“World’s Columbian Exposition Events at Museum of Science & Industry, Newberry Library” by S.M. O’Connor

“MSI After Hours: Night at the Fair” is an adults-only event at the Museum of Science and Industry (M.S.I.) commemorating Chicago’s first World’s Fair, the World’s Columbian Exposition (1893), on Friday, June 15, 2018 from 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.  This is a chance for adults (twenty-one years of age and over) to experience some measure of what it was like to be one of the 27,000,000 people who visited the World’s Columbian Exposition: listen to music of the era; taste food and drinks made popular at the World’s Columbian Exposition (popcorn, hotdogs, and Pabst Blue Ribbon beer); and take selfies with the “most popular guests” at the World’s Fair, including the Golden Lady.  In addition, one can sit in on a live presentation as N.P.R. station W.B.E.Z.’s podcast Curious City explores the history of Chicago’s first World’s Fair.

Admission is $30 and covers snacks, one beer or cocktail, parking in the underground garage, and access to over a dozen exhibits.  [Please note the exhibit The Science Behind Pixar will not be open during this night event.]  There will also be a cash bar.  Tickets to the Curious City presentation are covered by the admission price and are available on-line on a first come, first served basis.  The 7:30 Curious City presentation is sold out, but tickets are still available for a second Curious City presentation at 8:30. Click on this link or go to Eventbrite (https://www.eventbrite.com) to purchase tickets.  Tickets to MSI After Hours events are nonrefundable.

The Palace of Fine Arts, also known as the Fine Arts Building, is the last palace from the White City fairgrounds of Chicago’s first World’s Fair, the World’s Columbian Exposition (1893), still standing in Jackson Park. The façade is modeled on temples standing on the Acropolis of Athens.  Upon the exposition board naming him Director of Public Works for the World’s Columbian Exposition, on October 30, 1890, Daniel Hudson Burnham, Sr. (1846-1912) named his partner John Wellborn Root, Sr. (1850-1891) the supervising architect and the great landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903) the supervising landscape architect. Some 19th Century sources state the Palace of Fine Arts was designed by Root and Atwood, but Root’s Second Empire-style design work was not incorporated by Atwood.  Root died after visiting Jackson Park on a stormy night. Burnham replaced him with Charles B. Atwood (1849-1895) was Chief Architect of the World’s Columbian Exposition and personally designed the Illinois Central Railroad Station, the Peristyle of the Court of Honor, and the Palace of Fine Arts. The neoclassical design Atwood developed for the Palace of Fine Arts combined Roman domes with Ionic Greek columns, statues, and frieze panels.

He borrowed the Central Pavilion’s north portico from a painting of a fanciful art museum by Paul-Albert Besnard (1849-1934) that had won the Prix de Rome. Atwood had two assistants. Alexandre Sandier had studied at the École des Beaux-Arts under Besnard.  Ernest R. Graham (1868-1936), who coordinated much of Atwood’s work on-site, including aspects of the Palace of Fine Arts.  Philip Martiny (1858-1927) carved the caryatids, the entablature figures, and the figure of Victory (the goddess Nike) that had initially crowned the Central Pavilion’s dome.   He was paid $18,920.00 for his work. Martiny’s contract didn’t cover installing his statues. Nike weighed too much, and had to be removed, but her finial remained. The Palace of Fine Arts originally had eight pairs of plaster guardian lions. Pairs of lions flanked Athena at the South Portico and Augustus at the North Portico of the Central Pavilion and there were two each at the north & south porticos of the East & West Pavilions.  Alexander Phimister Proctor (1860-1950), sculpted the lions flanking the Central Pavilion’s south stairs.  Edward Kemeys sculpted the lions flanking the Central Pavilion’s north stairs.  Augustus Baur sculpted the lions flanking both the north and south stairs of the annexes (East & West Pavilions).  The Palace of Fine Arts held art treasures from around the world.  To protect the world’s art treasures, unlike the other palaces of the White City, the Palace of Fine Arts had a brick substructure under its staff superstructure.

The other palaces were made of wood or steel framing clad in a kind of plaster known as “staff.” [Staff is a combination of plaster of paris, hemp fibers, and Portland cement.]  Some were disassembled in Chicago and reassembled in state capitals.  The Peristyle and some other structures burnt down on January 8, 1894.  Seven more palaces burnt down on July 5, 1894.  The South Park Commissioned turned the German building into a bathhouse, renamed it the Liberty Building during the First Great World War, and it burned down.  The Japanese Tea House burned down during the Second Great World War.  The Iowa Building became an eyesore and was demolished at the Museum of Science and Industry’s expense.

Initially, the South Park Commission wanted to tear down the Palace of Fine Arts after The Field Museum of Natural History vacated it in 1920, but sculptor Lorado Taft (1860-1936) rallied groups in support of restoring the building. [The South Park District was one of twenty-two park districts in Chicago that merged in 1934 to form the Chicago Park District.]  Mrs. Albion Headburg organized 6,000 women to donate $1 each to restore a small part of the Palace of Fine Arts to show what it could look like. They changed the mind of South Park Commission. The South Park Commission asked voters to approve the sale of $5,000,000 in bonds to finance restoration of the building to serve as a science museum, trade school, sculptural art museum, and convention center.

Dr. Charles R. Richards, author of The Industrial Museum and Director of the American Association of Museums, attested to the suitability of the Palace of Fine Arts as the future home of a science museum in 1925. On March 17, 1925, William E. Furlong filed his first lawsuit to enjoin the sale of $5,000,000 in bonds by the South Park Commission to finance the restoration of the Palace of Fine Arts.  On April 23, 1926, the Supreme Court of Illinois ruled against Furlong in Furlong vs. South Park Commissioners, declaring that the sale of $5,000,000 in bonds by the South Park Commission to finance the restoration of the Palace of Fine Arts was legal.  On April 16, 1929, Furlong filed a second lawsuit to enjoin the sale of bonds by the South Park Commission.

On April 17, 1929, Judge Oscar Hebel of the Superior Court of Cook County denied Furlong’s temporary injunction. On June 28, 1929, Furlong filed an amended lawsuit to place an injunction on the South Park Commission’s executing the ordinance passed and agreements made on March 20, 1929.  On June 29, 1929, Judge Hebel denied an injunction by Furlong against awarding the contract to restore the Palace of Fine Arts, and the sale of $1,500,000 in bonds by the South Park Commission.

      Julius Rosenwald (1862-1932), President of Sears, Roebuck & Company, who was already a famous philanthropist, told The Commercial Club of Chicago he would back an interactive science museum like Oskar von Miller’s Deutsches Museum von Meisterwerken der Naturwissenschaft und Technik (German Museum of Masterpieces of Science and Technology) in Munich, Bavaria, Germany. The Commercial Club had earlier sponsored Burnham’s Plan of Chicago (1909). In 1906-09, Burnham and assistant Edward H. Bennet drafted The Plan of Chicago with the financial support of Chicago’s Merchants Club, which merged with The Commercial Club of Chicago in 1907.  The report, published in 1909, circulated amongst Commercial Club members and public institutions, and was adopted by the Chicago Common Council at the urging of Fred A. Busse (1866-1914), Mayor of Chicago (1907-1911).  The Commercial Club of Chicago also sponsored the Chicago Zoological Society.

In 1926, the Museum Association incorporated as the Rosenwald Industrial Museum, but Julius Rosenwald persuaded his fellow trustees to drop his name.  In 1929, the Museum Corporation officially changed its name to the Museum of Science and Industry.

Designing the restoration and reconstruction of Atwood’s staff superstructure and brick substructure fell to the architectural firm employed by the South Park Commission: Graham, Anderson, Probst, and White – principally to Alfred Shaw (1895-1970).  He also designed the Art Moderne interior. Upon the death of Messrs. Probst and White, another firm, Shaw, Naess, and Murphy, undertook completion of the new interior’s design, beginning in January of 1937.

The façade and substructure underwent restoration and reconstruction between 1929 and 1931.  When it became apparent $5,000,000 would be insufficient to restore the building, Julius Rosenwald pledged to pay for completion of the project, in addition to his endowment pledge of $3,000,000.

Sculptors Fred Bruner and Harry Donato setup shop in the Shawnee Stone Co. facility in Bloomington, Indiana where the rest of the limestone for the new façade of the Palace of Fine Arts was prepared. For the Museum of Science and Industry, Bruner & Donato copied Hering rather than Martiny. Bruner & Donato sculpted statues that copied Martiny’s staff angels from the entablature. They also copied Hering’s Field Museum caryatids and executed in limestone Hering’s entablature figures. This is why the four central figures carved by Bruner & Donato in the 1920s are not replicas of the Martiny’s Muses of Art, Painting, Music, and Sculpture. They are, instead, Hering’s stylized representations of four races and geo-political centers of civilization: Europe, Far East Asia, Egypt, and the Americas. One difference between Hering’s clay maquette and the statues Bruner & Donato made is they gave East more Asiatic features. They also gave West different features, and a different stance. Hering borrowed the imperial orb from Daniel Chester French’s Republic, which had an eagle in place of a cross. A small-scale replica of Republic, funded by the Benjamin Ferguson Fund, stands south of the Museum of Science and Industry in Jackson Park.  The replica is twenty-four feet tall, while the original was sixty-five-feet-tall.

The Museum of Science and Industry opened in three stages between 1933 and 1940, with the first opening ceremony on July 1, 1933.  These events coincided with Chicago’s second World’s Fair, A Century of Progress International Exposition (1933-34), which opened on June 1, 1933.

Need a lift to “Night at the Fair?”  Click on this link to get 25% (up to $5) off of Lyft rides to and from “Night at the Fair.”  The Museum of Science and Industry is located at the northern end of Jackson Park, on the south side of 57th Street between Lake Shore Drive to the east and Cornell Drive to the West in the East Hyde Park neighborhood of the Hyde Park Community Area (Community Area #41) on the South Side of Chicago.

Now through September 3rd, the M.S.I. is open from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. every day except Thursday, July 19, 2018.  On September 4th, the M.S.I. will revert to regular hours (9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.).  On Sunday, September 23, 2018, the M.S.I. will be open from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.; and on Saturday, October 6, 2018, will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.; and on the weekend of Saturday, November 17, 2018 and Sunday, November 18, 2018, the M.S.I. will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.  The Museum of Science and Industry will be closed on Thanksgiving Day (Thursday, November 22, 2018) and the First Day of Christmas (Tuesday, December 25, 2018).  Extended hours (9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.) will be in play again from Friday, November 23, 2018 to Sunday, November 25, 2018; Saturday, December 1, 2018 and Sunday, December 2, 2018; Saturday, December 8, 2018 and Sunday, December 9, 2018; Saturday, December 15, 2018 and Sunday, December 2016; Saturday, December 22, 2018 and Sunday, December 23, 2018; and Wednesday, December 26, 2018 through Sunday, December 30, 2018.  Check this Webpage and the Museum of Science and Industry’s social media for updates.

The address is 5700 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60637.  The Website is https://www.msichicago.org.  The phone number is (773) 684-1414.

In related news, Professor Rebecca S. Graff will be giving a presentation on her archeological and archival research on the White City and Midway Plaisance at The Newberry Library on Thursday, October 4, 2018 from 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.  This presentation is called “The Vanishing City” and it is free.  Rebecca S. Graff is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Chair of Urban Studies at Lake Forest College.  She is the authoress of the forthcoming book The Vanishing City and the Enduring Home: Approaching Modernity at Chicago’s 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition and the Charnley House.  Click on this Eventbrite link to sign-up to attend this event.  If you sign up to attend this program, you will begin to receive The Newberry Library’s twice-a-month e-newsletter.

The Newberry Library takes up a whole city block bounded by Oak Street to the north, Dearborn Street to the east, Walton Street to the south, and Clark Street to the west.  It is located across from Washington Square Park (Bughouse Square), a little north of the Cathedral District west of the Magnificent Mile of Michigan Avenue, in the Near North Side Community Area (Community Area #8) on the North Side of Chicago.

As a whole, The Newberry Library is closed on Sundays.  The Newberry Library’s Exhibition Galleries are open on Mondays, from 8:15 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., but the Reading Rooms and Bookstore are closed. Otherwise, the Reading Rooms are open from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays, and from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on Saturdays; the Exhibition Galleries are open from 8:15 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, and from 8:15 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays; and the Bookstore is open from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Fridays, and from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Saturdays.  The Bookstore is closed daily for lunch from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m.  [Please note while the ground floor is undergoing renovations through the end of June, 2018, the Exhibitions Galleries and Bookstore will be closed.]  The Newberry Library will be closed on Independence Day (Wednesday, July 4, 2018); will be closed Labor Day Weekend (Saturday, September 1, 2018 through Monday, September 3, 2018); will close early (at 5:15 p.m.) on Wednesday, November 21, 2018; will be closed on Thanksgiving Day Weekend (Thursday, November 22, 2018 through Sunday, November 25, 2018); will be closed for Christmas from Saturday, December 22, 2018 through Wednesday, December 26, 2018; and will be closed for New Year’s Eve (Monday, December 31, 2018) and New Year’s Day (Tuesday, January 1, 2019).  Check this Webpage and social media for updates.

The address is 60 West Walton Street, Chicago, Illinois 60610.  The Website is https://www.newberry.org.  The phone number is (312) 943-9090.

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