Between 1924 and 1925, Thomas G. Moses, Fitch B. Fulton and Harry E. Naile delivered scenery to several Masonic theaters. The Pasadena Scottish Rite project began on the heels of the Fort Scott Scottish Rite project. It all started with Fort Scott, Kansas.
In August 1924, Moses wrote, “Fulton is now in Fort Scott getting ready for our big work. I bought a round trip ticket for a long western trip and started on the 16th of August arriving in Fort Scott on the 17th. Put in one day with Fulton, leaving on the 19th.”
Fulton was on site setting up the paint space in the theater and was already painting when Moses arrived for a day in Fort Scott. The two worked on a platform twenty-feet above the stage-left side of the theater. The project would be completed in spits and spurts that year.
After leaving Fort Scott and stopping in Salt Lake City, Moses arrived in Los Angeles on the afternoon of the August 22, He wrote, “Got busy immediately at Pasadena for ten days. As a final deal, I offered the Little Rock drops for $8,500.00, closed the deal and at Los Angeles for a big interior for the Consistory.”
So, while Fulton began the Fort Scott job, Moses landed the Pasadena job.
Moses returned to the Fort Scott Project, finished the work with Fulton, and then headed back to Chicago. By November 1924, Moses wrote, “I must get back to Pasadena as they want to open on the 24th of February, so we put the house in perfect shape for cold weather and got our tickets via the D.R.G. through Colorado. Met Fulton at Denver and were soon on our way to San Jose. Arriving in San Francisco, we reached the 3rd Street Station just in time to catch a train for San Jose. Went to the Vendome Hotel and Mrs. Fulton came up. It took us eight days to close a $7,000.00 contract and get to Los Angeles where we spent two days, finally securing a fine apartment at the 159 S. Los Robles Avenue in Pasadena, where we will remain for two months. Had a delightful Christmas day at Walters.”
Moses and Fulton planned on preparing the used Little Rock scenery for installation and painting a few new scenes for the Pasadena Scottish Rite.
Scene by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite theater in Little Rock, Arkansas, 1902. It was sold to the Pasadena Scottish Rite and installed in 1925.Scene by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite theater in Little Rock, Arkansas, 1902. It was sold to the Pasadena Scottish Rite and installed in 1925.Backdrop painted by Thomas G. Moses and Fitch Fulton in 1925 for the Pasadena Scottish Rite.Painted detail. Backdrop painted by Thomas G. Moses and Fitch Fulton in 1925 for the Pasadena Scottish Rite.
On February 14, 1925, the “Pasadena Post” reported, “The magnificent scenic drop curtains which have been hung in the new Scottish Rite cathedral to be dedicated Tuesday evening, are a gift of Major Charles M. Skillen, in memory of his son, the later Dr. Ralph G. Skillen. Both father and sone were charter members of the Pasadena Consistory.“The 73 drops represent some of the finest work of the artists of Sosman & Landis company of Chicago have ever produced, according to Thomas G. Moses, president of the firm, who is in Pasadena to personally supervise the work of installing them. “Each of the drops was especially designed and finished for the Pasadena cathedral. Months were spent in the preparation of then, it is said. About half were painted in the Chicago studios of the company and the reminder finished in this city. While Mr. Moses has watched carefully the painting of the curtains, much credit for their final perfection must go to the assistant and scenic artist, F. B. Fulton. Mr. Fulton believes the scenic work to be some of the finest he has ever produced. The final work of hanging and installing the curtains will be under the supervision of Harry Nail, a member of the Sosman & Landis company. This work demands such expert workmanship that Mr. Nail [sic.] was brought from Chicago so that no mistakes in installation could be made.”
The stage machinery at the Pasadena Scottish Rite installed by Harry E. Naile in 1925. This is the same system that was previously used at the Little Rock Scottish Rite from 1902 to 1923.The Pasadena Scottish Rite theater became known as the Cobb Auditorium in 1935.The original decor at the Pasadena Scottish Rite from 1925.The renovated Pasadena Scottish Rite, ca. 1965.The Pasadena Scottish Rite, c. 2017.
Only if you were standing backstage at the Pasadena Scottish Rite and saw “Little Rock” written all over the back of many of the scenes would you suspect that they scenery was not new. That a good portion of the collection was previously designed and installed at the Little Rock Scottish Rite in Arkansas.
“Little Rock” written on the back of a drop at the Pasadena Scottish Rite.“Little Rock” written on the back of a drop at the Pasadena Scottish Rite.Also included is information about the size, composition, scenic piece, and degree.
When the Scottish Rite in Little Rock purchased new scenery in 1923, their old scenery was returned on credit, applied toward the purchase of new scenery. This used collection was stored and then split between the Miami Scottish Rite and the Pasadena Scottish Rite. When some of the old Little Rock scenery arrived in Pasadena, Moses and Fulton touched up the scenes and then added some drops.Over the decades, the scenery collection was expanded, touched up, and repositioned. A complete remodel of the auditorium took place from 1964-1965, greatly altering the overall aesthetic and proscenium opening that showcased the scenic artworks.https://www.pasadenascottishrite.org/about-us/history/
Scenery by Sosman & Landis Scene Painting Studio for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Wichita, Kansas. In 1908, the Wichita Scottish Rite purchased new scenery. Their old scenery was relocated to the Masonic Temple in Yankton, South Dakota.
Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1898The Masonic Temple in Yankton, South DakotaThe Masonic Temple in Yankton, South Dakota
In 1927, 117 drops were moved from the Scottish Rite Theatre in McAlester, Oklahoma, to the Scottish Rite Theatre in Salina, Kansas. The collection dates from 1908, originally delivered by the Sosman & Landis Scene Painting Studio of Chicago. Thomas G. Moses (1856-1934) supervised the design and painting of the collection.
Scenery By Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery By Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery By Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery By Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery By Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery By Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery By Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery By Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery and stage machinery By Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery and stage machinery By Sosman & Landis, 1908 Sosman & Landis wooden arbor cage, 1908
Backdrop by the Sosman & Landis Scene Painting Studio of Chicago for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, Arkansas. This scene was removed from the Little Rock Scottish Rite in 1923 and placed into storage until 1925. In 1925 it was sold to the Pasadena Scottish Rite and installed in their new theater. This same scene was also featured in the 1904 Souvenir Program for the Little Rock Scottish Rite Reunion.
Scenery by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This scene was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Scenery by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This scene was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Scenery by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This scene was featured in Little Rock’s 1904 Reunion program. This scene was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Scenery by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This scene was featured in Little Rock’s 1904 Reunion program. This scene was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This scene was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This scene was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Painted detail. Scenery by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This scene was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Backstage at the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1904. Counterweight system by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This system was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925 by Harrey E. Naile, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Number painted on top show arbor placement at the Little Rock Scottish Rite. Numbers on the side show current location at the Pasadena Scottish Rite.Backstage at the Pasadena Scottish Rite, 2016. Counterweight system by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This system was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925 by Harry E. Naile, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Backstage at the Pasadena Scottish Rite, 2016. Counterweight system by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This system was installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925 by Harry E. Naile, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.Backstage at the Pasadena Scottish Rite, 2016. Scenery and counterweight system by Sosman & Landis for the Scottish Rite Theatre in Little Rock, 1902. This system and scenery were installed in the Pasadena Scottish Rite in 1925 by Harry E. Naile, under the supervision of Thomas G. Moses.
Thomas G. Moses, president of Sosman & Landis, became a Freemason in 1925, joining both the Pasadena Scottish Rite and Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine. After forty years of designing and painting Masonic scenery, he finally became a Freemason.
In 1921 Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Made a side trip to Little Rock to settle on the Scottish Rite Temple. I hope to be able to close the contract very soon.” He returned to Little Rock later that summer to close the contract for $9,548.00. However, it was only a verbal agreement that year. The original contract specified, “When our designs are completed, submitted and accepted, it is agreed that the painting can be started during our dull season soon after January 1, 1922. We agree to store the finished work covered by insurance until such time that it can be taken care of in Little Rock.”
Later in 1922, Moses wrote, “Went to Little Rock to see Mr. Rosenbaum.” He was still trying to finalize a written agreement with Little Rock, although some painting had already begun on the project. In the end, the contract would not be signed until 1923; two years of watching, waiting and starting the work. Those two years made all of the difference in the world for the life of the studio.
Charles E. Rosenbaum
It was not until the spring of 1923 that Moses finalized the Little Rock contract under his own name, and not that of Sosman & Landis. He wrote, “I arrived on the 16th of May with the contract of $10,040.00 in my name, out of which I am to get enough to pay Sosman and Landis’ indebtedness to me. I hope I will be able to do it.” Sosman & Landis had closed its doors by the time Little Rock finalized the work. In 1923, Moses was trying to buy the Sosman & Landis name after all of the studio’s assets were liquidated.
The 1902 Scottish Rite stage and auditorium in Little Rock, Arkansas. Illustration in a 1904 Souvenir program.
From the beginning, Sosman & Landis financed the majority of the Masonic stage projects, with clients paying nothing up front, one-third upon delivery and then the remainder over the next few months, or years. It made sense, as the studio landed the work with an appealing payment plan, winning out over their competitors. However, this only worked if the Scottish Rite Valleys honored the contractual obligations and made all of the agreed upon payments in a timely manner; many did not. Inevitably, that final payment always seemed to be a battle to collect. On top of everything else, Masons did not always understand what they were purchasing or receiving, so the numbers of scenic pieces in final contracts went up and down as specific settings were added or removed during contractual negotiations. Initially, a studio representative was sent to help supervise the scenery during its first use at a Reunion.
Scenic studios constantly waited in fear of not receiving that final payment, making both artists and studios left begging for what was contractually owed. Masonic work made up approximately 25% of all Sosman & Landis studio projects for over two decades. I believe the constant battle to collect funds owed by the Masons created a perfect storm that contributed to the studio’s financial downfall. Unfortunately, this occurred at the same time that the demand for painted scenery also began to plummet. Moses learned much from these experiences at did not offer similar terms of payment once Sosman & Landis closed.
Scottish Rite scenery projects were massive undertakings, often taking months to paint. Masonic stock scenery collections were frequently more than twice the size of those delivered to commercial theaters.
It was not until the late spring of 1923 that the Little Rock contract was signed. Moses wrote, “Went to Little Rock early in April, had my designs O.K. and had made an agreement with Rosenbaum to do the work on the ground… I got settled at the Marion Hotel, Loitz and Naile got quarters up near the Temple. The Marion is a good-sized hotel, and I had a good room and bath. After some trouble getting our bridge and frame, Loitz and I ran through 30 drops in the first 3 weeks. Of course, these were not our hardest ones, as I wanted to make a showing, we worked hard and to good advantage. Early in June the weather got quite warm and the rain did not help us. The high-water mark soon reached in the Arkansas River and I had a wonderful view from my window. My first duty in the morning was to take a look at the river, for I expected it to rise over the banks and that meant to the foundation of the hotel.”
Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923Scenery by Thomas G Moses for the Little Rock Scottish Rite, 1923
The project took longer than Moses hoped, and not due to his own failings. Mid-project Moses wrote, “Naile and his men are not giving me full service and I am getting desperate, as to my ability to pull the contract through with profit.” In the end, Moses completed the project in less than three months. He wrote, “Finished my work at Little Rock on the 4th of August, got a settlement in full. The last check was $4,995.00 and the $700.00 in old scenery that I am still holding, and I hope I will realize at least $1,500.00 out of it.” I would bet that Moses refused to leave town until receiving the final payment; there was too much on the line and a pattern of non-payment.
In regard to the old scenery that was removed from Little Rock in 1923. Accepting old scenery as credit on a new purchase was always a risky proposition. Unless there was a Masonic client waiting in the wings, the return of an old scenery collection was never advantageous to the studio, only to a future client. Storing an entire scenery collection demands a sizeble storage space. It would take another year before Moses located another Valley to purchase the old scenery – the Pasadena Scottish Rite. During 1924 negotiations with Pasadena, he wrote, “As a final deal, I offered the Little Rock drops for $8,500.00.” Although the Pasadena contract was for $8,500.00, Moses only paid himself $700.00 for the Little Rock scenery.
For the installation of the new Pasadena Scottish Rite scenery, Moses rented an apartment at 159 S. Los Robles Avenue in Pasadena, where he remained for two months that winter after arriving on Feb. 24, 1925. Of the Pasadena Scottish Rite project in 1925, Moses wrote, “The Scottish-Rite Bodies are well pleased with the layout that we have arranged for their new stage, using the old scenery from Little Rock, Arkansas, which I took part payment when I put in the new equipment at the Albert Pike Memorial for Chas. Rosenbaum. The Pasadena contract was for $8,500.00, out if which I paid myself $700.00 for the Little Rock scenery. The settlement was quickly made, and everyone was highly pleased with everything we did. We had our plush curtains on from the studio in time everything arrived on time and was placed in position. The lighting effects were very good all through the 32nd Degrees. Everyone worked hard for a big success which it certainly was in every detail.”
It was in Pasadena that Moses became a Scottish Rite Mason..
In 2018, I visited the Scottish Rite theater in Salina, Kansas. It was on my return trip from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to Minneapolis, Minnesota. Although I had documented the Salina collection before, I want to see the current condition of the deteriorating drops.
The Salina Scottish Rite theater was part of a 1920s Masonic building boom. Many Scottish Rite theaters with existing scenery collections enlarged their facilities and purchased new collections, trading in their old scenery for credit on a new purchase. These used scenery collections were then resold to other Scottish Rite theaters for a fraction of the original cost. In other cases, the Masons brokered their own used scenery deal, transferring scenery from one theater to another. That was the case with the 1908 McAlester scenery collection. The Salina Masons purchased the used scenery collection from the McAlester Scottish Rite. The collection was originally painted at the Sosman & Landis Studio. Here is the cathedral setting; one of the more complex scenes. For more information about Scottish Rite scenery and theaters, visit www.drypigment.com and use the keyword search function
Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery by Sosman & Landis with original shipping label for McAlester, OklahomaScenery by Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1908Scenery by Sosman & Landis, 1908
In 1883, Henry C. Tryon painted a drop curtain for the Salt Lake Theater. Many sources explain that Henry C. Tryon replicated a painting by William Linton (1791-1876), “A City of Ancient Greece, with the Return of a Victorious Fleet” for the Salt Lake Theatre’s drop curtain composition. The actual title of the painting was “A City of Ancient Greece – Return of the Glorious Armament,” and was painted by Linton in 1825. By 1840, the composition was engraved by J. W. Appleton and published by the Royal Gallery of British Art in 1840 with the title “A City of Ancient Greece.”
Henry C. Tryon’s drop curtain for the Salt Lake Theatre, pictured in George D. Pyper’s 1937 publication, “The Romance of an Old Playhouse.”Source that Henry C. Tryon used for “The Return of the Victorious Fleet” drop curtain at the Salt Lake Theatre, 1883.
On Sept. 2, 1883, the “Salt Lake City Herald” published a long description of Tryon’s drop curtain composition (page 4). Here is the article in its entirety:
“Henry C. Tryon, artist of the Salt Lake Theatre, has finished the drop curtain on which he has been engaged for some time past. To those who have been acquainted with the artist’s condition during his work on this picture, the result will be a profound surprise. He has had scarcely one day on it in which he had the strength necessary to the labor, to say nothing of the unfortunate condition of mind that naturally results from physical incapacity and sickness.
The picture is from a painting by W. Linton, called “A City of Ancient Greece, with the Return of a Victorious Fleet,” but the lines of the composition have been materially altered, and it must be admitted, with happy results. Instead of making the city of primary interest, Mr. Tryon has made the “Return of the Victorious Fleet” the subject of his story, using the city as a necessary detail to the perfection of the tale. The hour is just before sunset, the sky soft, warm, and tender – just such a sky as any lover of nature might have noticed here repeatedly about a week ago when our warm Indian summer evenings began; and one of who had watched the progress of the picture must have felt forcibly on many occasions during the past two weeks what a powerful effect our summer evenings have had on the artist’s mind and with what trust and feeling he has expressed the sentiment they awakened in him.
The scene opens in a broad harbor. Showing the grand architectural structures of the period and nationality in the rear, gradating into the distance with a few hazy mountains, as an accessory background, the outlines of which are made apparent by a remarkable atmosphere and soft clouds tinged and iris-hued by the rays of the fast sinking sun, the existence of which, while not visible, is none the less strongly felt. On the right, and very prominent, are marble supports and marble steps leading down to the water’s edge; opposite to the left there is a distinct intimation of the same architecture, only hidden by a profusion of foliage and the sails and banners and pennants of the incoming vessels. A viaduct beneath which a stream of water flows fringes the centre of the harbor in the rear, and here again the foliage golden tipped by the sun, grows in glorious profusion and saves the eye from that sense of weariness which architecture, bare and unrelieved, however magnificent, however fascinating for the time being, invariably produces upon a longer acquaintance.
With the genuine landscape artist’s feeling, which does not exist where it does not reach after trees and water generally, foliage freaks out from unexpected yet natural points, and while doing service by relieving the monotony of architecture, introduces a feeling which, even though unobserved, gives a sense of satisfaction which is experienced and enjoyed without passing through the judgment for approval. The story of the picture is told in its title – “The Return of the Victorious Fleet.” There need be no title for the picture explains itself. The vessels filled with warriors enter at the left, pass up the harbor, then turn to the right where they group together, where wives, children and friends rush out of the grand marble structures and are massed between the marble columns, and receive the dear ones who have come home safely and victoriously out of the contest with a powerful foe. Everything is glowing, warm and cheerful, the expression being free and happy, while the bright colors, the brilliant banners, streamers and pennants, the colors commingling and toned down by the intervening atmosphere, give to the principal chapter of the story a gala-day appearance, and inspire a sentiment of pleasure in the bosom of the spectator. There is enough omitted detail to give the imagination ample sway, hence it is that the story continues to the right outside the picture, leading to the belief that the scene which the eye beholds is continually indefinitely, and that the same happy and joyful sentiment prevails at other colossal structures which do not appear in the picture.
The story is made the richer by the happy idea of coloring which the artist has employed – that is, the line of light follows the interest of the story, which begins at the left, spreads bout two-thirds over the picture, and culminates at the extreme right hand. So the shadows are deepened at the left (the bright colors of the sails just entering the harbor relieving it of a dismal air) the light gradually dawning towards the middle of the picture where it breaks in a glorious flood just at that point where the interest of the story culminates, and then modulates and tones down to the right, leaving the impression that away in the distance the story is concluded, leaving also to the imagination just as much as is essential to the perfection of a charming sketch. One objection that might naturally be interposed to the detail of the story is the fact that on the front marble steps there are no figures such as can be seen in the rear, and which as a matter of fact ought really to be visible at the point referred to. But there are weighty reasons why these were omitted. In the first place, Mr. Tryon is essentially a landscape painter, and confesses his inability to paint respectable figures. This being true, he could add nothing to the effect. But even were he capable of painting figures, for the truth of the story they are better omitted in this picture. To paint them well, or even indifferently, would be to arrest the eye, and in the degree in which this result was produced, just in that degree would the interest of the story be interrupted, and the idea of the artist be disadvantageously affected. It is a principle in all art that too much detail ruins the finest paintings, as in all stories, those details only are to be tolerated which are essential to the solution of the plot, that moment it is an injury.
Therefore, for the reason that he was incompetent for good figure-painting, and because such a detail would arrest the eye at a point where the injurious, Mr. Tryon wisely deemed it best to leave out the figures, and made the architecture as simple as possible, relieving it only by the water at its edge, and the prows of the two vessels just turning one of the columns. So much for mechanical thought and labor. But who can explain in words the sentiment, the tone, the poetic idealism the artist intended and has expressed? It is in these mainly that his genius is manifest; and every eye that rests upon the glowing canvass will behold beauties peculiar to itself; in every mind it will awaken thoughts that may occur to none other, and the impression and sentiment that it may arouse will be individualized in each bosom. Imagine, a warm, rich, summer day, the haze of an Indian summer’s eve lingering lovingly and tenderly overall, toning down features that might be harsh and making indistinct and indefinite points that seem to fade away into atmosphere so delicate, so mild, so feeling, so tender!
Here and there a flood of warm light develops a particular feature in order that the contrast may heighten the effect, as for instance in the foliage under the viaduct, or as a single point in the architecture; as a cloud catches a single ray of the warm sun as to appears on the ripples on the waves. The beauty of the water in the harbor must strike every artist and art lover as a thing of surpassing loveliness, in that it is true to nature and nature is beauty. The reflection of the brilliant colors from the prows of the bright colored boats, mingling in the waves, produces a combination of brilliant colors, which is rendered beautiful from the very indistinguishable profusion of the hues and the brilliance of the effect, rendering the transparency of the water so realistic that the deception is perfect. But who can describe a painting in words, however beautiful, however poor? It may be pronounced good, bad, or indifferent, particularly points favored and others condemned; it may awaken thoughts that otherwise would remain dormant, and may call to view things of beauty which would otherwise have blossomed and blushed unseen, but to the artist alone is given to produce anything approaching an imitation of the evanescent beauty, the supreme grandeur of nature. The critic cane merely direct public attention, and that is all we dare attempt with regard to Mr. Tryon’s picture. The drop curtain just finished, establishes, or will establish a fact that has always been claimed by the HERALD, that a successful scene painter is every inch an artist. Only view “The Return of Victorious Fleet” by Mr. Tryon, and be convinced.”
The newspaper article stated that Tryon replicated a painting by William Linton (1791-1876) – “A City of Ancient Greece, with the Return of a Victorious Fleet” for the Salt Lake Theater. The actual title of the painting was “A City of Ancient Greece – Return of the Glorious Armament,” and was painted by Linton in 1825. By 1840, the composition was engraved by J. W. Appleton and published by the Royal Gallery of British Art in 1840 with the title “A City of Ancient Greece.”
William Linton’s 1825 painting was sold at auction in 2015
In 1910, Tryon’s drop curtain was replaced with a new one, tucked away in storage for the next two decades. Of the event, “The Salt Lake City Herald-Republican” reported,
“After thirty years of almost continuous service, the drop curtain at the Salt Lake theatre is to be replaced by a new one which manager George D. Pyper expects to have in place in time for the engagement of Henry Miller, beginning September 29. The subject of the new curtain will be Salt Lake Valley in the days of the pioneers, and it will be copied from a painting by William M. Minor, scenic artist at the theatre.
It will be difficult to exceed the beauty of the old curtain, whose artistic coloring and good drawing have made it a favorite for years. “The Return of the Victorious Fleet” was painted by Henry C. Tryon, one of the best artists in his line who ever came to Salt Lake. Those who have studied the stately ships coming into harbor may have wondered at the absence of life in the picture. The original, which is in the possession of Mr. Pyper, contained a crowd of people on the steps of the buildings, but Mr. Tryon was not a figure painter, and rather than mar his painting by inferior work, left the out altogether.
Except for the short intervals, “The Return of the Victorious Fleet” has hung in the theatre nearly thirty years. Some years ago an attempt was made to replace it by a picture of the chariot race in “Ben Hur.” The artist made the horses of heroic size, and so near the edge of the curtain that they seemed to menace the spectators who sat close. One critic of the day said that a certain scene in a play created a strong effect until “Pyper’s horses came clattering down” that there were plans for a new drop curtain for the Salt Lake Theater” (Salt Lake City Herald-Republican, 18 Sept. 1910, page 26).
Tryon’s curtain remained in storage until 1930 when it was donated to Kingsbury Hall. Tryon and his drop curtain made headlines again on January 9, 1930, when the “Deseret News” announced, “S. L. Theatre Curtain to be Hung at ‘U’” (page 9). The article reported, “The beautiful old Salt Lake theatre curtain, which hung for more than 40 years and witnessed, if curtains have that power, some of the earliest graduating classes of the old University of Deseret, will now function entirely as a cohort of education. It was announced Thursday that George D. Pyper, former manager of the theatre, had presented the curtain to the University of Utah to be hung in Kingsbury hall on that building’s completion. The curtain carries a painting by Henry C. Tryon entitled, “The Return of the Victorious Fleet.” “It was the most popular curtain ever hung in Salt Lake,” says Mr. Pyper.
On January 10, 1930, the “Salt Lake Tribune” reported, “ University Auditorium Gets Historic Curtain. Announcement was made Thursday by George D. Pyper, manager of the old Salt Lake Theater, that the curtain which was used in the historic structure would be presented to the University of Utah for the use in the new auditorium of the state institution, Kingsbury hall. The Salt Lake theater was razed last year, and the curtain is among the few relics of the building. It is decorated with a painting by Henry C. Tryon entitled, “Return of the Victorious Fleet.” Kingsbury hall will be completed about March 1. The new curtain will be hung shortly thereafter, with some form of ceremony” (page 7).
George D. Pyper wrote about the history of the Salt Lake Theatre in the 1937 book, “The Romance of an Old Playhouse.” Pyper recalled the popularity of Tryon’s drop curtain at the venue, writing:
“Many other artists have contributed to the scenic investiture of the plays produced in the old theatre, among whom may be named J. Guido Methua, George Tirrell, De La Harpe, R. Kirkham, Henry C. tryon and later James Anderson. Of these, most interest is centered on Tryon who painted “The Return of the Victorious Fleet” o a drop curtain which hung for many years in the Theatre, and which Salt Lake theatregoers never grew tired of. It was quite marvelous that Tryon’s curtain should have been so well regarded, because, while the original picture contained what seemed to be thousands of figures, Tryon’s reproduction contained absolutely none. Years later, desiring a change, I was induced by one of the artist’s to allow him to paint the chariot race from Ben Hur” with figures heroic size. The curtain was hung but did not make a hit. Mr. LeGrande Young, a regular patron and an expert on horses, came to me and said seriously that I might fool him on a landscape or marine scene, but I could not fool him on a horse; that those Ben Hur horses were spavined and their shoulders out of joint and that unless I took down the curtain he would not patronize the theatre. Then one of the newspapers said that in a very quiet scene which required a slow curtain, “down clattered Ben Hur’s horses and spoiled the scene.” So the noisy horses were turned out to grass and up again went “The Return of the Victorious Fleet” to the great satisfaction of the theatrical patrons. Only when it actually became thread-bare and the stage lights could be seen through its worn fabric would the public permit me to junk it” (pages 143-144).
The “Ben Hur” drop curtain that replaced Henry C. Tryon’s “Return of the Victorious Fleet” for a short period of time.
Saturday was our last big day to
lower scenery from the attic at the Tabor Opera House in Leadville, Colorado. It
was the sixth of seven workdays in a row. We did manage to hit our goal of
lowering all remaining shutter scenes, plus a few other pieces, to the stage
floor. The attic looks positively bare. Only eight borders remain for me to
document today. That being said, some scenic pieces still remain in the loft
above the attic and on platforms high above stage right and stage left. Documenting
the final shutters, wings and borders will have to wait until next time. The amount and the scope of the scenery at
the Tabor Opera House is staggering.
Two rocky pass shutters pieced together on the stage of the Tabor Opera House after spending a century in the attic. The shutters were painted by Frank Cox in 1888.The backside of the rocky pass shutters. This scene was also painted by Frank Cox in 1888.Two shutters forming a European street scene. The Tabor Opera House in Leadville, Colorado.Two horizon shutters and three wings. There are five remaining wings, but all have been cut down; one is missing.
The biggest surprise this week was
discovering a marked piece of scenery from the Tabor Grand Opera in Denver. This
was Tabor’s second theater. There are some interior set pieces and borders obviously
created for another, and much larger.
There are also a few pieces from touring productions that never left the
Tabor during the nineteenth century. It will be fun to track down more
information in the upcoming weeks.
The majority of the work this week
was completed by volunteers without any background in theater. Their careers
varied from nursing and teaching to law and public service. Some were born in
Leadville and others not; all were passionate about the project.
Volunteer crew on day 6 at the Tabor Opera House in Leadville, Colorado.Painted border, likely created for another venue due to size. This border matches the palace interior setting that we assembled earlier this week.
Painted scenery produced for the
stage a century ago continues to have a
broad appeal to the general public. Well painted scenes still cause people to gasp,
as did much of the scenery at the Tabor Opera House. It is just magical.
Painted detail from the rocky pass shutters. Note the seam between the to shutters.
For the next few weeks, I will continue
to post images from this week’s documentation, focusing on individual scenes
and painting techniques. More tonight.
In 1921 Thomas G. Moses wrote, “Made a side trip to Little
Rock to settle on the Scottish Rite Temple.
I hope to be able to close the contract very soon. I enjoyed the trip as I saw some very
interesting old buildings.” He later returned to Little Rock that summer,
writing, “I spent a week and closed the contract for $9,548.00.” This was a
verbal closure and all preliminary; the final contract would not be signed
until 1923.
Scottish Rite scenery projects were massive and sometimes
took years to land, and months to actually paint. Masonic stock scenery
collections were often more than twice the size of that delivered to a commercial
theater, ranging from 80 to 120 drops with dozens of set pieces. Masons did not
always understand what they were purchasing or receiving, so the numbers went
up and down as specific settings were added or removed during contract negotiations. I am beginning to realize that there were few
Scottish Rite Masons who understood the complexity of what was delivered or how
to effectively use it. During the early twentieth century, the company selling
the product often sent a representative to help stage and run the scenery during
the first Scottish Rite reunion. Masonic stagehands were instructed in the
appropriate handling of drops and the set up for stage effects.
By the time Scottish Rite Valleys purchased a second set of scenery,
often from the same firm, there was no longer training offered with the
installation. In some ways this is understandable; members were familiar with using
painted settings for degree work. However, as time passed much information became
lost in translation. It is like playing a game of telephone with a bunch of
older white men, some hard of hearing; important information gets dropped and
what made sense in the beginning becomes something entirely different. Even the origins of the scenery become a
little murky or completely lost.
Backstage at the Little Rock Scottish Rite, picture in a 1904 Reunion program.
On May 11, 1917, “The Washington Standard” reported.
“Olympia theater is now provided with two drop curtains, one painted by Sosman
& Landis, Chicago, entitled “The Water Place,” and the historic painting of
Olympia by Mr. Lange, which was used at the Spokane Fair during the canvass for
state capital” (Olympia, Washington,
page 7). This is another one of the many jobs by Sosman & Landis not mentioned
in Thomas G. Moses’ memoirs. This is a single article with no follow-up
information, so I am left with very little to go on.
The article notes that a painting
created for a country fair was repurposed for a theatre, used as a drop
curtain. This is not unusual. In 1893, a 20×30 mural for the California
building at the world fair was repurposed as a drop curtain for the Native Sons
of the Golden West Hal in San Francisco.
I explored this subject a few years back (see post #294). The Reed &
Gross Panorama Company created large scale paintings for the California State
Building with compositions that included: the harbor of San Francisco and the
city, as viewed from Goat Island; Christmas in Pasadena; the Stanford Ranch in
northern California; Leland Stanford’s Vineyard; Leland Stanford Jr. University
in Palo Alto; New Years at Hotel del Monte in Monterey, Santa Barbara, and
Fresno.James D. Phelan, one of the of
the World’s Fair Commissioners in 1893 purchased the 20’ x 30’ painting from
the California State Building after the fair, intending to use it as the new
drop curtain at the Native Sons of the Golden West’s Hall. At the time, the organization was
constructing a new building in San Francisco. Phelan was the association’s
president and purchased one of the paintings. Unfortunately the painting was irreparably
damaged in transit.
On January 10,
1896, “The San Francisco Call” reported, “A Fine Painting Spoiled” (page 8).
The original painting by Thaddeus Welch depicting “Golden Gate as Viewed from
Goat Island” was sold for $3,000. The article noted, “On Tuesday it was found
that the painting had been ruined by the careless persons who packed and
shipped it two years ago. Instead of winding the canvas around a roller these
bunglers wrapped it around a 4 by 4 inch scantling and every four inches the canvas
is cracked so that it is doubtful if it can be used.”
There are a few factors to consider:
The first is that the 1893 world fair painting was likely an
oil painting, as it cracked. Even if it had arrived safely, it may have looked
horrible under stage lights due to the sheen, characteristic of oil paintings. Those
unfamiliar with scenic illusion, for example Phelan, may not have realized
this, or that the oil painting would propose a fire threat once on stage.
However, I am intrigued with the basic idea that any large painting could be
transformed into a drop curtain for the stage.