Lot Essay
Old King Cole was the first of twelve murals painted by Maxfield Parrish, one of America's greatest book and magazine illustrators of the twentieth century. In 1894, while finishing his studies at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Parrish was selected by the Mask and Wig Club, the theater group of the University of Pennsylvania, to decorate part of the interior of their new clubhouse. The commission included not only the large mural above the bar (Old King Cole) but also the decorations for the entire grill room. What came to be called "The Parrish Room," this wonderful display of fantasy, humor and wit earned the artist immediate praise and critical acclaim, setting him on a path of continual success.
Established in 1889, the Mask and Wig Club is the second oldest undergraduate drama club in the country. In 1893 the club purchased an unused stable, formerly a church, for its new clubhouse and theater. The architect chosen to redesign the building was Wilson Eyre, who previously designed Northcote, the home of Parrish's father in Cornish, New Hampshire. Eyre, who shared Parrish's enthusiasm for the medieval ages, sought to preserve the existing Tyrolean flavor of the building while adapting it to its new function. (C. Ludwig, p. 151)
Reared by an artistic father who gained recognition for his etchings of New England scenery, Maxfield Parrish showed signs of interest in art and architecture at a very young age. In addition to the fine arts, Parrish was exposed to and embraced the worlds of music, literature and theater. After travelling with his parents through England, France and Italy between 1884-86, Parrish returned to America and entered Haverford College with the intention of becoming an architect, so impressed was he by the gothic and renaissance architecture of Europe.
At Haverford, residing with the young art critic Christian Brinton, Parrish adorned the walls of his and his friends' dormitory rooms, as well as his now famous chemistry notebook, with elaborate, spontaneous decorations. Having so relished these leisure time activities and having realized that a career in architecture demanded subservience to clients, he left Haverford and entered the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts with the intention of becoming an artist. There Parrish studied under Thomas Anschutz and Robert Vonnoh from 1892-94. Anschutz introduced the artist to the world of photography and may have also inspired Parrish to experiment with unmixed colors--the basis of the technique of glazing which Parrish later mastered.
Sometime in the early 1890s, Parrish also studied at the Drexel Institute of Arts and Sciences under Howard Pyle, one of, if not, the greatest illustrators of the day. Pyle quickly recognized Parrish's unique and individual style and told him he was beyond his coursework. However, Parrish went away from Pyle's studio with an interest in historic subject matter and period costumes which feature prominently in much of Parrish's work, including Old King Cole.
During his student days, Parrish received many commissions for artwork from nearby institutions, such as Bryn Mawr College for which Parrish designed posters and program covers for theatrical productions. This early experience in the commercial art world paved the way for the extensive room design of the Mask and Wig Club. At twenty-four years old, Parrish approached this project with a vitality and enthusiasm which is echoed in the designs themselves. During the decoration of the proscenium arch, which depicts a male and female dressed in medieval costumes representing comedy and tragedy, Parrish wrote to his father,
It is great fun--and I have constantly to keep a check on myself. I get so excited and carried away with what I am doing that 'tis bad for one's nerves; but there is in it at times a fiendish
delight which partakes of all sorts of sensations, of what is
possible in art and in me and in everything. (quoted in C. Ludwig, p. 152)
In addition to the arch, Parrish decorated a wall covered with wooden pegs which hold beer mugs of the club members. Around several dozen pegs, the artist painted comical caricatures intertwined with names identifying the mug owners. For the club, he also designed the wall around the ticket window, a bulletin board, and four program covers. In these images, Parrish's unique and youthful imagination has animated a dark wooden room in a light-hearted and whimsical manner beyond compare.
The major and most accomplished portion of the entire project was the large mural above the bar titled Old King Cole. The richly colored mural complete with banderoles and shields is divided into three panels by structural wooden beams. The far right panel depicts the seated king "round of body, rosy of countenance, and with a smile and pose that no one could mistake as belonging to other than a very merry old soul indeed." The center panel depicts the three fiddlers "advancing with mincing step, each with bow in hand, their faces delightfully expressive of the true courtier's attitude." (J. Carrington, p. 221) The left panel is filled with a rotund cook who stands erect raising a large steaming bowl over an equally large belly. Through the arched windows of this opulent interior, a fairy-land landscape of castles, green meadows, and light fleecy clouds can be seen. This fantastical backdrop became a hallmark of Parrish's work.
The flat areas of rich color throughout the mural give the image a lively, theatrical quality. The striking checkerboard floor of three alternating colors, the rich surface patterning of the far walls and the undulating areas of red, green and gold of the three fiddlers combine to create an active play of form and color. The expressive facial and hand gestures of the figures heighten the sense of comedy and humor inherent in the famous tale.
The overall mural reveals much of Parrish's working methods as well as his natural artistic inclinations. Most significant is the architectonic sense of compostion. As his early education reveals, Parrish was initially interested in architecture and thus such a site-specific commission was well suited to his background. The personal selection of an architectural space within an already existing structure reiterates the artist's natural tendencies. In addition to this predilection towards architecture, the mural demonstrates Parrish's early, very graphic method. This flat, linear style clearly derives from his poster and cover designs which depended on strong contour lines and silhouettes for an effective design. To achieve these bold, clear outlines, Parrish used paper cut-outs in creating his composition. As Christian Brinton recalls, Parrish began using this technique while a student at Haverford.
The customary toys were not to his taste. They seem stiff,
soulless and inarticulate; so, armed with scissors and paste-pot, he proceeded to cut out and piece together a world of his own
making, a universe of ferocious giants and fabulous monsters
of the forest, of fairy princesses...It was a cosmos entirely of his own concoction. Every figure was carefully designed.
(C. Brinton, p. 340)
While facilitating the drawing process of a design, this tool simultaneously limited the range of designs the artist could use--notice the figures, as well as most of the additional "stage props," they are all either in profile or in full frontal position. However, this device lends the mural a simple, purely decorative quality characteristic of the graphic arts of the day.
Old King Cole enjoyed a favorable reception, so much so that the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts purchased the preparatory study for the mural in 1895 after it was exhibited at the Architectural League in New York where Harper's Weekly also took notice of its accomplishment. In the following passage from a 1904 article from House and Garden, Helen Henderson reiterates the positive response to this early work: "these are of special interest as being practically the first commercial output of a man at the pinnacle of professional success. The mural decorations show all the spirit of a con amore performance, indeed the remuneration was trifling in respect of the merit of the work." After this project, Parrish enjoyed a continual flow of commissions for book and magazine illustrations, calendars and prints, advertisements for products varying from chocolate to tires, as well as eleven more murals, including another Old King Cole commissioned for the Knickerbocker Club in 1906, now in the St. Regis Hotel in New York City. All of these subsequent works by Parrish reveal the wildly imaginative creations of a make-believe world that essentially stem from his earliest masterpiece Old King Cole at the Mask and Wig Club at the University of Philadelphia.
Established in 1889, the Mask and Wig Club is the second oldest undergraduate drama club in the country. In 1893 the club purchased an unused stable, formerly a church, for its new clubhouse and theater. The architect chosen to redesign the building was Wilson Eyre, who previously designed Northcote, the home of Parrish's father in Cornish, New Hampshire. Eyre, who shared Parrish's enthusiasm for the medieval ages, sought to preserve the existing Tyrolean flavor of the building while adapting it to its new function. (C. Ludwig, p. 151)
Reared by an artistic father who gained recognition for his etchings of New England scenery, Maxfield Parrish showed signs of interest in art and architecture at a very young age. In addition to the fine arts, Parrish was exposed to and embraced the worlds of music, literature and theater. After travelling with his parents through England, France and Italy between 1884-86, Parrish returned to America and entered Haverford College with the intention of becoming an architect, so impressed was he by the gothic and renaissance architecture of Europe.
At Haverford, residing with the young art critic Christian Brinton, Parrish adorned the walls of his and his friends' dormitory rooms, as well as his now famous chemistry notebook, with elaborate, spontaneous decorations. Having so relished these leisure time activities and having realized that a career in architecture demanded subservience to clients, he left Haverford and entered the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts with the intention of becoming an artist. There Parrish studied under Thomas Anschutz and Robert Vonnoh from 1892-94. Anschutz introduced the artist to the world of photography and may have also inspired Parrish to experiment with unmixed colors--the basis of the technique of glazing which Parrish later mastered.
Sometime in the early 1890s, Parrish also studied at the Drexel Institute of Arts and Sciences under Howard Pyle, one of, if not, the greatest illustrators of the day. Pyle quickly recognized Parrish's unique and individual style and told him he was beyond his coursework. However, Parrish went away from Pyle's studio with an interest in historic subject matter and period costumes which feature prominently in much of Parrish's work, including Old King Cole.
During his student days, Parrish received many commissions for artwork from nearby institutions, such as Bryn Mawr College for which Parrish designed posters and program covers for theatrical productions. This early experience in the commercial art world paved the way for the extensive room design of the Mask and Wig Club. At twenty-four years old, Parrish approached this project with a vitality and enthusiasm which is echoed in the designs themselves. During the decoration of the proscenium arch, which depicts a male and female dressed in medieval costumes representing comedy and tragedy, Parrish wrote to his father,
It is great fun--and I have constantly to keep a check on myself. I get so excited and carried away with what I am doing that 'tis bad for one's nerves; but there is in it at times a fiendish
delight which partakes of all sorts of sensations, of what is
possible in art and in me and in everything. (quoted in C. Ludwig, p. 152)
In addition to the arch, Parrish decorated a wall covered with wooden pegs which hold beer mugs of the club members. Around several dozen pegs, the artist painted comical caricatures intertwined with names identifying the mug owners. For the club, he also designed the wall around the ticket window, a bulletin board, and four program covers. In these images, Parrish's unique and youthful imagination has animated a dark wooden room in a light-hearted and whimsical manner beyond compare.
The major and most accomplished portion of the entire project was the large mural above the bar titled Old King Cole. The richly colored mural complete with banderoles and shields is divided into three panels by structural wooden beams. The far right panel depicts the seated king "round of body, rosy of countenance, and with a smile and pose that no one could mistake as belonging to other than a very merry old soul indeed." The center panel depicts the three fiddlers "advancing with mincing step, each with bow in hand, their faces delightfully expressive of the true courtier's attitude." (J. Carrington, p. 221) The left panel is filled with a rotund cook who stands erect raising a large steaming bowl over an equally large belly. Through the arched windows of this opulent interior, a fairy-land landscape of castles, green meadows, and light fleecy clouds can be seen. This fantastical backdrop became a hallmark of Parrish's work.
The flat areas of rich color throughout the mural give the image a lively, theatrical quality. The striking checkerboard floor of three alternating colors, the rich surface patterning of the far walls and the undulating areas of red, green and gold of the three fiddlers combine to create an active play of form and color. The expressive facial and hand gestures of the figures heighten the sense of comedy and humor inherent in the famous tale.
The overall mural reveals much of Parrish's working methods as well as his natural artistic inclinations. Most significant is the architectonic sense of compostion. As his early education reveals, Parrish was initially interested in architecture and thus such a site-specific commission was well suited to his background. The personal selection of an architectural space within an already existing structure reiterates the artist's natural tendencies. In addition to this predilection towards architecture, the mural demonstrates Parrish's early, very graphic method. This flat, linear style clearly derives from his poster and cover designs which depended on strong contour lines and silhouettes for an effective design. To achieve these bold, clear outlines, Parrish used paper cut-outs in creating his composition. As Christian Brinton recalls, Parrish began using this technique while a student at Haverford.
The customary toys were not to his taste. They seem stiff,
soulless and inarticulate; so, armed with scissors and paste-pot, he proceeded to cut out and piece together a world of his own
making, a universe of ferocious giants and fabulous monsters
of the forest, of fairy princesses...It was a cosmos entirely of his own concoction. Every figure was carefully designed.
(C. Brinton, p. 340)
While facilitating the drawing process of a design, this tool simultaneously limited the range of designs the artist could use--notice the figures, as well as most of the additional "stage props," they are all either in profile or in full frontal position. However, this device lends the mural a simple, purely decorative quality characteristic of the graphic arts of the day.
Old King Cole enjoyed a favorable reception, so much so that the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts purchased the preparatory study for the mural in 1895 after it was exhibited at the Architectural League in New York where Harper's Weekly also took notice of its accomplishment. In the following passage from a 1904 article from House and Garden, Helen Henderson reiterates the positive response to this early work: "these are of special interest as being practically the first commercial output of a man at the pinnacle of professional success. The mural decorations show all the spirit of a con amore performance, indeed the remuneration was trifling in respect of the merit of the work." After this project, Parrish enjoyed a continual flow of commissions for book and magazine illustrations, calendars and prints, advertisements for products varying from chocolate to tires, as well as eleven more murals, including another Old King Cole commissioned for the Knickerbocker Club in 1906, now in the St. Regis Hotel in New York City. All of these subsequent works by Parrish reveal the wildly imaginative creations of a make-believe world that essentially stem from his earliest masterpiece Old King Cole at the Mask and Wig Club at the University of Philadelphia.