The Painted Brick Building Sides of buildings in Wyoming's towns and cities, and sometimes from other areas of the West. An examination of old style advertising. . . as it looks today.
Friday, May 13, 2022
Today In Wyoming's History: Casper's Historical Preservation Commission Meets Tonight, May 13, at Black Tooth Brewery.
Saturday, April 23, 2022
Southern Rockies Nature Blog: Amber and Her Arborglyphs
Saturday, April 16, 2022
Historic Sidewalk Maps, Denver Colorado.
The City of Denver has municipal offices right downtown, and in front of their municipal office building, they have a series of maps in the sidewalk, depicting Denver in prior eras. These are photos of a few of them.
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
Baseball mural, 1998 All Star Game. Denver Colorado.
This mural is directly across from Coors field in downtown Denver. The All Star Game was played at Coors Field in 2021, but this mural celebrates the 1998 game.
Monday, April 11, 2022
Street corner, Denver Colorado.
Saturday, April 2, 2022
West of Surrender, Denver Colorado.
Thursday, December 2, 2021
The Aerodrome: Medicine Bow Aiport (Site 32 SL-O (Salt Lake-Omaha) Intermediate Field Historic District).
Medicine Bow Aiport (Site 32 SL-O (Salt Lake-Omaha) Intermediate Field Historic District).
Monday, December 28, 2020
Lex Anteinternet: "Denver has outgrown us". El Chapultepec closes.
"Denver has outgrown us". El Chapultepec closes.
I really wondered how it was hanging on.
I'd never been in there, and I apparently never got a picture of it from the outside for our Painted Bricks blog. It wasn't very photogenetic anyway. But when the Mexican restaurant turned jazz club found itself no longer in the seedy Five Points district it had survived in for years, but in the new gentrified up and coming Coors Field area, without moving an inch, it just didn't look quite right. It's old school "the nightlife ain't the right life, but it's my life" type of genuine atmosphere didn't squire with the hipsterization of where it was.
COVID 19 didn't help things, but the owners were quick to note that it wasn't solely responsible for brining its 87 year existence to an end.
Jazz musicians and blues musicians, they shouldn’t have to time their sets around baseball innings and when the crowds are going to get out and be wild. They should be able to play their music, and the crowd should just be there to enjoy them, The employees and our musicians, our customers, we shouldn’t have to be worried about our safety when it’s time to leave.
Denver’s outgrown us.
So stated one of the owners.
I love Coors Field and baseball, about the only thing about Denver I actually like. But there isn't anything I like about Denver without some degree of reservation. Like everything else, there really isn't a permanent "old Denver" that was in some state of perfection. The area that El Chapultepec was in prior to Coors Field was a scary dump which was a bit scary to drive through in the middle of the day. It wasn't until Coors Field overhauled everything downtown that it changed.
But it was a change that to an end the feeling that the jazz club belonged there. A jazz club could probably exist somewhere else in Denver, but it wouldn't be genuine in the same fashion that El Chapultepec was.
But that's true of a lot of Denver now.
Indeed, that's true of a lot of the US, but Denver is somehow sort of unique in this way. The town that my father was born in, four years before El Chapultepec opened, was still around in many ways into the 1980s when I first started to go there on my own. Bits of that, indeed, still are. But when it pulled out of the oil recession of the 1990s it really started off in another direction even as the oil companies came back. Prior to that point it was sort of an overgrown cow town in some real ways. Then it started to become a hipster epicenter, followed soon thereafter by a new weedy culture based on pharmacological stupefaction. That's what basically characterizes the town town today. And the change hasn't overall been a good one.
Not that those who hung out at the jazz club were models of universal clean living. It was a bar. But the set in seediness in the old Five Points district was of a different sort than the new widespread seediness that characterizes a lot of Denver. In between was sort of a high point when it looked like the city would overcome its decay without creating a new one, based on Coors Field and what it brought to the downtown. It did partially succeed but weed took a lot of it away.
Monday, December 14, 2020
Wyoming Territorial Seal, Big Hollow Food Coop, Laramie Wyoming.
This is a nice rendition of the Territorial Seal of Wyoming on the Big Hollow Food Coop building in Laramie. We've featured this building before, but we missed the seal in our prior photographs. Indeed, one of our remote roving contributors to this blog just picked this one up.
Wyoming has a complicated history in regard to seals, and this one was actually the state's third. This is additionally slightly complicated by the fact that some versions have the year 1868 at the top, rather than 1869. 1869 is, I believe, correct.
The seal depicts a mountain scene with a railroad running in the foreground in the top field. In the bottom left it depicts a plow, shovel and shepherd's crook, symbolic of the state's industries. The bottom right field depicts a raised arm with a drawn sabre. The Latin inscription reads Cedant Arma Togae, which means "let arms yield to civil authority", which was the territorial motto.
This seal was an attractive one and in some ways it was a better looking seal than the one the state ultimately adopted. The state actually went through an absurd process early in its history in attempting to adopt an official state seal that lead, at one time, the Federal mint simply assigning one for the purpose of large currency printing, which featured state seals at the time. Part of the absurdity involved the design, which was describe in the original state statute rather than depicted, which lead to the sitting Governor hiring his own artist as he didn't like the one art of the one that had been in front of the legislature. That caused a scandal as the one that he picked featured a topless woman, which had not been a feature of the legislative design, and ultimately it was corrected to the current design.
All in all, looking at the original one, I think they could have stuck with it.
Saturday, December 5, 2020
Nolan Chevrolet, Casper Wyoming
Nolan Chevrolet was an early Chevrolet dealership in Casper, Wyoming, probably the town's first. It opened in this building, which was built for it, in 1924. The company originally operated in this location on South David Street until it outgrew it, becoming Schulte Chevrolet in 1965 and then being bought out by the Schellerbargers in 1966.
In 1969 the Chevrolet dealership moved out of this downtown location into a new facility on East Yellowstone, where it is today. While this facility was still in use when I was a kid, I don't ever recall it being a Chevrolet dealership and until this recent work was done on it, I didn't know that it had been.
In 1973 this building and a neighboring one became Plains Furniture, which I do recall. A childhood friend of mine's father worked there. It was completely redone at that time. Plains closed some time ago and these buildings have changed hands again and are part of a restoration process which is restoring the look of the block to its 1920s appearance. The area here, which was once a display yard for the dealership, had been enclosed by the Plains remodeling but has been re exposed, along with the Nolan sign and a Schellabarger sign as well.
Wednesday, August 26, 2020
Art or vandalism?
We don't like to put up photos of graffiti here as it's not in the same category as what this blog is dedicated to depict. Here, we make a bit of an exception.
The scenes depicted above are of the backs of two local office buildings. Both are actively occupied. I.e., there's going businesses in them. They aren't abandoned buildings.
So what, you may ask.
Well, graffiti has been a feature on the back of these buildings for a long time, but it's grown markedly worse in recent years. The amount of graffiti has increased as the building on the right has been oddly popularized in the local press. And when I say the building, I mean the alley. For reasons that aren't apparent to me, the fire escape has become locally celebrated as some sort of a wonder. That's drawn people to trespass on it and as that's occurred, graffiti has likewise increased as well. So have high school graduation pictures with the staircase as a backdrop and even wedding photos.
And now a local theater company.
I'm not a big fan of local theater, which speaks poorly of me. When I was very young my parents introduced me to the theater at the local community college which was a real treat for all of us grade school kids. I can dimly recall seeing You're A Good Man Charlie Brown and The Man From Lamancha at the college theater. While in high school I was never in theater but about that time I was introduced to the text of plays as literature, and I really like some of those. I've seen more college production in latter days, including when I was in college, including, by my recollection, The Dark Of the Moon, which I don't particularly care for, and A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum, which I do. When our kids were little, we took them to a college play about the Wright Brothers.
Local theater, however, is another deal entirely and you have to admire the people who are willing to do it. It doesn't get hte same viewership as college theater, for one thing. And the quality fo the volunteers is bound to be uneven.
Anyhow, there's a couple local theater companies around here and one of them decided to put on a version of a famous Greek play. I've read the text of the play as a college student, which is a long time ago, but I can dimly recall the outline of it. In this production of the play, apparently, there's an element that emphasizes the need to put on a play in spite of hte presence of an Athenian plague, which apparently might be a real background story to the original play. I.e., it was staged during a plague, perhaps, during which the author felt it critical to reopen the Athenian theaters in spite of hte risks.
There's a lot of things that are interesting about that, including that if that's correct, ancient Greeks, while they may not have had the germ theory of disease, grasped that hanging around in groups spread it. Athens apparently closed up shop to try to combat it, something that might seem familiar to the readers here. If my understanding of the views at the time are correct, there were also those who dissented from that view. . . which is also interesting in context.
In the current context, it's generally those who are on the left to the center left, politically, who have been for keeping things shut down and a tight quarantine, while on the right to the center right the view is the opposite. In the middle, where most folks are, the views are nuanced. On the edges, they aren't.
Anyhow, most theater people are on the hard left. It's the hard left that generally would really have a really tight quarantine. Probably most people in local theater on are the left somewhere.
Which makes a play all about protesting quarantines oddly ironic.
Anyhow, that's not why we have posted this here. Apparently determining to stage this out in the open for a certain sort of street cred feel to it, the producers have added to the graffitti.
This may make the town about hte only town around which graffitti making reference to ancient Greece, but it's still graffitti. Of course, there was a lot of it before.
I'm not quite sure what to think.
The play on opening day. I happened to be in the building at the time and so I snapped this photo. There wasn't a large crowd, but then it was opening day during a time of pandemic too.
One thing maybe the theater company and the audience might think is how gracious the building occupants are. It's impossible not to notice a thing like this and in a lot of places the reaction would have been hugely negative. No reaction at all isn't permission, but it is pretty gracious.
Tuesday, August 25, 2020
Vita Sana Olive Oil Company, Casper Wyoming
Monday, August 24, 2020
Antelope mural, Laramie Wyoming
Somehow I missed this mural in downtown Laramie when I was otherwise photographing the excellent set of murals there. This one depicts Wyoming scenes very skillfully, along with a state map, on the side of a building.
It also contains a sketch of the mythical Wyoming jackalope and a quote from D. L. Moody. The quote depicted with the jackalope is; “Our greatest fear should not be of failure, but of succeeding at something that doesn't really matter.”
Friday, July 31, 2020
Elk Mountain Trading Company. Elk Mountain, Wyoming.
This is the Elk Mountain Trading Company building in the tiny town of Elk Mountain, Wyoming. Built in 1932, the building and business name is presently used by a restaurant.
Sunday, February 9, 2020
Graffiti Records Mural, Rock Springs Wyoming
This is a mural on the side of Graffiti Records in Rocks Springs, Wyoming.A fox and a jack rabbit adorn the buidling.
Saturday, February 8, 2020
CPA Office Murals, Rock Springs Wyoming.
The office of a CPA in Rock Springs, Wyoming. Most of the themes on this side of the building have to do with the rights of women in society.
The other side of this building also has murals, but I have yet to photograph them.
Thursday, January 30, 2020
Former Grocery Store, Rocks Springs, Wyoming.
Rock Springs Wyoming has a fairly extensive old downtown dating from the early 20th Century. Not all of the buildings are in good shape by any means, but they do provide an example of what an early 20th Century downtown was like. Very few newer buildings have been built in Rock Spring's old business district and therefore, in that sense, its well preserved.
One of the buildings located there is this former grocery store which features a fairly typical, and well preserved, painted wall advertising its wares.
Thursday, December 5, 2019
Holscher's Hub: Pentax: Built like a tank
Tuesday, July 16, 2019
Grant Street Grocery, Casper Wyoming
Grant Street Grocery in Casper Wyoming is the only surviving small neighborhood grocery store in the town and even advertises the same.
Opened in 1921, the store was converted into a specialty grocery store and deli some years ago, and features meats and cheeses, as well as many other items, that are unlikely to appear on the counters of regular grocery stores. It's featured here for its simple sign, as well as being a remnant of something that was once very common, a neighborhood store.
Wednesday, June 26, 2019
University Building, Denver Colorado.
What's depicted here is the smokestack of the University Building in Denver Colorado.
The University Building was built in 1910 as the A. C. Foster Building and was renamed in 1921 when it was donated to Denver University. It contains many art deco embellishments.
A more recent embellishment to the building, which is now an apartment building, has been the painting of its smokestack as a No. 2 pencil, thereby playing on its name.
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
La Boheme, Denver Colorado.
Postscript
The image is in fact that of Marilyn Monroe. I ran across it by accident elsewhere on the net.
Monday, May 27, 2019
Paleontologist Mural, Laramie Wyoming
Sunday, May 26, 2019
Indian Mural, Laramie Wyoming
I know that this mural's image is taken from a photograph, but unfortunately I don't know who the photograph was of. Should anyone recognize the subject, let us know who it is in the comments.
Saturday, May 25, 2019
Cowgirls, Laramie Wyoming
Friday, May 24, 2019
Wyoming Scenes Mural. Laramie Wyoming
Another Laramie alley mural, this one featuring various scenes of Wyoming, both current and historical.
Thursday, May 23, 2019
Tree Mural, Laramie Wyoming
We noted this mural a couple of days ago when the larger mural next to it was featured. Here's a closure view.
Wednesday, May 22, 2019
The Black Fourteen, Laramie Wyoming Mural
The Black Fourteen were fourteen University of Wyoming football players who lost their positions on the football team in 1969 when they sought to wear black armbands during a scheduled football game between UW and BYU.
As noted in our entry on our companion blog, Some Gave All;
The action was intended to protest the policy of the Mormon church in excluding blacks from leadership roles in their church. Coach Eaton, the UW football coach at the time, dismissed all fourteen players prior to the game, ending their football careers at UW and, at least in some cases, simply ending them entirely.
As also noted in that entry, which depicted a memorial in the UW Student Union, and which was posted in 2017:
The event was controversial at the time, and to a lesser degree, has remained so. Generally, in most of Wyoming, Coach Eaton was supported, rather than the players, which doesn't mean that the players did not have support. As time has gone on, however, views have changed and generally the players are regarded as heroes for their stand. Views on Eaton are qualified, with some feeling he was in the wrong, and others feeling that he was between a rock and a hard place and acted as best as he could, even if that was not for the best.
The mural is located in an alley in downtown Laramie. As noted earlier in this series of posts, downtown Laramie has had a mural project and, in fact, most of the murals are located along the same alley over the course of several blocks.
Tuesday, May 21, 2019
Big Hollow Natural Foods, The Second Story Bookstore, Laramie Wyoming
This is a mural I was sure I'd posted before, but apparently have not. One of a collection of murals in downtown Laramie, Wyoming.
Indeed, these photographs show two separate murals, as there is the tree mural, apparently a nocturne, behind the one that is principally featured here.
Oops
And, indeed I had. I just didn't post them at the time. So I'm going to go back and do that now, leading to the oddity that the last two mural topics are more recent than those which are about to follows.
Monday, May 20, 2019
Fish Mural, Laramie Wyoming
Sunday, May 19, 2019
Trees and Hills Mural, Downtown Laramie, Wyoming.
There has been an extensive mural project in downtown Laramie Wyoming in recent years. Indeed, I thought that I'd posted a set of photographs on Laramie murals before, and I'm pretty sure that I've taken a collection of them, but I can't see that I posted them.
This mural is a fanciful landscape featuring animated trees.