When the Grand Lodge of Texas built their magnificent art deco/Egyptian-revival grand lodge building in Waco in the 1940s, a mural was designed originally to be installed behind the auditorium's Grand East. It was never completed, for reasons lost in the mists of time. Cheapness, laziness, changes in taste, or never getting around to it. The point is, it was never put in place.
According to PGM and Grand Secretary Brad Billings, it was included in the building committee meeting talks up until 1945. An architectural model was created when the building was proposed by architect Raoul Jossett, and it was built almost exactly as the model specified. But the painting itself was never installed. A look at the immense size of the auditorium stage gives you some idea of just how huge this would have been.
"Speculation is cost or they likely couldn't find a local artist to make that size painting," says Brad.
Fast forward to this past year.
An artistic Texas Brother named Sean Starr got hold of the original proposed artwork and has painted a scaled-down version for the Grand Secretary's office in three 5-foot by 5-foot panels. (Forgive the not-perfect match-up of the three panels - I pasted it together from three separate images that weren't quite perfectly lined up.)
It appears to depict Hiram Abiff (or perhaps King Solomon?) flanked by art deco depictions of the Holy Sts John, combined with the circle and parallel lines of our symbolism.
GS Billings says the mural will be projected behind the Grand East at the next annual communication of Grand Lodge. He adds, "We plan to make prints to help offset the cost of the artist to make it! I’m happy to answer any questions or give a quote. Such a cool thing to be a part of!"
As you are probably aware, the 1980s represented a turning point in English Freemasonry: what up to that time had been a somewhat mysterious (if publicity shy) but respected national organisation with many prominent members went into decline, as British elites largely stopped becoming Freemasons, public opinion turned negative, and overall membership numbers started their sharp decline.
ReplyDeleteI suspect you meant this comment for the previous story.
DeleteIt’s been too long since I read the English numbers - US voluntary associations all began their downward trend in 1958, not just Masonry. Country clubs became the hangout for the elites and the upper middle-class management and entrepreneurs, leaving the old fraternal clubs behind. Did the UK start to decline at this same period, or did fraternal groups and voluntary associations stave off membership drops a few more decades?