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Frank "Pancho" Gates Sold at Auction Prices

b. 1904 - d. 1998

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    • 1930s Frank "Pancho" Gates Set Designs + 3 Anonymous
      Apr. 20, 2023

      1930s Frank "Pancho" Gates Set Designs + 3 Anonymous

      Est: $500 - $750

      **Originally Listed At $400** Total of 12 pieces. Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). 9 "It Can't Happen Here" Set Designs. Mixed media on matte board, 1936. All signed with play, act, scene, and date below image. Anonymous (American, mid-20th century). 3 Set Designs. Mixed media on paper, ca. 1934. One signed "O'Hearm" on verso. Accompanied by matte signed "Jones" and dated 1934. A fascinating ensemble of 12 mixed media set designs: three by an anonymous 20th-century artist and nine by Frank "Pancho" Gates for the play "It Can't Happen Here," written by Lewis and John C. Moffitt and based on the novel of the same name by Sinclair Lewis (American, 1885 to 1951). Published in 1935 and premiering as a play in 1936, "It Can't Happen Here" describes the rise of a US dictator, similar to how Adolf Hitler gained power. Each design, save for the tranquil forest landscape of Act I Scene I, displays a darkened scene dominated by shadows, which is quite apropos to the subject matter. Size of board (all the same): 20" L x 15" W (50.8 cm x 38.1 cm) All 12 pieces employ a wide range of media, including watercolor, acrylic paints, pastels, charcoal, crayons, and colored pencils. Two of the three anonymous pieces may also be by Gates and have served as preliminary studies for "It Can't Happen Here" set designs. The third may be a set design instead for Shakespeare's "Othello" as they are also accompanied by a matte inscribed "OTHELLO. SC. II. / A Council-Chamber. / Jones 1934." Accompanied by a custom leather-bound portfolio cover. Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post's Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174639

      Artemis Gallery
    • Mixed Media Drawings Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates
      Apr. 06, 2023

      Mixed Media Drawings Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates

      Est: $500 - $750

      **Originally Listed At $400** Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). 9 total mixed media drawings: 7 on paper & 2 on illustration board, n.d. A captivating ensemble of mixed media drawings depicting varying scenes: four taking place on a ship at sea and five set in a Spanish or Spanish Colonial village. Each of the images displays a keen eye for light, with contrasting hues that bring a dynamism and drama to the composition. Two display similar images with three sailors in a rowboat suggesting that some of these may have served as sketches for larger or final compositions. Size of paper (all about the same): 11.5" L x 9" W (29.2 cm x 22.9 cm) Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post’s Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174640

      Artemis Gallery
    • Frank "Pancho" Gates Watercolor - Ballerinas
      Apr. 06, 2023

      Frank "Pancho" Gates Watercolor - Ballerinas

      Est: $500 - $750

      **Originally Listed At $350** Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). Ballerinas - watercolor, n.d. A wonderful watercolor depicting a ballerina lacing her shoes before a mirror by Frank "Pancho" Gates, a modernist of the American West who was very involved with the performance art scene of Colorado and created set designs for the annual summer operas in Central City as well as several theaters (see biography below). Gates' composition for this painting is particularly intriguing, because the image in the mirror is not actually a reflection of the ballerina before the mirror; instead, she is presented in parallel rather than as a mirror image. How surreal! A fascinating example of Gates' work, replete with vibrant color and a dynamic composition, demonstrating his embrace of Modernism and the performing arts. Size: 21" L x 15" W (53.3 cm x 38.1 cm) Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post’s Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: Private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174638

      Artemis Gallery
    • 1930s Frank "Pancho" Gates + 3 Anonymous Set Designs
      Feb. 10, 2023

      1930s Frank "Pancho" Gates + 3 Anonymous Set Designs

      Est: $600 - $800

      **Originally Listed At $400** Total of 12 pieces. Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). 9 "It Can't Happen Here" Set Designs. Mixed media on matte board, 1936. All signed with play, act, scene, and date below image. Anonymous (American, mid-20th century). 3 Set Designs. Mixed media on paper, ca. 1934. One signed "O'Hearm" on verso. Accompanied by matte signed "Jones" and dated 1934. A fascinating ensemble of 12 mixed media set designs: three by an anonymous 20th-century artist and nine by Frank "Pancho" Gates for the play "It Can't Happen Here," written by Lewis and John C. Moffitt and based on the novel of the same name by Sinclair Lewis (American, 1885 to 1951). Published in 1935 and premiering as a play in 1936, "It Can't Happen Here" describes the rise of a US dictator, similar to how Adolf Hitler gained power. Each design, save for the tranquil forest landscape of Act I Scene I, displays a darkened scene dominated by shadows, which is quite apropos to the subject matter. Size of board (all the same): 20" L x 15" W (50.8 cm x 38.1 cm) All 12 pieces employ a wide range of media, including watercolor, acrylic paints, pastels, charcoal, crayons, and colored pencils. Two of the three anonymous pieces may also be by Gates and have served as preliminary studies for "It Can't Happen Here" set designs. The third may be a set design instead for Shakespeare's "Othello" as they are also accompanied by a matte inscribed "OTHELLO. SC. II. / A Council-Chamber. / Jones 1934." Accompanied by a custom leather-bound portfolio cover. Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post's Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174639

      Artemis Gallery
    • Frank "Pancho" Gates Watercolor - Ballerinas
      Jan. 19, 2023

      Frank "Pancho" Gates Watercolor - Ballerinas

      Est: $600 - $900

      Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). Ballerinas - watercolor, n.d. A wonderful watercolor depicting a ballerina lacing her shoes before a mirror by Frank "Pancho" Gates, a modernist of the American West who was very involved with the performance art scene of Colorado and created set designs for the annual summer operas in Central City as well as several theaters (see biography below). Gates' composition for this painting is particularly intriguing, because the image in the mirror is not actually a reflection of the ballerina before the mirror; instead, she is presented in parallel rather than as a mirror image. How surreal! A fascinating example of Gates' work, replete with vibrant color and a dynamic composition, demonstrating his embrace of Modernism and the performing arts. Size: 21" L x 15" W (53.3 cm x 38.1 cm) Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post’s Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: Private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174638

      Artemis Gallery
    • Mixed Media Works Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates
      Jan. 12, 2023

      Mixed Media Works Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates

      Est: $700 - $1,050

      Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). 9 total mixed media drawings: 7 on paper & 2 on illustration board, n.d. A captivating ensemble of mixed media drawings depicting varying scenes: four taking place on a ship at sea and five set in a Spanish or Spanish Colonial village. Each of the images displays a keen eye for light, with contrasting hues that bring a dynamism and drama to the composition. Two display similar images with three sailors in a rowboat suggesting that some of these may have served as sketches for larger or final compositions. Size of paper (all about the same): 11.5" L x 9" W (29.2 cm x 22.9 cm) Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post’s Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174640

      Artemis Gallery
    • 9 Mixed Media Works Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates
      Nov. 17, 2022

      9 Mixed Media Works Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates

      Est: $800 - $1,200

      Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). 9 total mixed media drawings: 7 on paper & 2 on illustration board, n.d. A captivating ensemble of mixed media drawings depicting varying scenes: four taking place on a ship at sea and five set in a Spanish or Spanish Colonial village. Each of the images displays a keen eye for light, with contrasting hues that bring a dynamism and drama to the composition. Two display similar images with three sailors in a rowboat suggesting that some of these may have served as sketches for larger or final compositions. Size of paper (all about the same): 11.5" L x 9" W (29.2 cm x 22.9 cm) Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post’s Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174640

      Artemis Gallery
    • 1930s Frank "Pancho" Gates + 3 Anonymous Set Designs
      Oct. 13, 2022

      1930s Frank "Pancho" Gates + 3 Anonymous Set Designs

      Est: $800 - $1,200

      Total of 12 pieces. Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). 9 "It Can't Happen Here" Set Designs. Mixed media on matte board, 1936. All signed with play, act, scene, and date below image. Anonymous (American, mid-20th century). 3 Set Designs. Mixed media on paper, ca. 1934. One signed "O'Hearm" on verso. Accompanied by matte signed "Jones" and dated 1934. A fascinating ensemble of 12 mixed media set designs: three by an anonymous 20th-century artist and nine by Frank "Pancho" Gates for the play "It Can't Happen Here," written by Lewis and John C. Moffitt and based on the novel of the same name by Sinclair Lewis (American, 1885 to 1951). Published in 1935 and premiering as a play in 1936, "It Can't Happen Here" describes the rise of a US dictator, similar to how Adolf Hitler gained power. Each design, save for the tranquil forest landscape of Act I Scene I, displays a darkened scene dominated by shadows, which is quite apropos to the subject matter. Size of board (all the same): 20" L x 15" W (50.8 cm x 38.1 cm) All 12 pieces employ a wide range of media, including watercolor, acrylic paints, pastels, charcoal, crayons, and colored pencils. Two of the three anonymous pieces may also be by Gates and have served as preliminary studies for "It Can't Happen Here" set designs. The third may be a set design instead for Shakespeare's "Othello" as they are also accompanied by a matte inscribed "OTHELLO. SC. II. / A Council-Chamber. / Jones 1934." Accompanied by a custom leather-bound portfolio cover. Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post's Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174639

      Artemis Gallery
    • Signed Frank Gates Watercolor - "Train Trestle"
      Oct. 13, 2022

      Signed Frank Gates Watercolor - "Train Trestle"

      Est: $900 - $1,200

      Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). "Train Trestle" watercolor, n.d. Signed on lower right. A captivating watercolor painting of a train trestle by Frank "Pancho" Gates, a modernist artist of the American West. In this scene, Gates incorporated Cubist elements with dramatically tilted angles and an emphasis on geometrical shapes. The view was most likely inspired by the Central City Railroad in the heart of the Colorado Rockies, as Gates created set designs for the annual summer operas in Central City as well as scenes inspired by Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville, and Black Hawk. A wonderful example of Gates' work, demonstrating his embrace of color, dynamic energy, and the tenets of Cubism. Size: 14.4" L x 19.75" W (36.6 cm x 50.2 cm) Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post’s Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: Private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174637

      Artemis Gallery
    • Frank "Pancho" Gates Watercolor - Ballerinas
      Sep. 29, 2022

      Frank "Pancho" Gates Watercolor - Ballerinas

      Est: $700 - $900

      Attributed to Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998). Ballerinas - watercolor, n.d. A wonderful watercolor depicting a ballerina lacing her shoes before a mirror by Frank "Pancho" Gates, a modernist of the American West who was very involved with the performance art scene of Colorado and created set designs for the annual summer operas in Central City as well as several theaters (see biography below). Gates' composition for this painting is particularly intriguing, because the image in the mirror is not actually a reflection of the ballerina before the mirror; instead, she is presented in parallel rather than as a mirror image. How surreal! A fascinating example of Gates' work, replete with vibrant color and a dynamic composition, demonstrating his embrace of Modernism and the performing arts. Size: 21" L x 15" W (53.3 cm x 38.1 cm) Frank "Pancho" Gates Artist Biography: "A Colorado modernist artist and theater set designer, he grew up in Edgewater, Colorado, near the Manhattan Beach Theater and the winter quarters of the Denver Post’s Sells-Floto Circus which he frequented as a youngster. These two places introduced him early on to the theater. Additionally, his father toured the United States in a wire walking act with the Barnum and Bailey Circus. Gates began his association with the theater in 1919 when just out of high school. He initially worked with scenic artist, Jack Stein, at the old Tabor Theater in the Tabor Grand Opera House (demolished in 1964) in downtown Denver. Soon after that, he became an assistant scenic artist to George Bradford Ashworth, a famous New York stage set designer, who during the summer designed sets for the Elitch Gardens Theater in northwest Denver. Gates later produced the sets there until 1928. He was offered a scholarship to Colorado A & M College (now Colorado State University) in Fort Collins but declined because of his growing commitment to the theater. He followed his tenure at Elitch's with positions at the Denham Theater in Denver and the Palm Theater in Pueblo. Upon returning to Denver, he became a free-lance artist for studios producing scenery for stage shows at the city's Tabor, Denver, Paramount, Alladin, Rivoli, Broadway, Orpheum and Empress Theaters. He moved to California, perfecting his craft at the Pasadena Playhouse, a training school for young actors and actresses pursuing stardom in the movies. Later associated with the Technicolor Corporation, he helped to produce the film used in early color movies such as Becky Sharp (1935) and the Garden of Allah (1936) starring Marlene Dietrich and Charles Boyer. He also worked in New York with Robert Edmond 'Bobby' Jones, regarded as the dean of American theatrical set designers. When Jones became artistic director of the Central City Opera House in 1932 – restored thanks to the efforts of Anne Evans and Ida Kruse McFarlane – he invited Gates to join him to paint the sets for the inaugural production of Camille starring Lillian Gish. Laura Gilpin, Colorado native, and renowned platinum print photographer documented the production. By the following season, Gates had opened a studio in the old Loop Market in downtown Denver, experimenting with design and color to create stage sets for the annual summer operas in Central City, working on every production until his retirement some years later. Becoming a resident of the town in the 1930s, he was in charge of the homes owned by the Opera Association hosting the invited performers during the summer months. He also served as the in-residence curator of the Central City Opera House. In addition to his career as a scenic theater artist, he developed a parallel one in the fine arts. Largely self-taught, he began doing sketches backstage at the Elitch Gardens Theater after World War I. With Brad Ainsworth, who had studied at the Art Students League in New York, with George Bellows and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Gates traveled in a Model T Ford to Taos, embarking on a sketching and painting trip throughout the state. His talent earned him a commission from the Public Works of Art Project (PWAP, 1933-34), the first federally-funded art project during the Great Depression, to paint a group of murals for the main entrance of North High School in Denver where they can still be seen today. During World War II he volunteered his artistic and mechanical skills to the Army Air Corps, serving as an aerial bombing instructor. Beginning in the 1930s, he started exhibiting his work, primarily watercolors, in the Denver Art Museum annuals, as well as in Kansas City, Philadelphia, New York, and Musee d'Art Moderne in Paris. His titles of Coal Crusher, Blow Torch and Welding reflect his connection during the Great Depression with American Social Realism and the Urban American Scene influenced by the New York Ashcan School of the early twentieth century. Stylistically, the composition of a number of his images, such as Mining Town and Mining Scene, incorporate cubistic elements of French modernism. In his scenes from the Colorado mining towns of Central City, Nevadaville and Black Hawk he employed tilted angles and geometric shapes, differentiating his work at the time from that of his fellow artists painting the state’s nineteenth-century mining towns. In a review from the 1930s in the Denver Post, 'Chappell House Offers Several One-Man Shows,' Donald J. Bear, Curator of Paintings at the Denver Art Museum, discussed the work in Gates' solo show at the museum: Among the new one-man affairs is a particularly original group of watercolors by Frank Gates of Denver. Multi-colored, naive fantasies based on the stacked up buildings of Central City, dusky street scenes caught from odd angles or perspective, and vivid but ingenious arrangements of the intricacies of mining machinery, viaducts, mills and orange-vermillion water wheels propelled by cerulean blue flames, which are twisted like spun glass, constitute altogether one of the most individual renderings of familiar subjects which we have not seen for some time. These pictures are not easel pictures in any sense of the word but linger between scenic designs for the stage and possible murals. Gates had a sentimental attachment to Central City and the surrounding locales. As a young man, he sketched in and around those environs. His father had met and married his mother while she was employed in a hotel in Blackhawk. Gates knew Central City from childhood because an uncle by marriage owned the general store in nearby Nevadaville and also managed a local saloon and served as the town's postmaster. He regarded his mature creative output as having a dual purpose – as a delight for the eye and as historical documents. In connection with the latter, he and his wife collected memorabilia such as carousel horses and weathervanes. Given his long-standing relationship with the area, he and his wife Agnes are buried together in Bald Mountain Cemetery in Nevadaville. (Author: Stan Cuba, Associate Consulting Curator, Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art - Source: "Modernist West" online) Frank "Pancho" Gates' works have been collected by the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art in Denver, Colorado and the Denver Public Library Western Art Collection. Solo exhibitions include: Chappell House-Denver Art Museum (1932); Colorado Women's College, Denver (1977); Byers-Evan House Museum, Denver (2013). Group exhibitions include: Denver Art Museum (1930, 1932-35, 1937-39, 1943, 1948). Provenance: Private Terral, Oklahoma, USA collection, inherited from Uncle who purchased at auction in the 1980's and 1990's All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back. A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids. We ship worldwide and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience. #174638

      Artemis Gallery
    • Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998) Mining Town, 1930
      Jun. 04, 2020

      Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998) Mining Town, 1930

      Est: $400 - $600

      Frank "Pancho" Gates (American, 1904-1998) Mining Town, 1930, oil on canvas 18 3/4 x 24 3/4 inches Property from an Important Private Collection of Modernist West Art

      Hindman
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