I continue with my exploration of Victor Hubal, a Sosman & Landis
scenic artist who later worked for a variety of other studios. The 1930 Census
listed Hubal (41 yrs.), living with his wife Eloise (32 yrs.) and children,
Glenn James (11 yrs.), Lucille (8 yrs.) and Victor Jr. (6 yrs.) at 439 E. Sixth
Street in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Undated photograph of the Victor J. Hubal family, likely from 1924.
When Hubal passed away in 1972, the “St. Paul Dispatch” included a
lengthy article about Hubal reporting, “Among his other works were early
Shipstad and Johnson “Ice Follies” productions and the Josef Meier Passion
Play, both the touring productions and the permanent one at Spearfish, S.D.” Of
the Black Hills Passion Play, a 1944 article in the “Queen City Mail” noted
“Victor Hubal of St. Paul, scenic artist, was in Spearfish last week redecorating
the play scenes for the winter performances” (Spearfish, SD, 21 Sept. 1944). Over
the years, Hubal was was repeatedly connected with the production as the sets
were repaired and new elements were added.
The Black Hills Passion PlayThe Black Hills Passion Play
Meier brought his Passion Play to the United States in 1932. Born in Lünen, Germany, he was the seventh generation of his family to portray Jesus in the biblical drama. Meier translated the production from German to English and brought a small company to the United States, premiering the show in New York and then taking the production on tour. By 1939, Meier found a permanent home for his production in Spearfish, South Dakota, building a 6000-seat amphitheater. Even after settling in Spearfish, later toured the United States and Canada until 1964. The production was performed in more than 650 cities over the years, becoming an annual event for many cities. Meier remained part of the production until 1991, when he retired after performing in 9000 performances. Meier passed away eight years later at the age of ninety-four. The Black Hills Passion Play outlived its founder, lasting until 2008 when the summer performances finally ended. For more information about the show, there are amazing photographs available to peruse online, part of the Fassbender Collection. Here is the link: https://www.historicblackhillsstudios.org/keyword/Black%20Hills%20Passion%20Play/
Image from the Fassbender Collection that depicts the scenery produced by Victor J. Hubal, Sr.Painted detail of the scenery by Victor J. Hubal for the Black Hills Passion Play in 1939.
My life intersects with Hubal’s on multiple planes, not having been aware
of his existence until studying at the University of Minnesota and working with
Lance Brockman. I knew nothing of the Spearfish Passion Play, however, until I
was working in Spearfish and restoring the Twin Cities Scenic Co. collection
delivered to the Matthews Opera House in 1907. Although many of my friends and family had made
pilgrims to see this massive outdoor production, it didn’t pop up on my radar
until 2017. And then while sharing some restoration stories with a good friend
in Duluth, I made a connection. My friend’s eyes lit up when I mentioned
Spearfish. “Spearfish?!?” she asked. “I
have many stories about that place and the production my mother managed.” My
friend was Nancyelaine Rusk Anderson, and she proceeded to she share a series
of stories about the touring production and its founder Meier. What a connection
to discover out of the blue!
Image from the Fassbender collection depicting the touring production.
I met Nancyelaine and her husband Duane in 1991. He was a well-respected Masonic scholar in Duluth and pulled in to help Brockman document the Scottish Rite scenery collection there. Nancyelaine taught dance, and has once been the prima ballerina with the Kansas City Ballet, as well as a concert pianist in the region. Her studies extended to Egyptian hieroglyphics and automotive repair. I still find her absolutely brilliant and fascinating. Duane was a mathematician with a passion for the Fraternity. He was on the Southern Jurisdiction Scottish Rite’s ritual revision committee and in line to be Grand Master of Minnesota in the 1990s. Duane was part of the Scottish Rite network that helped Brockman during the “Theatre of the Fraternity” Symposium that evolved onto the 1996 touring museum exhibit: “Theatre of the Fraternity: Staging the Ritual Space of the Scottish Rite, 1896-1929.” Working as his research assistant for both events, this exposure to Masonic scenery for the stage fueled my passion for scenic art and directed the course of my career.
I reconnected with Nancyelaine in 2015 while working as the
Curatorial Director for the Minnesota Masonic Heritage Center. Her name was
passed along to me when I sought various resources to help with shape the museum
displays for various Masonic groups. I was looking for artifacts, information,
and various Masonic representatives during the design phase of the six museum
galleries. Nancyelaine has a depth of
knowledge about Masonry for women that is unparalleled, having ascended to some
of the highest state and national positions in five Masonic organizations. My
initial correspondence with Nancyelaine led to my securing the Duane Anderson
and Nancyelaine Rusk Anderson Library for the Minneapolis Scottish Rite. After
the acquisition, however, I continued to visit my friend in Duluth whenever I traveled
north.
Scenes from later productions of the Black Hills Passion play currently for sale online.Scenes from later productions of the Black Hills Passion play currently for sale online.Scenes from later productions of the Black Hills Passion play currently for sale online.
On January 12, 1912, “The News-Democrat” mentioned Sosman & Landis employee
Victor Hubal. Hubal was painting scenery for the Kentucky Theatre in Paducah, a
venue that first opened its doors on September 24, 1901. The Kentucky Theatre
advertised “refined plays at family prices – 10, 15 and 20 cents. At the prices
you can bring your family at least twice a week, pass a pleasant evening with
them at this beautiful resort, and while being highly entertained save more
than the price of admission asked in gas and fuel.”
On January 15, 1912, the Kentucky Theatre began a short season of permanent
stock, with Manager Finney engaging the Garside Stock Company for fifty weeks.
They were scheduled to perform two plays a week. The “News-Democrat” article
continued, “Each play will be a production from a scenic point of view, as Mr.
Vic Hubal, of the Sosman & Landis studio, Chicago, has been engaged to
paint all the scenery, and is now hard at work at the Kentucky on the first
production of ‘The Devil’s Kitchen,’ which will be the bill for the first three
days, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.”
At the time, Hubel was 24 years old and living in Chicago, Illinois.
Victor Hubal (right) with fellow scenic artist George Wood in 1912.
Victor J. Hubal was born in Chicago on May 10, 1888. His father, Felix
Hubal (b. Nov. 1861), was a Czech immigrant. His mother, Theresa Mary Koranda
(b. 1864), was born and raised in Illinois. Hubal’s parents both worked, his
father as a baker and his mother as a seamstress. Like Thomas G. Moses’ family,
there is no indication of any connection to the performing arts, yet Hubal
entered the theatre industry at the age of 17 in 1905. The 1910 United States
census reports Hubal as still living with his mother and two siblings, Otto (20,
born 1890) and Lucy (18, born 1892) at 3528 W. Cortland St. in Chicago. The
census lists Hubal as an artist and his sister as a stenographer, with his
brother being unemployed. Seven years
later in 1917, the WWI draft registration card reported Hubal’s appearance as
“medium” in height and “medium” in build with gray eyes and dark brown hair.
His draft card also noted that Hubal claimed exemption status based on “kidney
trouble.”
In 1917, Hubal met and married a Minnesota girl, Eloise L. Strenlund (1897 – 1984), moving his new bride to Chicago. The couple’s first address was 5030 Hutchinson St, yet familial ties would prompt the couple to relocate to the “Land of 10,000 Lakes,” raising their family in Minnesota.
Eloise’s father was a Swedish immigrant. Anton Strenlund arrived in the
United States in 1887 at the age of sixteen. Traveling west, he worked as a
carpenter and finally settled in Minnesota where he married Alise Oberg on August
21, 1897. At the time, she was pregnant, giving birth to Eloise on November 12,
1897. The couple’s second child Arthur
arrived on 29 September 1900, with their third child, Ernest William, being
born on April 1, 1903. When Eloise turned 17, she moved to St. Paul and began
working as a clerk. Her new profession and new address at 1010 Euclid Ave. were
listed in the 1915 St. Paul Directory for the next two years before moving to
Chicago. Life married to a scenic artist in Chicago must have been a been a far
cry from her simple upbringing in Minnesota.
Like Moses, Hubal’s scenic art career extended for more than sixty years and his work was featured across the country in both live theater and film productions. After moving to Minnesota, he became an integral part of the opera and theatre scene.
Victor Hubal pictured with fellow scenic artists in front of an ad drop. Date unknown.Victor Hubal pictures in front of a painted interior with co-worker. Studio and date unknown.
Although Hubal’s scenic art career began in 1905, little is known of his
early work or the studios that he was associated with for the first six years. By
1912, however, he was working for Sosman & Landis in Chicago, as well as
continuing as an itinerant artist, picking up work across the country during
slow times.
Hubal’s 1972 obituary in the “St. Paul Dispatch” reported, “His work graced some 50 productions of the St. Paul Civic Opera, as the organization was then known, from the initial one, ‘Samson And Delilah’ in 1933, to ‘The Merry Widow’ in 1963. He also did the decorations and designs for a number of the International Institute’s, “Festival of Nations” at the Auditorium and was responsible for the mounting of major productions at Andahazy Ballet Borealis. (Feb. 20, 1972).” Other Andahazy production settings painted by Hubal included “Slavonic Scenes,” “Les Sylphises,” “Swan Lake,” “Spectre de la Rose,” “Aurora’s Wedding,” “The Miraculous Stag” and “Scheherazade.” I discovered a 1954 article that provided some insight into the scenery produced by Hubal for the Andahazy Ballet Borealis company at Northrup Auditorium on the University of Minnesota Campus. The “Star Tribune” described the scenery for “Les Sylphides:”
“The setting, a woodland glade, by Victor Hubal, had a spacious, semi-transparent
effect which enhanced the quality of the ballet” (Minneapolis, Minnesota, 0
July 1954, page 29). The article also noted that the ballet company was
composed of 40 dancers and headed by Lorand Andahazy and Anna Adrianova.
In regard to Hubal’s “Swan Lake” scenery, an entertaining tale was published
in the “St. Paul Dispatch.” During the execution of scenery for “Swan Lake,”
Andahazy accidentally upset a pail of dye onto the canvas and apologized. “Hubal
said, ‘Never mind” [and] with deft strokes he converted the dark blotch into a
rocky formation and balanced the composition by converting some trees into more
rocks on the other side.” The “Dispatch”
article ended with a description of the artist’s character: “A man of artistic sensitivity and great skill
and accumulated knowledge of his craft, Hubal labored largely in obscurity, for
he was shy and retiring by nature and had no talent for self-promotion. But the
contributions to the community to which he made in his self-effacing way for so
many years were great, and they can be remembered with respect and gratitude
One more insightful story about Hubal appeared in conjunction with his scenery for the St. Paul Civic Opera’s production of “Rigoletto.” Hubal’s past with the film industry was also described in a newspaper article:
“When the curtain rises Wednesday it will be on the work of a man who might have been prominent in his field in motion pictures as Wallace Beery and Charlie Chaplin are in theirs, had it not been for the fact that he found black and white too monotonous. He is Vic Hubal, scene designer for the opera association. When the motion pictures were in their infancy, Hubal, already an accomplished scene designer for some of the largest production and road shows in the country, wandered into the old Essanay Film company’s lot in Hollywood. There he went to work on designing backgrounds against which Charlie Chaplin, Ben Turpin and Beery were to cavort. But the backgrounds were all black and white, because those were the only colors to film well. There were relieving incidents once in a while, as he when he would be called down from his scaffold to take the part of a cop, or when he was called into the dressing room to make up Turpin for his monkey roles, but on the whole, black and white was too confining for a true scenic artist. Hubal went on to train with Fred Scott, Ansel Cook and Fred Lewis…” Scott and Cook both worked at Sosman & Landis, therefore, the article is likely referencing his time at the studio around 1912.
I will continue to explore the life of Vic Hubal tomorrow, as there is too much to put in one post.
At the beginning of 1912, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “starting
some new work for the Palace Theatre.” Moses
was referring to the 1500-seat Palace Music Hall, advertised as “Chicago’s New
Vaudeville Theatre” in 1912.
Detail of a Palace Music Hall program currently for sale online.Detail of a Palace Music hall program currently for sale online.
Built at N. Clark Street and W. Randolph, the Palace Music
Hall opened on April 1, 1912. Designed
by Holabird and Roche, the new Palace Music Hall was advertised across the
country. An article in the “Daily
Herald” noted that the Palace Music Hall was the newest theater “situated in
the heart of Chicago’s theatre district and that “leading artists of the world”
would be featured at this “high-class vaudeville” house (August 30, 1912, page
11). The article further reported, “The building department of Chicago has
pronounced the Palace the most perfectly constructed and equipped theatre in
the country.” Hmm. I have noticed that most new theaters during this period were
advertised as the “best” that could be found in country, often including
validation by some organization or well-known personality. Great marketing
technique to get the public in the doors.
The Palace Music Hall, Chicago, Illinois.
Performances at the Palace were given twice daily, once at
3:15 PM and once at 8:15 PM. Individual seat prices were 15 cents, 25 cents, 50
cents and 75 cents. Like many theatres
during this time, however, there was a shift in popular attractions and
entertainment, often promting a change in owners. Abraham Lincoln Erlanger
acquired the lease for Chicago’s Palace Theatre building during January 1926.
He extensively remodeled the theater, renaming it the Erlanger Theatre. The Erlanger
theatre remained open until March 10, 1962. The building was soon demolished,
with the theater’s original location and remainder of the block being razed to build
the Chicago Civic Center, now the Richard J. Daley Center. Neither this venue,
nor the original Palace Theatre, are to be confused with Chicago’s New Palace
Theatre, a venue designed by Rapp & Rapp and located on Randolph and La
Salle Street in Chicago in 1926. The second “Palace Theater” opened Oct. 4,
1926 and is now known as the Cadillac Palace Theatre.
The Palace Music Hall, Chicago, IllinoisWhen the Palace Music Hall became the Erlanger Theatre in Chicago, Illinois.
In 1912, Martin Beck
announced his intention to “invade” the east and Chicago with the new Palace
theatres. The Palace Theatre in Chicago and the Palace Theatre in New York were
intended to fight eastern interests. Beck’s Palace theaters were also mentioned
in an interesting 1912 newspaper article published across the country. “Woman
Back of a Theatre Trust” was the title and the article’s headline stated, “Mrs.
Katherine Kohl Carries Out Late Husband’s Ideas for Territory Division. STOPS
VAUDEVILLE WAR” (Rock Island Argus, 30 April 1912, page 9). Here is the article
in its entirety, as I found it quite fascinating:
“Chicago, April 20, 1912.- The efforts of a Chicago woman,
Mrs. Catherine Kohl, has averted a threatened vaudeville war which would have
involved millions of dollars and has brought about a combination of theatrical
interests aggregating $50,000,000.
Her months of endeavor have resulted in a union of men of
the east and west representing practically the same theatre interests but
operating in different territories. By the new arrangement the eastern magnates
will keep in their own territory, the western magnates in theirs and Mrs. Kohl
will be left the mistress of the situation in her Chicago theatres, founded by
her husband and left to her on his death a year ago.
By the deal, completion of which was just announced in New
York, B. F. Keith has purchased interests of Percy G. Williams, controlling
eight theatres in New York, and a working agreement has been entered into by
the different vaudeville powers by which there will be no friction in the future.
A general agreement has been made as to the placing of different vaudeville
acts and the ‘time’ to be allotted performers.
This new assignment of territory and interests stops a new
vaudeville war started some time ago when Martin Beck opened the Palace theatre
in New York and followed it by the Palace theatre in Chicago. These two houses
were to be used in conjunction with others, to fight the eastern interests. By
the new terms of the Chicago theatre, which is now playing vaudeville, will
change its policy. It is said the first sign of the change will be when ‘A
Modern Eve,’ now playing at the Garrick theatre, is transferred to the Palace theater.
Under the new combination thousands of performers are
virtually interested. Mr. Keith with E. F. Albee, A. Paul Keith and John J. Murdock
will control the vaudeville situation far west as Chicago. The situation in
Chicago will be under the control of Mrs. C. E. Kohl, Max Anderson and the
Monroe Amusement company. Meyerfeld and Beck of the Orpheum circuit will
control the remainder of the country for the Orpheum circuit.
Mr. Keith will have control of the situation in the east,
Mrs. Kohl in Chicago, and Martin Beck for the Orpheum circuit west of Chicago.
The new combination was caused by the announced intention of
Beck to invade the east and Chicago, his new Palaces theatres being his first
step in this regard. Theatrical managers saw ahead another theatrical war which
probably would duplicate the efforts of Klaw & Erlanger to break the
vaudeville trust some years ago and the fight of William Morris along the same
lines. But before the war was fairly advanced the alignment of interests was
accomplished.
‘The late Charles E. Kohl planned more than once to bring about
this arrangement which would place the Majestic and other large theatres in
association with the east,’ said Lyman Glover, general manager for the
Kohl-Castle theatres, last night. ‘He wanted to leave the west as an empire for
the Orpheum circuit. His widow has labored effectively in promoting the agreement
now reached. The result will clear up the situation, prevent ruinous
competition, provide better and more uniform vaudeville bills, and simplify the
business in many ways.’
From New York at night a statement was issued by Meyerfield
and Beck.
‘It always has been our fondest desire,’ the statement said,
‘to bind the east and west together in a more substantial way. The consummation
of the deal just put though by Mr. Keith and ourselves is a happy solution of
our difficulties and is most satisfactory to us.
‘The situation, as far as territory is concerned, is no
different than it was before, but by buying interests with Mr. Keith and in
other ways tying our interest more closely together we have accomplished
something for which we have been working for years, and the public and artists
will reap the benefits as well as ourselves.
‘We are all men who have practically brought the high class
vaudeville business to its present high standard, both sides owning controlling
vast interests thoroughly established. And we feel that the fruits of our labor
for 30 years have been consummated by the arrangement we have entered into.’”
At the beginning of 1912, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Started
right by hustling out some work for Bangor, Maine.” Moses was referring to the recently
fire-damaged Bangor Opera House. An extensive fire damaged the building in 1911,
necessitating a new stage, scenery and necessary machinery the following year. The 1912 Sosman & Landis installation was
short lived, as two years later another fire destroyed the building. The “big
conflagration of 1911” was recalled in a newspaper article after the second
fire. On January 15, 1914, “The Boston Globe” reported, “The Bangor Opera
House, the oldest and largest theatre here was destroyed by fire this morning.”
The fire department managed to contain the flames to the theater and prevented
its spread to nearby buildings, with losses estimated at $80,000. Sadly, five
men lost their lives as they fought the flames in frigid temperatures that
night. The hose men were all in line, playing the hose through the door, when
an explosion occurred and toppled the brick wall nearest them. All of the firemen
were instantly crushed to death.
1914 newspaper photograph of the Bangor Opera House, destroyed by fire.
The first Bangor Opera House, designed by architect Arthur
H. Vinal, was built in 1882 for a population numbering 20,000. Prior to this
new theatre space, “Jno. B. Jeffrey’s Theatrical Guide and Directory” listed only
three performance halls in the city: Bangor Music Hall (seating capacity 650), Norombega
Hall (seating capacity of 1500), and Bangor City Hall (seating capacity of 800). Neither Bangor’s Music Hall nor City Hall contained
any painted scenery. Only the Buskin Club had purchased nine scenes that were used
at Norombega Hall; a modest enticement for touring theatrical troupes.
For many years, the opera house was the only stage in Bangor
available for legitimate theater and touring productions. The Bangor Opera
House had a seating capacity of 1,109, a fair size for many types of events. The
size of the proscenium opening measured 31’ high by 31’ wide, with the height
from the stage floor to the rigging loft was 45. Some records indicate that the
height of the rigging loft was only 40 feet. The depth under the stage was 10 feet and
boasted 2 traps. The full stage area measured 40’ deep x 65’wide. There was a height of 18’ from the stage
floor to the underside of the grooves to accommodate the painted wings. In
addition to painted wings, theatrical directories indicate that there were
fifteen sets of scenery. The original installation was painted by scenic artist
M. H. Andrews and added to over the years. Unfortunately, all painted scenery
was destroyed during the 1911 fire, providing an opportunity for Sosman &
Landis to provide a new installation
By 1912, the Bangor Opera House building was owned by a
corporation, with local businessman Dr. Thomas U. Coe as a significant stockholder.
The population of Bangor at this time numbered 40,000 people. “Julius Cahn’s
Official Theatrical Guide” for the 1913-1914 season reported an increased
seating capacity after the fire of 1159. The stage was also illuminated with
electricity by this time (110 AC and 8 stage pockets). After the 1914 fire, however,
everything was lost, leaving Bangor without a full-stage theater once again. Although
immediate action was taken to replace the city’s lost theater, it took time to
gather the necessary funds, and then the United States entered World War I
The lot theatre lot was purchased by Joseph P. Bass in
February 1919. Bass was a businessman and publisher of the “Bangor Daily
Commercial.” He announced his plan to
rebuild the opera house, selecting the new lessee to be the Alfred S. Black
chain of theatres. For the next few decades, a variety of entertainment was
featured at the Bangor Opera House. Like many theaters during the mid-twentieth
century, however, the stage would eventually feature film. By 1966, the theater
was known as the Bangor Cinema. Over the years, it fell into a state of
disrepair.
By 1997, the building was acquired by the Penobscot Theatre
Company. The opera house underwent a series of restorations, with the exterior
façade being restored during 2007-2008. By 2016, the company launched a capital
campaign to complete a number of other necessary improvements. The recent
auditorium makeover included new carpet, seating, lighting fixtures and fresh
paint. It is now a very blue auditorium. As with many historic theater venues,
much of the early history is forgotten, with the main focus remaining on the
architectural style and/or a specific architect. Little is remembered interior, especially
details of the original stage, scenery, lighting, and other mechanical systems
that remained behind the curtain line.
As I conclude the year 1911, Mrs. Thomas G. Moses re-enters
the story as a one-line entry in a newspaper article published in the “Joliet
Evening Herald-News” (11 June 1911, page 12).
I seldom explore the life of Thomas G. Moses’ wife, Susan “Ella” Robbins,
in my posts. One of the reasons
is that she primarily remained absent from print, being primarily identified in
minimal public records and a few brief mentions in her husband’s memoirs. Prior to 1911, there are only a few mentions
of “Mrs. Thos. G. Moses” in the newspaper mostly associated with various church
events.
It is not that she was confined to the home, unloved by her husband. However, like most women of her time, she was cast in a supporting role. Ella spent much of her married life taking care of home responsibilities while her husband crisscrossed the country to complete one theater project after another. After the children were grown and her own parents had passed, what was there to do other than housekeeping? Primarily volunteer and church work. Her husband worked until his death, never really slowing down. Ella had not worked outside of the home since getting married. For one year, she worked as a seamstress’ assistant in Sterling, Illinois, before giving birth to their first child.
Ella was the love of Tom’s life, their first having met in the one-room schoolhouse in Sterling. Moses recalled their first date in 1872, writing, “The first party we attended together compelled me to do some hustling in putting my clothes in shape, as about the only clothes I had were made from my Father’s cast-offs, which had done good service in the tannery. A paper collar and “dickey” over my flannel shirt, a piece of ribbon for a tie, a good coat of blacking on my heavy shoes and I was ready to shine in Society. I think Ella was awfully brave to go with me, especially when the other boys always dressed better than I.” The couple was married on October 31, 1878, with their first child, William Pitt Moses, arriving in 1879.
Ella was her husband’s confidant, counselor, and eventual caretaker.
When Moses’ father and step-mother rejected him, Ella and her family were there
to welcome him with open arms and
support him. They offered unconditional
love, something that had vanished when his birth mother passed away at a young
age. Ella became his rock, an integral link that completed her husband’s
network of support throughout the decades. When her husband did return home
after a project, he escaped to the solace of his attic studio, always painting.
He also left home between work projects to hone his artistic skills on sporadic
sketching trips. All the while Ella was there to keep everything quiet on the
home front. She was the one who packed up their entire house and moved east
when her husband started a new studio in New York in 1900, with children in
tow. She was the one who kept children and grandchildren from bothering their father/grandfather
while he was painting. As most women during this time, her life was defined by
the desires and actions of her husband. There was little time for her to follow
her dreams as she was always busy with home and church projects. We will never know if this was “enough” and
made her life complete.
It was a time when women could note vote, and most of their activities were limited by gender. As fascinated as I am with this particular period of time, I would have hated the restrictions of being a female at this time. I think of my mother’s frustration when she first purchased a car during the 1950s. She had an advanced degree, a full-time position as a teacher, and a guaranteed income, yet could not secure a car loan without the co-signature of a male, ideally a father or husband. Yes, my grandfather thought this was ridiculous too, so he loaned her the money. Forty years prior to my own mother’s experience, women had limited control of their bodies, their bank accounts and property without some form of guardianship from a male; these restrictions suggest that women were in capable of making important decisions. And yet there remain men who yearn to return, restricting women. We remember that when women are kept at home, unemployed, and constantly pregnant their voice in society is effectively silenced.
One of the few outlets for women during the early twentieth century was charitable work for religious organizations. Such was the case for Mrs. Thomas G. Moses and the Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society of the Chicago Presbytery. In 1911, she was a speaker at the annual meeting held at DuPage church. The Thursday, June 8, event was attended by 125 ladies, 67 of whom were representatives from various Chicago churches, with the remaining number coming from the surrounding parishes and towns. The morning session opened with a hymn, a devotional service and words of welcome from Mrs. M. B. McNutt. Then various reports were presented from the secretaries, treasurer and a personal story described foreign missionary work.
Mrs. Thomas G. Moses spoke in the afternoon about “Where
Foreign and Home Missions Meet.” Other afternoon speakers discussed reports on
recent gatherings, a plea for young people to commit to mission work, and
thoughts for the coming months.
For the remainder of her life, Ella, was an active participant in various church activities. As wonderful as this sounds, what else could she do? Church socials, fundraisers, and other volunteer work kept some women’s minds and bodies active. A few were able to rise above social constrictions in 1911, but most of them were an anomaly.
On January 25, 1911, an
entertaining article was published in “The Columbus Journal” about a fine
artist’s quote to paint a drop curtain.
Here is the article in its
entirety:
“Costly Drop Curtain.
The One Meissonier Didn’t Paint For French Theatre.
The enterprising manager of a theater called upon the famous
French artist Jean Louis Ernest Meissonier on one occasion and asked him to paint
a drop scene for a certain theater and name his terms.
‘You have seen my pictures, then?’ asked Meissonier.
‘Oh, yes,’ exclaimed the manager, ‘but it is your name I
want! It will draw crowds to my theater.’
‘And how large do your wish the curtain to be’ inquired the
artist.
‘Ah, well, we will say 15 by 18 meters.’
Meissonier took up a pen and pencil and proceeded to make a
calculation. At last he looked up and said, with imperturbable gravity,
‘I calculated and find that my pictures are valued at 80,000
francs per meter. Your curtain, therefore, will cost you just 21,600,000
francs. But that is not all. It takes me twelve months to paint twenty-five
centimeters of canvas. It will take me just 190 years to finish your curtain.
You should have come to me earlier, monsieur. I am too old for undertaking it
now. God morning.”
Meissonier (1815-1891) was a sculptor and fine artist, known
for his detail and precise brushwork.
His realistic approach to painting meant that it took time to complete
each composition; the same techniques could not be applied to the stage for
many reasons.
Jean Louis Ernest MeissonierPainting by Meissonier, 1864
Although Meissonier passed away two decades before the 1911
article was published, the story still resonates in the field of scenic art
today. The precision required for photorealistic painting takes more time, and
ultimately, these same techniques destroy illusion on the stage. An artist may
excel at photorealism yet remain unable to produce a satisfactory backdrop or
large outdoor mural.
Many artists struggle when they change exhibition spaces,
for example, transitioning from small-scale watercolors to large-scale theatrical
backdrops. Painting miniatures for an art gallery versus painting cycloramas for
the stage require different techniques, tools and materials. Is the artwork
intended to be viewed from several inches away or from several yards away? An
automated billboard in Times Square is intended to be viewed from several blocks
away. The basis of scenic art has always been learning how to see from the
audience’s perspective. This skill is not necessarily taught in fine art schools.
Different painting techniques take an artist different
amounts of time to complete. This is what is addressed in the 1911 newspaper
article above. Meissonier based his estimate on a very realistic technique, one
that he used for his many detailed military compositions. Painting techniques not
only shift when transitioning from one type of artwork to another, but also one
school of scenic art to another. Some techniques take more time. Here is one
example: The majority of theatrical backdrops created at the turn of the
twentieth century took between one and two days. The same compositions might
now take a scenic artist one to two weeks to complete. It is not that contemporary
scenic artists are untalented, or simply slow. Much has to do with the fact
that many of the scenic art techniques have been lost or altered over the
decades, whether intentional or not. In addition to the shift in painting techniques,
the overall paint system changed from dry pigment to pre-mixed theatrical
paints. Shifts in scenic art remain dependent on instruction, tools, and type
of paint. Whether a student learns in a classroom
or scene shop, the instructor/journeyman is the one to pass along a tradition
and “preferred” type of painting system.
Dry pigment paint table used by Jesse Cox on display at the Mt. Pleasant Theatre Museum in Iowa
In the past, I have posted articles that examined why scenic
artists more easily transitioned to a fine art gallery than fine artists transitioned
to the stage. It all has to do with one’s ability to understand how painted
compositions are intended to be viewed from any distance, whether far away or
close up. In short, theatrical artists painted many compositions that were intended
to be viewed from a distance of twenty feet or more, employing speed and economical
brushwork. They incorporated specific painting techniques that allowed the audience’s
“eye” to fill in the gaps. There needs to be a division of colors and separate
of value. Keep in mind their work appeared at many other venues beyond the
theatre, opera, and vaudeville stage. Scenic artists controlled the scenic illusion
at world fair attractions, grand circus spectacles, and American pageants. The scenic
artist could not create photographic realism for these venues as their
paintings would appear fuzzy from a distance.
At the same time, these same scenic artists had to paint for
intimate performance spaces and displays that placed audience members mere feet
from their work. This requires an overall understanding of stage illusion and various
scenic art techniques for any venue, in addition to basic artistic training in
color, light, perspective, composition and layout. In the end, these trained,
experienced and knowledgeable individuals understood how to make their artworks
come to life from a distance or up close. Painting techniques placed well
upstage of the proscenium line would “fall apart” when examined close-up. The
same could not be said for a drop curtain that was within almost arms reach of
the first row, as the techniques were different than those employed against the
backwall.
Scenic fitch used by Thomas G. Moses
Throughout the twentieth century the understanding of basic
painting techniques that were dependent on the scenic piece’s stage position became
a struggle, especially as some modern scenic designers failed to comprehend the
complexity of the painted stage aesthetic, or the magic that could be produced
by one. Simultaneously, the role of a
nineteenth-century scenic artist who controlled the entire stage aesthetic transitioned
to a twentieth-century scenic artist who painted another’s design (the scene
designer). This transition compounded by scenic designers who were not trained
as scenic artists became a challenge. In many cases it has continued to remain an
obstacle when painted scenery is designed by those who do not paint, or fully
understand painted illusion for the stage. It is not that these designers are
unskilled, or that they are less valued by our industry, but it provides a
challenge for many paint crews when a scenic designer visits a shop and sees a
backdrop at close range, and not from the back of an auditorium. Simply stated,
these designers are unable to fully comprehend either the possibilities or
limitations of a two-dimensional composition and therefore, in many cases, avoid them.
This lack of understanding has carried over into come current digital
designs. In many cases a scenic artist should be used to help the designer translate
his vision for the stage. One example is when computer renderings fail to
depict a uniform light source, allowing random shadows and highlights to appear
through the final product. With an
inconsistent use of shadows and highlights, the dimensionality is destroyed,
and the overall composition looks flat, or simply odd. The basic rules of scenic art for the stage still
apply to digital backdrops.
Contemporary scenic art obstacles, however, are not
solely the result of designers, lighting or technological innovations. Much has
to do with training. All scenic art is not equal; it has never been equal, and
America has supported two distinct schools of scenic art (see past posts about
opaque painting versus glazing). In the end, whether it is hand-painted or digital
the same questions need to be asked. Is the background or prop for live
theater, film, theme parks, department store displays or some other exhibition
space? Each one requires a different skill set. The individual designing and manufacturing
the backdrop needs to understand that the final product is dependent on whether
it is viewed from a distance or up close.
Another example of differing skill sets: backdrops for
theatre and backdrops for film.
Comparing these two is just like comparing apples to oranges. From the
beginning, techniques used for scenic illusion on the stage did not successfully
transfer to the movie industry, especially as the quality of film advanced
throughout the twentieth century. This aesthetic
shift for scenic artists was already in play during the first decade of the
twentieth century – the early twentieth-century generation of scenic artists that
had to figure artworks for a new format. They needed an even further division
of value to help the painted scenery read on screen – in the beginning. When
Harley Merry worked with Thomas Edison on some of the earliest films at the
turn-of the century, new painting techniques were created to successfully read
in this projected black and white format. Keep in mind that some of the early
films also included Thomas G. Moses’ work for attractions at Coney Island. The distance from the camera to the painted
setting, and from the screen to the audience, dictated the scenic artist’s painting
technique at this time. By the mid-twentieth century, a scenic art system for
film was partially in place for color.
Success in any form of scenic art is based on the continued
study of the trade. There should never be a point when any artist says, “I have
learned enough.” For centuries, scenic artists sought constant training,
whether it is in the form of a class at the academy or a sketching trip with one’s
contemporaries. We must continue to grow as artists, always studying the past
while planning for the future. In many
ways, today’s scenic artists are even closer to their nineteenth-century predecessors
who successfully worked in a variety of industries throughout the duration of
their career. Their income derived from many different venues, not simply painting
backdrops for the stage, or working in a studio. It is an exciting time to be a
scenic artist as change is the only constant thing we can expect.
Newspaper illustration of a painting exhibited by George. F. SchultzNewspaper illustration of a painting exhibited by George. F. Schultz
In 1911, Thomas G. Moses wrote,
“Got Geo. Schultz on the staff at 20th Street.” This was Sosman
& Landis’ annex studio, a separate shop from their main studio on Clinton
Street.
George F. Schultz was well known
for his landscapes and marine scenes in both fine art galleries and upon the
stage.
A child of immigrants, his father came from Germany and his
mother from Canada. Schultz was born in Chicago on April 17, 1869, and began
his career as a decorative painter in Chicago. As a souvenir decorator,
Schultz’s specialty was china decoration. This initial trade provided training
as Schultz grew and began to take classes as a student at the Art Institute of
Chicago.
The 1888 Chicago City Directory, listed Schultz’s occupation
as an artist and his residence at 2163 Archer Ave. in Chicago. Schultz began
exhibiting his work around this time and by 1892, he exhibited some of his work
at O’Brien’s Gallery. This was a shop that he ran with fellow artist William
Wilson Cowell in 1893 on Chicago’s Rush Street. Schultz was featured in a solo
exhibition at Thurber’s Gallery in 1896, again exhibiting at there in 1898. In
1896, “the Chicago Tribune” reported , “Last summer he visited Monhegan Island,
the favorite resort of Edwards. Triscott, and other Eastern artists, away up on
the Maine Coast. Most of the pictures he now shows are Monhegan views and the
result of his sojourn. Many are coat scenes. In nearly all rocks abound, and
Mr. Schultz has been eminently successful in catching the effects of sun and
shadow on sea and land and rocky shore. One of the pictures, “A Misty Morning,”
the artist calls it, is a really powerful bit of color work such as is rarely
attained with aquarelles. The sun breaking through the mist and the softened
aspect of the rocks are presented with such strength as many a man would have
difficulty showing in oils” (16 Feb 1896, page 28).
Geo. F. Shultz painting that is currently for sale onlineGeo. F. Shultz painting that is currently for sale onlineGeo. F. Shultz painting that is currently for sale online
Later, in 1898, the “Chicago Tribune” advertised his
twenty-five paintings on exhibition at Thurber’s, including “Gray Day, “ “Along
the River,” “Hoeing Cabbages, “A Lowery Day,” “Quietude,” and “Morning” (10
April, page 43). An illustration of “Hoeing Cabbages” even accompanied the article.
Although primarily known for his watercolor studies, Schultz also worked in
oils. An article in the “Inter Ocean” commented on Schultz’s “delicate, loose
and pleasing” technical skill. His work “Reflections,” appeared in the March
issue of “Brush and Pencil.” The 1904 City Directory still listed Schultz as an
artist, an occupational title that would remain throughout the duration of his
career. Regional sketching trips included Delavan, Wisconsin during the 1890s,
with later travel bringing him to Indiana, the coast of Maine (Monhegan Island)
and even Mexico.
Like many Sosman & Landis artists, Schultz’s work was continuously
exhibited in fine art exhibitions. He was a member of the Art Institute of
Chicago, exhibiting over one hundred works at the AIC annuals, between 1889 and
1925. Schultz also belonged to the Palette & Chisel Club, the Municipal Art
League of Chicago, the Arche, the Cliff Dwellers, and the Union League Club
during the early twentieth century. He was also the president of the Water
Color Club. Schultz also exhibited Converse at the Carnegie International in
1914 and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in 1916. By 1918, he
received the William H. Tuthill Prize of
$100 at the Art Institute in Chicago.
Geo. F. Shultz painting that is currently for sale online
In 1906 works Schultz were accepted as part of the Palette and Chisel Club’s
permanent collection. This is likely
where Moses first met Schultz prior to hiring him on staff at Sosman &
Landis. Around this time he also began painting woodland scenes, a possible
result of his working with and for Thomas G. Moses at Sosman & Landis
Studios. Art historian, Dr. Wendy Greenhouse, purports Schultz use of “bright
color, rapid brushwork, dappled sunlight, and garden settings beloved of American
adherents of impression.” These same artistic characteristics are the hallmark
of many early twentieth-century scenic artists, and considering he was working
at Sosman & Landis studio during this period, one has to wonder if studio
work invaded his fine art work. Much of the Chicago scenic art community not
only worked together, but also studied and socialized together. Throughout the
decades, scenic artists gathered in town and planned sketching trips to hone
their artistic skills for a variety of artistic projects, including theatrical
settings, grand circus spectacles, panoramas, industrial fairs, and fine art
exhibitions.
Schultz’s exhibited several watercolor paintings in a solo
exhibition at the Art Institute in 1907. That same year he became a charter
member and secretary of the Chicago Water Color Society, being elected as the
club’s president in 1912.
Six years later in 1918, Schultz was awarded the
Tuthill Prize in
the Art Institute’s annual exhibition of watercolor paintings. In 1919 the
Marshall Field and Company department store exhibited his work; this became
recognized as his last-known solo exhibition.
Geo. F. Shultz painting that is currently for sale online
In regard to Schultz’s personal
life, he raised a family in Chicago, after marrying Katharine Karr Hagenlotha
on Sept. 20, 1883.The 1910 census lists his marriage to Katherine and their
renting a house at 1158 Perry Street, Chicago, Ward 26, Cook, Illinois. This
same census lists Schultz’s occupation as an “artist” who worked in the “picture
paint” industry. Schultz was head of the household, with other members being Beatrice
(b. 1895, age 15), Katherine R. (b. 1898, age 12), George F. Jr., (b. 1900, age
10) and Florence (b. 1908, age 2).
Schultz’s wife Katharine wife was
also an Illinois native, with immigrant parents from Germany (father) and Switzerland
(mother). By 1920, the couple was still married and living in another rental
home at 4013 Green View Ave., still listing Schultz’s profession as “artist.”
Their children were still living at home, with Beatrice working as a clerk in
the Oil Concern industry, the younger Katherine working as a stenographer in
the Building Waters industry, and George Jr. working as a tire-maker in the
automobile Pates industry. The youngest child, Florence, was still listed as
attending school.
Ten years later, everything
changed for Schultz. The 1930 census listed George Schultz as a divorced male,
although he was sill working as an artist “working on account.” He was now living
in another rental unit at 1521 Warren Boulevard.
I have been unable to find any information
about Schultz after 1930, including any obituary. This may indicate his being
in poor circumstances or being estranged from his family at that time. Although
art historians list his death in 1934, nothing is offered in terms of any public
tribute.
A scenic artists palette. Currently on display at the theatre museum in Mt. Pleasant, Iowa.
In 1911, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Pausback had his hands full; Scott acted
bad.” Moses was referring an extremely busy period at Sosman & Landis. Nicholas
J. Pausback and Frederick J. Scott were both painting for Moses at the Sosman
& Landis Annex Studio on 20th Street that year.
Yesterday, I explored at the life of future studio founder
Nicholas J. Pausback. Today, I look at the life of scenic artist Frederick J. Scott.
“Fred” Scott was noted for his ability being able to paint any type of subject matter,
a great asset to Sosman & Landis studio in 1911, considering the scope of
their work. A naturalized citizen, Scott was born England on Aug. 16, August 1860.
This made him four years Moses’ junior. In
1904, Moses was 48 years old, with Scott Being 42; both were journeymen
artists. The personality of Scott, however, continually rubbed Moses the wrong
way and their personalities clashed for years.
When Moses returned to Sosman & Landis in 1904, he had
just closed a successful business in New York City known as Moses &
Hamilton. Keep in mind that from 1900-1904, Moses worked with Will F. Hamilton
on a variety of projects for many well-known stage personalities and producers.
Regardless of Moses’ achievements and success in New York, however, Joseph S.
Sosman desperately needed Moses to return to Chicago. Sosman had remained
shorthanded after the retirement of Perry Landis. Ill heath had prompted Landis
to leave the studio in 1902, and Sosman had taken over many of Landis’ sales
and administrative duties. Sosman need
someone to fill his own role as shop supervisor and realized that Moses was the
only one who could do it. Moses had worked with Sosman since the beginning and
knew the running of the studio just as well as its founders. Although Moses
repeatedly left Sosman & Landis during the late nineteenth century to start
various partnerships, he always returned when Sosman or Landis needed help.
Back to Fred Scott. Moses’ 1904 return did not sit well with
all of the studio artists in Chicago, especially Scott. It was at this point
that Moses became vice-president of the Sosman & Landis, a company shareholder
and was given complete aesthetic control over all projects, supervising the design,
construction, painting and installation of everything. In a sense, Moses was handed the world on a
silver palette and many of the scenic artists resented Sosman’s preferential
treatment of Moses. That year, Moses wrote, “When Mr. Sosman announced to the
‘gang’ that I was coming back and would take charge of all the work, there was
much dissention among a few.” Moses
continued, “Fred Scott tried to start a mutiny and quit, hoping the others
would follow. But none did, and he came back. I put him on for he was a clever
painter.” Unfortunately, Moses’ bringing Scott back on for his skill did not
erase existing tensions between the two.
Little is known of Frederick J. Scott beyond a few newspaper
articles and some public records. In 1891, Scott worked for Albert, Grover
& Burridge. He was one of the decorators for the Beckwith Memorial Theatre
in Dowagiac, Michigan, a landmark theater in terms of decoration and innovation.
Scott secured employment with Albert,
Grover & Burridge before bringing his family to America. Remember that
Walter Wilcox Burridge had previously partnered with Moses to form Burridge,
Moses & Louderback in 1887. All three studio owners were good friends with
Moses, as scenic artists shifted from one shop to another.
Census records from 1900 list Scott living at 5019 Turner
Street, Chicago Ward, Cook County, Illinois. His occupation is that of “artist.”
Scott was the grandson of William and Sarah Scott, with his father being John
Scott. Scott’s wife’s name was Ethel (b.
Oct. 1868) and the two were married in England in1890, soon moving to the
United States. The couple had four children living at home in 1900: Marjory (b.
May 1890.), Granville (b. April 1895) Edwin (b. Feb. 1899) and Bobs Victor (b.
May 1900).
In 1911, Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Pausback had his hands full; Scott acted
bad. Got Geo. Schultz on the staff at 20th
Street. I was obliged to remain at the Clinton Street studio only going to 20th
Street every other day.” Moses mentioned many Sosman & Landis scenic
artists during his life. He greatly respected Pausback and his contribution to
the studio.
In 1907, Moses first mentioned Pausback, writing, “I
depended a great deal on Pausback to look after the work while I was away.” Two years later, Moses mentioned him again
when Pausabck took control of the 20th Street Studio. M<oses
recalled that Pausback provided plenty of help “to rush the work through.”
There was no question that Moses had great faith in Pausback’s abilities. By
1917 Pausback was still working at the Sosman & Landis annex and would
remain with the company until its liquidation in 1923.
Nicholas John Pausback Jr., was born on May 5, 1881, in St.
Louis, Missouri. He was the son of St.
Louis residents Nicholas J. Pausback, Sr. (1853-1900) and Caroline Pausback
(1859-1943), each born and raised in the city. By the end of his life, Pausback’s
obituary credited him as being a “scenic artist de luxe”(Chicago Tribune
14 May 1953, page 36). Other notices
reported his staying in the theatrical scenery business for 45 years with
his wife Ottilia, and not retiring until 1947.
Pausback became the founder of Pausback Studios by 1927, four
years aftert the initial close of Sosman & Landis. He ran Pausback Studio
for twenty years, retiring only six years before his passing in 1953. As with
many competitors, Pausback Studio primarily focused on public school and
college projects, outfitting school stages with rigging and draperies. This
branch of the industry had greatly increased in the 1920s and continued to
thrive until the 1960s. Tiffin Scenic Studios and Art Drapery Studios became
major competitors of Pausback Studios by the 1950s (The Times, 11 Feb 1953,
page 2). Eventually Pausback merged with Acme and Carsen in 1957 to form the
Acme Carsen Pausback Studio (see past installment #566). The company placed
advertisements in the 1959 “Educational Theatre Journal” (Vol. 11, No. 1,
i-xxxviii).
Brochure for Acme, Carsen & Pausback
Prior to working at Sosman & Landis in Chicago, Pausback
began his scenic artist career in St. Louis, Missouri. In 1901, his occupation was listed in city
directories as that of “artis.” Pausback’s residence was at 3113 Magnolia Ave. In
1904, Pausback married to Otillia Groebl (1883-1963) and the couple raised five
children: Elvira Mary (m. Harold J.
Howard), Mary C. (m. Mr. Welsh) and Mrs. Therese Curtis. Raymond J.
Pausback (m. Yvonne Singer), and Very Rev. Gabriel N. Pausback (b. 1905) of the
Carmelite order. Records show that the two eldest children of five were born in
St. Louis during 1905 and 1906, with the remaining children being born in
Chicago. In the early years, Pausback
was crisscrossing the country like many artists, completing a variety of
painting projects that included seventy-five scenes for the Grand Theatre in
Owensboro, Kentucky (Messenger-Inquirer, 22 June 1905, page 8). Of this
installation, twenty-five of the scenes were backdrops, with the greater part remaining
framed pieces. In Kentucky, he waorked alongside stage carpenters J. A.
McDanuel and his son.
N. J. Pausback pictured in 1928 (back row, second from the left).
In 1907, Pausback relocated to Chicago, immediately working
with Moses at the Sosman & Landis in the 20th Street Studio. By
1908, Pausback became the shop manager of the space, replacing Ansel Cook. By 1916,
Pausback was frequently sent to in New York, installing shows with fellow
Sosman & Landis employee, Harry Nailer, the well-known stage carpenter. He
worked for New York Studios, the eastern affiliate of Sosman & Landis.
During the 1920s, Pausback founded Pausback Scenery Co.
Living at 6606 Woodlawn Ave., in Chicago Illinois. His scenery company was
located at 3727 Cottage Grove Ave., Chicago (Chicago Tribune 2 Dec. 1928, page
2). After founding the firm, Pausback also wrote a book on Stage Craft; a book
that I am still tracking down (Dec. 17, 1928). By 1929, the Pausback Scenery Co
was credited with a new innovation for gigantic Christmas trees – spangles in
various shapes and sizes, some that measured 10 inches in diameter (Chicago
Tribune 9 Dec. 1929, page 3).
Over the years, the Pauback studio pops up in several
newspaper articles, but nothing really consistent. Briefly morphing from
Pausback Studio to the Pausback Scenery Co.. the firm is briefly mentioned as providing
properties for “Wings of a Century” at 1934 Century of Progress World fair in
Chicago.
Toward the end of his career, Pausback partnered with another
Sosman & Landis scenic artist, Art W. Oberbeck (Blue Island Sun Standard
Archives, 15 June 1944, Page 6). Oberbeck and Pausback had started at Sosman
& Landis around the same time; Oberbeck starting as a paint boy at the in
1904 and Pausback as a journeyman artist three years later.
In 1939 Pausback Studios advertised, “Scenery and Lighting
Equipment Built and Rented” with offices located at 3727 Cottage Grove Avenue, Chicago and the
phone nunbers being Drexel 7060 and 7061 (Labor Union Directory). The key to
any scenic studio’s success at this time was diversification, manufacturing and
installing both stage machinery and lighting systems.
Pausback was also an amateur magician. As a member of the
International Brotherhood of Magicians and the American Society of Magicians, his
stage name was “Nicodemus, the Magician” (Chicago Tribune 14 May 1953, page 36). This persona was even
remembered “Do You Remember When,” a section published in an “Independent
Magazine for Magicians” known as “The Sphinx” in 1949. “The magazine queried,
“Do you remember when Nick Pausback, scenic artist de luxe, of Chicago was
known as “Nicodemus, the Magician?” (Page 12).
Pausback passed away on March 13, 1953, buried in St. Mary
Catholic Cemetery in Evergreen Park. His last residence was at 1000 S. Rhodes
Ave., Chicago, Illinois.
Sosman and Landis built their main studio at 236 and 237 S.
Clinton Street. The street numbers later changed to 417 and 419 S. Clinton Street,
yet the studio did not change locations.
The change was due to the renumbering of Chicago streets, also known as
the Brennan System.
The Sosman & Landis main studio
“The Encyclopedia of Chicago” explains this street name
change at the turn of the twentieth century. The publication specifically
describes the history prior to the 1901 Brennan System:
“The street names of Chicago offer a rich record of the
city’s spatial and social development. In 1830, southern Illinois mapmaker
James Thompson created Chicago’s first official map. Commissioned by the
federal government to bring order to
the city, Thompson platted the small downtown area bounded by Kinzie,
Jefferson, Washington, and Dearborn streets. Departing from the tradition of
naming streets for their destination, Thompson initiated the enduring practice
of naming streets after figures of national and local significance.
“In the decades that followed, explosive urban growth,
annexation, and the popular political favor of honorary street naming resulted
in multiple streets of the same name and streets known by several different
names. In 1901, building superintendent Edward P. Brennan confronted the
confused state of affairs. He suggested that Chicago be ordered as a large grid
with a uniform street numbering system, and proposed State and Madison Streets
as the city’s primary north-south and east-west axes. In 1908, the “Brennan”
system was officially adopted by the city council and became the basis of
modern Chicago’s street naming system.
“Over the next decades, Brennan’s system incorporated not
only the principle of having street address numbers register distance and
direction, but also the ideas that all portions of the same street should go by
a uniform name and that north-south streets should be named alphabetically as
one moved west from the Chicago/Indiana border. Led by Brennan and Howard C.
Brodman, superintendent of the city’s Department of Maps and Plats, the city
council and business community continued through the 1930s to replace duplicated
street names in order to simplify navigation and economize postal service and
merchandise delivery. Of the more than a thousand streets within Chicago’s city
limits today, the greatest number—more than 170—bear the names of real-estate
developers. English towns and Chicago’s former mayors and aldermen have
provided the next most popular sources of names.” The street numbering system
revision was completed in 1909.
A business address really does matter when it becomes part
of a firm’s identity. Sosman &
Landis were at their main studio for over three decades, becoming a landmark on
Clinton Street. When the company dissolved,
three things happened: the liquidation of company assets, a new lease in the
old studio space and the purchase of the “Sosman & Landis” name. For a
while, the new address became home to Chicago Studios. This caused a problem for Thomas G. Moses and
Fred Megan, especially after they purchased the Sosman & Landis name. You see, Chicago Studios began marketing
itself as the new owners of Sosman & Landis. They used the space, but had
not retained the Sosman & Landis staff or designs.
The problem became a significant one, forcing Moses to send
out letters to many previous clients. In 2010 I discovered a letter during the evaluation
of the Scottish Rite scenery collection in Salina, Kansas.
Sosman & Landis letter that I discovered during the Salina Scottish Rite scenery evaluation
A Nov. 13, 1923, letter from Sosman & Landis to the Salina Scottish Rite stated:
Dear Sir,
It has recently been brought to our attention that a certain
studio is advertising out old customers that they have brought the Sosman &
Landis Company and are now operating same, combining it with their original
company. We wish to assure you that this is not a fact and that our original
organization in intact, but our studio has been moved to new and better
quarters. Mr. Thomas G. Moses, our Art Director would like the opportunity of
meeting with your scene committee to submit our designs and specifications
covering your requirement. You will perhaps recall that we were favored with
your original scenery order, working through the M. C. Lilley Co. and
therefore, it is not necessary for us to give you any reference as to our
ability and quality of workmanship.
Sosman & Landis relocated their offices to 6751 Sheridan Road in 1923. Moses’ role with the firm had shifted from being the company president to its artistic director. In 1923, Moses and Fred Megan bought the name “Sosman & Landis,” continuing to produce scenery as before, just in a new location; they retained the studio designs. At first, they rented space at other shops, such as the Fabric Studio.