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The
Artists Who Painted the Nauvoo Murals
by
Duane Carling

Abundant
Wildlife on Mural in Garden Room (Click to enlarge)
"I had
never been to Nauvoo, and neither had most of the other artists
in our vehicle. As we came up the river road, about 9:30 at night,
we rounded the last bend and looked up at where we thought the temple
should be. All of the interior lights were on for the workers working
late, none of the exterior lights were on, and here was this glowing
building against the night sky. No one said a word. The driver stopped
the car and we all got out to look. It was the most moving experience."
Robert Marshall,
professor of visual arts at BYU describes his first visit to the
Nauvoo Temple where he and 5 other prominent LDS artists painted
the first murals the LDS Church has installed in a temple since
L.A. in 1956. Marshall, along with Frank Magelby (professor emeritus
at BYU); Gary Smith, Alpine-based artist better known for his sculptures:
Jim Christensen of Provo, best known for his fanciful depictions
of imaginary scenes; and Doug Fryer and Cris Young also very well
known artists all collaborated on the Nauvoo murals.

Beautiful
Mural in Garden Room (Click to enlarge)
Shortly after
the Nauvoo reconstruction was announced in April of 1999, the interior
designers in the temple construction department. decided to revive
the practice of putting murals in the the world room, the celestial
room, and the garden rooms. They contacted Frank Magelby, who had
retired from BYU in 1999, and has been on a "painting mission"
for the Church doing pictures to hang in temples all over the world.
When he was asked if he would do the murals for Nauvoo, he responded
that the job was way too big for one artist, and selected the other
5, most of whom had worked with him on Church film projects at the
BYU film studio. "I could have gotten good artists from Vermont,
where I live in the summer", said Magelby,"and all of
the men I chose were very busy doing other work. Certainly there
are other qualified artists in the Church, but I felt this was a
team that could work together and do a job we could all be proud
of." Everyone who was asked accepted, and cleared their schedules
to complete the murals in the short time allowed.

Creation
Room (Click to enlarge)
Vern Swanson,
the curator at the Springville Art Museum who is also a BYU art
graduate and began his career at the Smithsonian said, "In
my opinion these are the best murals ever done by the Church. Brigham
Young sent the most talented people of his day to Europe to study
under the masters there and return to paint for the Salt Lake and
other temples, and certainly there is other great work within the
Church. But this are the A team as far as I am concerned,
and likely never to be equaled."

Beautiful
Mural in Creation Room (Click to enlarge)
When the team
first assembled, they were given very little direction (to which
Mabelby attributes the success of the project). Shown the blueprints
of the building, and the size of the rooms, they realized they would
need a very large space in which to complete the paintings. Painting
them in Nauvoo was out, since the building was still a hole in the
ground. Someone suggested the BYU Film Studio, with its large sound
stages, good lighting, and secure location. The studio was glad
to cooperate, and built scale models of the rooms with the proposed
paintings in them for approval by the temple department. After the
plan was accepted, the studio sent lighting engineers to Nauvoo
in order to duplicate the light on the sound stage to be used for
the paintings. As Magelby commented "Everything about this
project went smoothly. Everyone cooperated, and indeed was thrilled
to be a part of it."The artists chose which rooms to be involved
in. Since Christensen does intricate and flamboyant work, he chose
the garden room, along with Cris Young. Magelby does very realistic
work, and Smiths paintings tend to be more hard-edged, so
they chose the world room. Marshall and Young chose the creation
room, which they felt more fit their style.

Mural
Detail in Garden Room (Click to enlarge)
How do you get
6 well known artists with very different styles to blend into one
mural? "Since the Hudson River school of painting was at its
height about mid 1800, and it was known for its misty interpretations
of landscapes, we all decided to emulate that school in our own
styles, said Robert Marshall, and I think it worked
out well." As it turned out, each room had a door way or a
window that roughly divided it in half, so the 2 artists each took
a side. "We also critiqued each other's work, in a constructive
and friendly way, said Marshall. That's an ugly duck
would bring a laugh and a constructive suggestion. We're all seasoned
enough with immense respect for each other's work to allow such
comments."

Mural
in World Room (Click to enlarge)
Magelby and
Smith decided to paint the world room as the world the early Saints
would have know. They toured New England, starting at Joseph Smith's
birthplace in Vermont, then to Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, and finally
to the Wasatch Front. They even got access to some old paintings
from the RLDS Church.
Since the seasons
started after Adam left the garden, they started the mural with
spring in Vermont, and ended with winter in the Wasatch. To show
the contrast with the garden room, where there is an idylic feeling,
they put predators, thistles and storms in the scenes.

Detail
of Meadow in Mural of World Room (Click to enlarge)
Marshall and
Young toured Vermont and the East coast as inspiration for the more
lush scenes and dramatic skies in the creation room. The hard rock
coasts of New England suggested the shores of a newly-formed world.
Christensen and Young went to Florida to study the lush gardens
there.
Each of the
artists described the Nauvoo mural paintings as a "once in
a life time experience." The common feeling was that "nothing
will ever come along again as significant as the Nauvoo Temple."
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