21/08/2024
One of our favorite art wraps, great for helping Music tour guests imagine the glittering crowds attending Staub's Theatre in its heyday.
! 📸 - Staub's Theatre by Russell Briscoe at Gay Street and W. Cumberland Avenue. Sponsored by Home Federal Bank. Photography by Mike O'Neill.
Briscoe's early creative impulses seemed limited to whimsical cartooning and, in the 1930s, an earnest effort to manufacture wooden toys and miniatures with the help of his wife, Deas. It was not until age 58, when Deas surprised him with a gift of oil paints and brushes, that Briscoe began to paint.
For the last 20 years of his life Briscoe was prolific, producing an estimated 75 meticulously detailed scenes of Knoxville, inspired by both nostalgic memories and by history as passed down to him by his elders. For him painting was a personal labor of love, happily out of step with artistic trends of the modernist era. Though he sometimes used his paintings to illustrate his talks about old Knoxville, the only exhibition of his work he ever witnessed in his lifetime was in 1972, when UT's McClung Museum presented a show of his work.
Referring to Briscoe's untrained style as "American primitive," Professor Kermit Ewing, an artist known for his experiments in abstract expressionism, remarked of Briscoe, "His fresh color, natural sense of design and thoroughness result in a personal expression of high artistic merit."
This scene shows Staub's Theater, built by Swiss immigrant Peter Staub on this corner in 1872, and hosted a wide variety of performers, from Lily Langtry to Sarah Bernhardt to W.C. Fields--as well as lecturer Frederick Douglass. This painting imagines it as it was on a gala night around 1897. It had become known as the Lyric before its demolition in 1956.