronical, 14 March 1909, page 24).

There were venues known as “Temple Theatres” across the country, many managed by the Knights of Pythias. There were many other Temple Theatres in 1909, including those in Alton, Illinois, Youngstown, Ohio, New Orleans, Louisiana, Palestine, Texas, and Detroit, Michigan, to name a few.

In regard to the new Temple Theatre in Rochester, he “Democrat and Chronicle” reported, “[the Temple Theatre] will have the most complete vaudeville house on the American continent” (25 October 1909, page 10). Architect Leon H. Lempert drew the plans and supervised the construction of the theater. Of the installation, the article continued,

“The stage scenery is from the studios of Sosman & Landis of Chicago, and a carload of scenery will arrive in the city next week, several other cars of scenery following rapidly. The asbestos, or fire curtain, will be the first to be placed so as to avoid wrinkling and the beautiful drop curtain will be the last thing.

This drop curtain will be a picture of Marie Antoinette receiving Louis XVI at Versailles. The scenic equipment itself is perhaps the most elaborately ever placed in a vaudeville theater in the world, and the subjects as well as the designs of the interior scenes were carefully selected at a conference of the artists, the owners and the architect. J. H. Moore gave carte blanche for this work. And the cost of the decorations and scenery alone is more than the cost of the average theatre.”

Of the other elaborate decorations in the new Temple Theater in Rochester included fresco work was completed by Charles S. Allen of New York. The article noted that he worked on the ceiling with “a dozen Italian artists” who were brought to this country to decorate the home of Charles M. Schwab, the steel magnate. Furthermore. The mural paintings on the soundboard above he proscenium arch were painted by Raphael Beck, an artist from Buffalo, New York. Beck had exhibited his work at the Pan-American Exposition.”

Program for the Temple Theatre in Rochester, New York.

To be continued…

Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 723 – Kansas City Scottish Rite, 1904, 1906 and 1909

Part 723: Kansas City Scottish Rite, 1904, 1906 and 1909

In 1909, Sosman & Landis provided a second set of scenery for the Scottish Rite in Kansas City, Kansas. The history of the Kansas City Scottish Rite is a little confusing. There were two Kansas City Scottish Rites, one in Kansas and one in Missouri. This makes it difficult when tracking down information about either one, as the same newspapers often published information without specifying the state.

In 1904, Sosman & Landis delivered a first set of scenery to the Kansa City, Kansas, Scottish Rite (see past post 692). This was the same year that the company also produced Scottish Rite scenery for Fort Scott, Kansas. The first Kansas City, Kansas, Scottish Rite was designed by architect W. W. Rose, and located at the corner of 7th and Ann Street. On April 1, 1904, The Lincoln Journal included an article on the new building, however a description of the stage area and scenery was absent. It was intentionally concealed from the public for the event, closed off with a curtain. The article only noted that the stage was “thirty-two feet deep and thirty seven feet to the gridiron and has a full equipment of scenery and appointments including a switchboard, which controls every light in the room from the stage.” Unfortunately, the stage, auditorium and building all went up in flames only two years later.

During October 1906, the three-story building caught fire during a street fair. The Iola Daily Record reported that the Masonic Temple, its entire contents, two residences adjoining the block, and half of the booths at the street fair were destroyed by fire (October 20, 1906, page 1). The cause of the fire was the explosion of a gasoline stove in the booth occupied by the ladies of the Central Christian Church. The flames spread rapidly throughout the booths, and the Masonic Temple was the first building to suffer damage on the corner of Seventh Street and Ann Avenue. All efforts to save the structure proved futile. Among the losses were Scottish Rite paraphernalia and stage settings, valued at $50,000; their insurance only covered $16,000 of the loss (Kansas City Gazette. 27 Oct. 1906, page 1). Other newspapers reported the loss paraphernalia, furniture, fixtures and stage scenery, was valued $20,000 and only insured for $6,500 (Kansas City Gazette. 27 Oct 1909, page 1). Many other Masonic bodies in the building also lost uniforms, regalia, ritual and records, including Wyandotte Lodge No. 3, the oldest Masonic lodge in Kansas.

On October 27, 1906, the Kansas City Gazette reported “The Masons Will Rebuild.” The article quoted R. J. McFarland, general secretary of the Scottish Rite, who said, “We have definitely decided on a magnificent building to be erected on our property at Seventh and Ann at a cost of $10,000. As we depend entirely on our members it must be through them that we raise the amount necessary. We will hold a meeting Wednesday evening of all Scottish Rite bodies to discuss various plans regarding funding.” Grand Commander James D. Richardson and grand secretary Frederick W. Webber, or Washington, D.C. were in attendance at the meeting.

The Scottish Rite bodies approved plans for the new Masonic Temple on June 5, 1907. Again W. W. Rose designed the new four-story structure that included a sixty-foot frontage on Seventh street and a depth of 136 feet on Ann Avenue. The exterior of the building was noted as a mixture of “Hebrew and Arabic,” with the roof being supported by “Moorish pillars” (The Weekly News, 7 June 1907, page 1). The auditorium and stage were located on the second, third and fourth floors, with the fly loft rising to the roof. The large space included a forty-foot stage and balcony with a seating capacity of 800.

Description of the new Scottish Rite Building i Kansas City, Kansas, 1909.
The Kansas City, Kansas, Scottish Rite building, 1909.
Aerial view of the Kansas City, Kansas, Scottish Rite building.
Detail of fly loft in an aerial view of the Kansas City, Kansas, Scottish Rite building.

In 1909, the new Scottish Rite building was dedicated in Kansas City, Kansas. The Kansas City Times reported, “The Scottish Rite Temple in Kansas City, Kas., which cost $100,000, will be dedicated at 8 o’clock tonight. The ceremony will be performed by James D. Richardson, sovereign grand commander of the Scottish Rite Masonic bodies in the United States. This ceremony will close the twenty-third semi-annual reunion of the Rite in Kansas City, Kas. A class of 150 persons have taken degrees from the fourth to the thirty-second at this reunion” (19 Nov 1909, page 12). The Fall Reunion was the twenty-third for the Valley of Kansas, Orient of Kansas. On the first day of the reunion, Thomas Wentworth Harrison of Topeka, SGIG in Kansas was in attendance (Kansas City Times 18 Nov. 1909, page 1). On the second day of the reunion, the degrees of Victory Chapter Rose Croix were conferred on a class of seventy-five candidates. In the third day, the degrees from nineteen to thirty inclusive in John H. Brown Council Knight Kadosh were conferred to the candidates.

To be continued…

Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 722 – The Palette & Chisel Club Camp at Fox Lake, 1909

Part 722: The Palette & Chisel Club Camp at Fox Lake, 1909

Like theatrical managers, scenic artists also sought to escape the tranquility of the country, escaping the hard work of the studio and the noise of the city. Thomas G. Moses wrote of summer sketching trips to Fox Lake, Illinois, throughout the early twentieth century, especially in 1909.

In 1905 the Palette & Chisel Club at the Chicago Society of Artists formed an artistic community along in Fox Lake. The club was founded in 1895 and consisted of a variety of artists and craftsmen for the purpose of work and study. The members were “all wage-workers, busy during the week with pencil, brush or chisel, doing work to please other people” (Inland Printer, 1896). On Sunday mornings, they gathered for five hours to paint just for themselves.

Fox Lake provided haven far away from the hustle and bustle of Chicago. Many Sosman & Landis artists journeyed to Fox Lake whenever they could escape the studio for a few days, including Moses. In the beginning, the site was quite rustic with tents and cots. In 1906, one year after the group formed the camp, Moses joined the Palette and Chisel Club. At the time, the group consisted of approximately sixty local painters, illustrators, and sculptors. Of Moses’s first trip to their seasonal camp, he wrote, “June 1st, I made my first trip to the Palette and Chisel Club camp at Fox Lake, Ill. Helped to put up the tent. A new experience for me, but I enjoyed it. I slept well on a cot. Made a few sketches. A very interesting place. I don’t like the cooking in the tent and there should be a floor in the tent. I saw a great many improvements that could be made in the outfit and I started something very soon.”

The Palette & Chisel Club camp tent at Fox Lake. Photograph taken by Stuart Fullerton.
The portable house purchased by Thomas G. Moses for the Palette & Chisel Club camp.

By 1908, Moses wrote, “I bought the portable house that we built years ago and at that time we received $300.00 for it. I finally got it for $50.00, some bargain. It cost $25.00 to remove it and we will put it up at Fox Lake in the Spring.” The house had been used in Forest Park that summer to show the attraction, “The Day in the Alps.”

The next summer, Moses wrote, “As we had put up the portable house in Fox Lake, I was better contented to go up. I gave the camp a portable kitchen and it was some class. I felt sure I would manage to get a camp outfit worth while and the boys all fell in line with me.” In 1909, he also wrote, “I also enjoyed sketching at the Lake. That is one thing I don’t think I could ever get enough of. But our business has to be taken care of before too much pleasure.”

There were two significant events over the course of the last five years that placed Fox Lake in more of a personal context for me. The first occurred in Minnesota, and the second occurred in Maui. In 2014, I discovered a map to Fox Lake drawn on the backside of a Scottish Rite drop destined for Winona, Minnesota, in 1909. This was the same year that Moses wrote, ““As we had put up the portable house in Fox Lake, I was better contented to go up.” Located near the top batten on the stage right side, I discovered the pencil sketch while placing the Winona scenery collection into temporary storage for the City of Winona. The backdrop was later sold in an online auction with many others from the scenery collection. It is now somewhere in storage at the Des Moines Scottish Rite, likely not to be seen for years.

Map on the back of Fox Lake drawn in the back of a scene painted for the Scottish Rite in Winona, Minnesota, 1909

The second event occurred in 2017. That fall, three very small paintings by Thomas G. Moses came into my possession from Moses. One of his great grandchildren sold these and a few others to me. Our friendship began, after he responded to a 1996 letter that I sent out in 2016. Three of the paintings from his collection were of the same size and vintage, with one titled “Fox Lake, 1909.” The other two depicted a distant lake and the Palette & Chisel Club’s portable house at Fox Lake. These three scenes painted on hardboard had remained with the family for decades; they meant something special to Moses.

Painting of the Fox Lake cabin of the Palette & Chisel Club camp by Thomas G. Moses, 1909
A view of Fix Lake painted by Thomas G. Moses, 1909
A view of Fix Lake painted by Thomas G. Moses, 1909

It was Moses’ view of Fox Lake that prompted my entire journey to the Hawaiian Islands.

They each remain a lovely reminder to me – take time for yourself. We all need to enjoy some form of scenic retreat, a respite from the daily grind. That is one of the reasons that I decided to start offering Scenic Art Retreats last year, hosted by Historic Stage Services. They are held at a stagecoach stop along a picturesque river in central Minnesota. Here is the link: http://www.historicstageservices.com/training.html

 

To be continued…

Tales from a Scenic Artist and Scholar. Part 721 – Where the Managers Will Swing Hammocks, 1909

Part 721: Where the Managers Will Swing Hammocks, 1909

Yesterday I explored Thomas G. Moses’ trip to Oconomowoc, Wisconsin. He stopped to visit theatrical manager Charles E. Kohl at his summer home, “Brier Cottage.” While researching the background for this story, I came across an interesting wonderful about the summer homes of theatrical managers. It was published in the “Chicago Tribune” on June 13, 1909:

“The call of the wild seems to have a peculiar charm for those engaged in theatrical business. Actors and managers alike are anxious to get back to nature during the brief intervals of leisure that an exacting business permits, particularly in the summer season when the pressure slackens and the charm, of the good old summer is potent.

Chicago managers like their associates in the east, most of whom have summer houses on seashore or mountain are quite given to indulging in the pleasures of country life.

Milward Adams of the Auditorium has a beautiful rustic place I upper Michigan. Will J. Davis has long possessed a big farm called Willowdale, near Elkhart, Ind. where he is always happiest when dispensing hospitality to his friends.

Charles E. Kohl, who, although unassuming to a degree, is the most influential personage in American vaudeville, has one of the show places in Lac La Belle, Oconomowoc, a place which twenty years of liberal expenditure and hard work have developed from the virgin forest into an ideal summer home.

Summer house of Charles E. Kohl

Harry J. Powers long ago selected Geneva lake as the place where, with the aid of his family, he could recuperate during the salad season, when every prospect pleases and only business is vile.

The Hamlins of the Grand opera house have for many seasons enjoyed a lodge in the wilderness of the Adirondacks which possesses ten thousand charms at every turn for the lover of nature.

 

George Lederer finds the seashore to his taste and F. Wight Neumann, who has blossomed into the dignified estate of operatic impresario, inhabits a Massachusetts cottage when not hunting the coy and elusive sing bird in Europe.

 

Lyman B. Glover, manager of the Majestic theater, is one of the latest victims of this longing for nature, having purchased last year a valuable vineyard and fruit farm in the heart of the Michigan fruit belt and on the shored of beautiful Eagle lake. Here he may loaf and invite his soul on an occasional summer day. Perhaps living in an atmosphere of illusion sharpens the theatrical appetite for nature’s own charming reality”

 

To be continued…