Advertisement Curtain (Ad Drop) in the Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota.
Ad drop. Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota.Detail. Ad drop. Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of MN.Detail. Ad drop. Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of MN.Detail. Ad drop. Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of MN.Detail. Ad drop. Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of MN.Detail. Ad drop. Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of MN.Detail. Ad drop. Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of MN.Detail. Ad drop. Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of MN.
Garden drop design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota, ca. 1905-1910.
Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co.
This is part of the Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.
Painted detail. Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. Painted detail. Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. Painted detail. Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. Painted detail. Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. Painted detail. Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. Painted detail. Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co.
The Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Holak Collection, Northwest Studios Collection and Great Western Stage Equipment Co. Collection are all part of an online searchable database. There are over 3000 images of historic designs produced by American scenic studios.
Design for an olio drop by John Z. Wood, representing the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Olio drop design by John Z. Wood. twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Painted detail. Olio drop design by John Z. Wood. twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Painted detail. Olio drop design by John Z. Wood. twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Painted detail. Olio drop design by John Z. Wood. twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Painted detail. Olio drop design by John Z. Wood. twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Painted detail. Olio drop design by John Z. Wood. twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Painted detail. Olio drop design by John Z. Wood. twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Painted detail. Olio drop design by John Z. Wood. twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.
This is part of the Twin City Scenic Co, Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries. The Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Holak Collection, Northwest Studios Collection and Great Western Stage Equipment Co. Collection are all part of an online searchable database.
Design for an olio drop by John Z. Wood, representing the Twin City Scenic Co. This is part of the Twin City Scenic Co, Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.
Olio design by John Z. WoodPainted detail from olio design by John Z. WoodPainted detail from olio design by John Z. WoodPainted detail from olio design by John Z. WoodPainted detail from olio design by John Z. WoodSignature by John Z. Wood near damage at right.
The Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Holak Collection, Northwest Studios Collection and Great Western Stage Equipment Co. Collection are all part of an online searchable database.
Design for an olio drop by John Z. Wood, representing the Twin City Scenic Co. Information on the back of the color rendering notes that the composition depicts Bordighera, Italy. This is part of the Twin City Scenic Co, Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.
Bordighera olio drop design, Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Detail. Bordighera olio drop design, Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Detail. Bordighera olio drop design, Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Detail. Bordighera olio drop design, Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Detail. Bordighera olio drop design, Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Detail. Bordighera olio drop design, Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Detail. Bordighera olio drop design, Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Detail of Bordighera, Italy, in the distance. Bordighera olio drop design, Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries.Historic photograph of Bordighera, Italy.
The Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Holak Collection, Northwest Studios Collection and Great Western Stage Equipment Co. Collection are all part of an online searchable database. Here is the link to the database with over 3000 images of historic designs produced by American scenic studios: https://umedia.lib.umn.edu/search?facet_field=collection_name_s&facets%5Bcollection_name_s%5D%5B%5D=Scenic+Collections
I post a historic scene every day to my FB Group Dry Pigment and my FB Page Wendy Rae Waszut-Barrett.
For the past few weeks, I have been posting some of the scenic art designs by John Z. Wood; designs that he completed for the Twin City Scenic Co of Minneapolis, MN. Here is the fascinating tale of this primarily unknown artist. His artistic gifts were extraordinary and his life has been all but forgotten.
Designs by John Z. Wood in the Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives, University of Minnesota. These designs are available online at https:// umedia.lib.umn.edu/ search?facet_field=collecti on_name_s&facets%5Bcollect ion_name_s%5D%5B0%5D=Sceni c+CollectionsDetail fo design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.Design by John Z. Wood for the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
John Z. Wood was born in England and moved to London,
Ontario as a small child. His family moved again when he was eleven years old,
taking up permanent residence in Rochester, New York. Wood enlisted in the 1st
Battalion of the New York National Guards, Light Artillery, on August 2, 1864
and served until his discharged on Nov. 22 of that same year. Returning to Rochester
after the Civil War, Wood initially worked as a decorative painter at Lang’s
Children Carriage Factory and then as a sign painter for Frank Van Doorn.
In the late 1860s, Wood joined a local art club called
the Goose Grease Club, attending informal gatherings at the studio of William
Lockhart in Rochester’s Palmer building. By the 1870s, Wood had opened his own
private studio at the Baker building, sharing the space with Lockhart. Seth C.
Jones later joined their studio. During this same time he also worked for the
Mensin, Rahn, and Stecher Lithographic Co., later known as Stecher Lithographic
Co. , known for its beautiful fruit crate labels and nurserymen crates. After
becoming a fairly well- ecognized artist, Wood worked as an instructor for the
Mechanics Institute in Rochester.
By 1872, Wood helped found the Rochester Sketch Club along
with James Hogarth Dennis (1839-1914), J. Guernsey Mitchell (1854-1921), James
Somerville (1849-1905), Harvey Ellis (1852-1904), and William Lockhart
(1846-1881). Wood, however, was the instigator, organizer and promoter of the
group. Within five years, club became the Rochester Art Club. In 1874, the
Rochester Academy of Art, also emerged as an offshoot of the Rochester Sketch
Club. The Rochester Art Club incorporated in 1882, with Wood not only serving
as Treasurer (1877-1882), but also Vice President (1889-1891) and President
(1894). In 1883, a newspaper review described Wood’s contribution to the
Rochester Art Club. Of his oil painting depicting two boys fishing, the review
commented, “It gives him opportunity to apply his knowledge of anatomical
drawing and his skill in producing excellent color effects. It is one of Mr.
Wood’s best productions” (Democrat and Chronicle, 20 May 1883, page 4).
For the Club’s educational oferings, a room was secured
at the Rochester Savings Bank Building. This became their headquarters with a
small faculty consisting of Horatio Walker (water color), James H. Dennis
(oil), John Z. Wood (drawing), Harvey Ellis (composition), and Ida C. Taylor
(painting). By 1890, the Rochester City
Directory listed Wood as a designer.
However, in 1892 the Directory listed John Z. Wood as
“removed to Chicago, Ill.” That year, Wood traveled to the Chicago World Fair
with fellow artist James Somerville. Life was on the up and up, and it was around
this time that Wood became a member of New York’s Salmagundi Club, the same
fine art group that Thomas G. Moses joined in 1904. Their paths possibly
crossed during the turn-of-the-century in either Chicago or New York.
The first mention of John Z. Wood as a scenic artist,
however, is in 1889. That year, he and
Dennis Flood painted scenery for the H. R. Jacobs Opera House in Syracuse, New
York. It was quite a lucrative contract and Flood would later be noted as
Wood’s “life-time friend.” Newspaper articles noted that the pair painted not
only a 25’ x 28’ drop curtain, but also the stock scenery. The drop curtain
depicted an elaborate conservatory with a tropical garden view in the distance.
Spending several weeks on site, they painted remaining stock sets that included
a palace exterior, a fancy interior, a dark wood exterior, a classical garden,
a rocky pass, a mountain landscape, a pastoral landscape, and a lakeside
exterior. He dabbled in the theater while continuing to work as a fine artist,
designer and art instructor, saving up what money he could.
Despite his success in fine art and some early theatre
designs, Wood’s career hit a major obstacle in 1896 that resulted in a
substantial financial loss. Wood
had a financially devastating incident that involved his stepson Howard C.
Tuttle, one that ended in family betrayal and subsequent financial ruin.
Wood had known his stepson since he was born on Nov. 12, 1874. In 1875, Wood
lived with the Tuttles; boarding with Charles, Nellie (Evalyn) and their newborn
son Howard. It was short lived as Charles left Nellie, married his mistress
Rosalie Graves and celebrated the birth of his second child Lillian that same
year. Nellie and Howard C. moved in with her parents, Horace C. and Esther
Rose; her father was a painter. Interestingly, Wood was now a boarder at the
Rose home. Wood eventually married Nellie by 1886 and helped raise her son.
On July 30, 1896, Rochester’s “Democrat and Chronicle”
reported, “Bad Predicament of a Young Man.
Horace C. Tuttle Spent the Money of His Parents. His Arrest Followed. The Man Represented to Them That He Wanted
the Money to Engage in Business in New York – Taken on a Minor Charge” (page
9). Tuttle was arrested at Batavia on a charge of skipping a board bill and
that’s when the truth came out about his financial antics. The article reported that “Young Tuttle’s”
home was at No. 17 Chestnut Street with his stepfather, John Z. Wood, who is an
artist with a studio in the Reynold’s Arcade.”
In short, Tuttle became dissatisfied with “his small salary and the hard
work he had to do” at Miler’s Piano Store and made up his mind to do business
on a larger scale. He unfolded to his
stepfather and his mother the outlines of a plan that he said would make him
speedily rich, telling his parents that he had been engaged as a traveling
salesman with Newby & Evans, piano dealers in New York city, and that it
would take some money to get started.
The cash was forthcoming and the young man departed for New York in high
glee. He soon pretended to be a member of the firm, getting his foster parent
to furnish even more money. You can
already see how this ends; the son doesn’t visit home, the parents get worried
and contact his supposed employer, only to learn that their son doesn’t work
there at all. In the end, the Tuttles lost $4,000, today’s equivalent $110,000.00
today.
This event was like let the instigator that prompted Wood to
seek employment at theaters. At that time, being a scenic artist was a very
lucrative profession, if one was good and fast. The substantial amount that one
could make producing a variety of painted scenes was indicated in the business records
of Thomas G. Moses. A good scenic artist was making today’s equivalent of
175,000-200,000 dollars a year.
In 1898, Wood
was actively working as a scenic artist and painting scenery alongside Gates
& Morange at the New Baker Theatre in New York City. He produced all of the
exterior scenery for the venue, while Gates & Morange completed the
borders, trips, and other specialty drops. Wood soon became an itinerant scenic
artist and followed the work as theatres continued to spring up in the western
United States and Canada. In 1901, the Rochester City Directory listed Wood as
a “scenic painter.” By 1906, he also helped organize an association of
Rochester painters known as the Picture Painters’ Club (Democrat and Chronicle,
15 Feb. 1901, page 8). The club was designed solely for working artists,
similar to Chicago’s Palette and Chisel Club.
Wood began
traveling throughout the country and working as a scenic artist for various
theaters. He travels brought him to Winnipeg, Minneapolis, and Los Angeles.
However, by 1907, Wood
left Rochester, although the city directory continued to list him as a scenic
artist there. For the 1908-1909 season, Wood was listed as the staff scenic
artist at the Winnipeg Theatre. Winnipeg
was the northern terminus of the railway and provided an excellent opportunity for
Wood to work. It also connected him to the Twin Cities in Minnesota. After
painting for the Winnipeg Theatre, Wood journey to Minneapolis, Minnesota, and
painted scenery for a variety of venues. Another Rochester Art Club founder,
Harvey Ellis, had settled in the St. Paul, Minnesota, during 1886, working
throughout the region for seven years before returning to Rochester. Some of Ellis’ designs include the Mabel
Tainter Memorial Building in Menomonie, Wisconsin, and Pillsbury Hall, at the
University of Minnesota campus in Minneapolis (East Bank).
It was in Minneapolis that Wood worked for the Twin City
Scenic Company. Several of Wood’s designs for drop curtains are currently part
of the Twin City Scenic Co. Collection, Performing Arts Archives at the
University of Minnesota Libraries. The backs of some designs include the name Robert J. Mork, a salesman for the
Twin City Scenic Co. A few of Wood’s paintings also have competitive scenic studio
stamps and markings on the backs, such as the Great Western Stage Equipment Co.
By 1911, Wood was again living in the Rochester, with the
Directory listing him as a “scene painter.”
In 1917 he was “recognized as a scenic painter for the
Masonic Temple and other theaters in the city” (Rochester Art Club history
records). His work was for the new 1917 Masonic Temple building that included a
theatre on the third floor.
Only two years after his return to Rochester, Wood was
reported as suffering from “cardio vascular renal” at the Sellwood
hospital in Portland, Oregon, as reported by the “Oregon Daily
Journal.” However, this would not be a contributing factor to his death
two years later. In 1919, Wood’s name would appear in the newspaper one final
time when he was involved in a motor vehicle accident. On November 13, 1919,
George C. Newel caused the death of John Z. Wood, residing at No. 144 South
Ave. Wood was hit by Newell’s automobile when crossing the street. The court
ruled against Newell as he was driving too fast and unable to stop in time.
Wood was only 72 years old.
The Rochester Art Club records that Wood was “known for
his sense of humor, ability at mimicry, and telling a good story.”
For well over a year I have posted a historic stage setting every day to my Facebook group “Dry Pigment.” This post is then shared with other groups for digital dissemination, but not here. I often group stage compositions on a theme, posting one version after another over the course of a week. In the past I have covered landscapes, seascapes, palaces, dungeons, hell scenes, cathedrals, and much more. The images are often from scenery evaluations that I completed over the past few decades while traveling throughout the United States of America.
I return to the life and times of Thomas G. Moses tomorrow on November 11, 2019. For the past week, I have been sharing my Dry Pigment Facebook Group posts, as it helps illustrate the scenic aesthetic that I write about each day.
I primarily post daily pictures of historic backdrops each day for my fellow scenic artists, many of whom were not exposed to this history during their training. I always hope that this small and consistent gesture will help others with their future projects and research.
Today’s Dry Pigment post looks at two sketches created by the Twin City Scenic Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota, now stored at the University of Minnesota – Twin Cities. They are part of the Twin City Scenic Company collection and also part of an online database. Although the database has become increasingly difficult to navigate after changing servers recently, it is still worth checking out. Here is the link: https://umedia.lib.umn.edu/search?facet_field=collection_name_s&facets%5Bcollection_name_s%5D%5B%5D=Scenic+Collections
Drop curtain with Masonic emblem.Same drop curtain without Masonic emblem, showing that both commercial theatre and the fraternity used the same stage settings. Top of Masonic drop.Top of similar commercial drop.Detail of commercial drop curtain.Detail of commercial drop curtain.Detail of Masonic drop curtain.Detail of commercial drop curtain.Detail of Masonic drop curtain.