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Masonic Arts & Artists

n8blanchard

Premium Member
Brethren,

I am working on a project and could use any input or assistance you may have to offer.
I am currently looking at compiling a list of known Masonic visual Artist's (Painters, Architect's, Sculptors, etc) from any time through our history.

Who can you name?


Thank you & fraternal regards,

Bro. Nate Blanchard - MM
Wasatch Lodge #1, S.L.C. F&AM of Utah
 

tomasball

Premium Member
Grant Wood was a mason, and there is a painting by him titled "First Three Degrees of Masonry" hanging in the Grand Lodge of Iowa Library. I consider it a great shame that work has never been reproduced and made available to the craft at large.
 

promason

Registered User
internetloge.de - internetloge.org - Hamburg, Deutschland -
Freimaurerei, Freimaurerlogen, Freimaurer





Masonic Art
3ros.jpg


"Three Roses on a Tesselated Pavement"
by Claus Wagener according to a sketch;
60x80cm, oils on canvas Link: Picture "Three Roses on a Tesselated Pavement" 1280x1024 Pixel, 128 KB



With a rose made of stone, the stone-masons of the Middle-Ages crowned the building as sign of perfection. In freemasonry, the rose stands for transformation and for the desire for a higher and perfect life. The three roses in the colours of white, pink and red, accompany the freemason from the reception into the brotherhood over the festivals of St. John down to the grave. They are interpreted as light, love, life, and are held togehter by a sky-blue band. The tesselated pavement symbolizes the ups and downs of life (life/death, happiness/misery, pleasure/suffering). The masonic tradition presumes that the foreyard of Solomon's temple was paved with black and white stones.


candleroses.jpg


"Three Roses"
unknown Artist Link: Picture "Three Roses" 1263x1783 Pixel, 628 KB

kub.jpg


"Rough Ashlar in the Cube"
Plastic Art, 25 cm high

"The smooth ashlar is the ideal of the stone which fits completely in the building and which has to be formed out of the rough ashlar by hard work. Therefore it is the ideal for someone having made progress in masonic work; someone who has reached the capability of insertion being able to bear the load by self-education." (Lennhoff/Posner, Internationales Freimaurer-Lexikon, Vienna 1932, column 883).
The "rough ashlar" here is enclosed by a transparent cube. This means that the "rough ashlar" as a symbol of the imperfect man is glittering through from the core in spite of all self-education. The way is the destination.


ham.jpg


"Masonic Gavel"
Ivory with Intarsia

During the ritual labour the Worshipful Master and his Senior and Junior Warden are using a gavel formed like a T as a symbolic tool. The historic gavel shown here is in the possession of the lodge "Am Rauhen Stein" ("At the Rough Ashlar"). It is made of ivory. At the frontal area, enclosing the letter "G", square and compasses are laid in, and at the knocking areas there are a level and a plumb rule.
http://www.internetloge.de/kunst/kunstabe.htm
 

promason

Registered User
internetloge.de - internetloge.org - Hamburg, Deutschland -
Freimaurerei, Freimaurerlogen, Freimaurer





Masonic Art
3ros.jpg


"Three Roses on a Tesselated Pavement"
by Claus Wagener according to a sketch;
60x80cm, oils on canvas Link: Picture "Three Roses on a Tesselated Pavement" 1280x1024 Pixel, 128 KB



With a rose made of stone, the stone-masons of the Middle-Ages crowned the building as sign of perfection. In freemasonry, the rose stands for transformation and for the desire for a higher and perfect life. The three roses in the colours of white, pink and red, accompany the freemason from the reception into the brotherhood over the festivals of St. John down to the grave. They are interpreted as light, love, life, and are held togehter by a sky-blue band. The tesselated pavement symbolizes the ups and downs of life (life/death, happiness/misery, pleasure/suffering). The masonic tradition presumes that the foreyard of Solomon's temple was paved with black and white stones.


candleroses.jpg


"Three Roses"
unknown Artist Link: Picture "Three Roses" 1263x1783 Pixel, 628 KB

kub.jpg


"Rough Ashlar in the Cube"
Plastic Art, 25 cm high

"The smooth ashlar is the ideal of the stone which fits completely in the building and which has to be formed out of the rough ashlar by hard work. Therefore it is the ideal for someone having made progress in masonic work; someone who has reached the capability of insertion being able to bear the load by self-education." (Lennhoff/Posner, Internationales Freimaurer-Lexikon, Vienna 1932, column 883).
The "rough ashlar" here is enclosed by a transparent cube. This means that the "rough ashlar" as a symbol of the imperfect man is glittering through from the core in spite of all self-education. The way is the destination.


ham.jpg


"Masonic Gavel"
Ivory with Intarsia

During the ritual labour the Worshipful Master and his Senior and Junior Warden are using a gavel formed like a T as a symbolic tool. The historic gavel shown here is in the possession of the lodge "Am Rauhen Stein" ("At the Rough Ashlar"). It is made of ivory. At the frontal area, enclosing the letter "G", square and compasses are laid in, and at the knocking areas there are a level and a plumb rule.
http://www.internetloge.de/kunst/kunstabe.htm
 

promason

Registered User
internetloge.de - internetloge.org - Hamburg, Deutschland -
Freimaurerei, Freimaurerlogen, Freimaurer





Masonic Art
3ros.jpg


"Three Roses on a Tesselated Pavement"
by Claus Wagener according to a sketch;
60x80cm, oils on canvas Link: Picture "Three Roses on a Tesselated Pavement" 1280x1024 Pixel, 128 KB



With a rose made of stone, the stone-masons of the Middle-Ages crowned the building as sign of perfection. In freemasonry, the rose stands for transformation and for the desire for a higher and perfect life. The three roses in the colours of white, pink and red, accompany the freemason from the reception into the brotherhood over the festivals of St. John down to the grave. They are interpreted as light, love, life, and are held togehter by a sky-blue band. The tesselated pavement symbolizes the ups and downs of life (life/death, happiness/misery, pleasure/suffering). The masonic tradition presumes that the foreyard of Solomon's temple was paved with black and white stones.


candleroses.jpg


"Three Roses"
unknown Artist Link: Picture "Three Roses" 1263x1783 Pixel, 628 KB

kub.jpg


"Rough Ashlar in the Cube"
Plastic Art, 25 cm high

"The smooth ashlar is the ideal of the stone which fits completely in the building and which has to be formed out of the rough ashlar by hard work. Therefore it is the ideal for someone having made progress in masonic work; someone who has reached the capability of insertion being able to bear the load by self-education." (Lennhoff/Posner, Internationales Freimaurer-Lexikon, Vienna 1932, column 883).
The "rough ashlar" here is enclosed by a transparent cube. This means that the "rough ashlar" as a symbol of the imperfect man is glittering through from the core in spite of all self-education. The way is the destination.


ham.jpg


"Masonic Gavel"
Ivory with Intarsia

During the ritual labour the Worshipful Master and his Senior and Junior Warden are using a gavel formed like a T as a symbolic tool. The historic gavel shown here is in the possession of the lodge "Am Rauhen Stein" ("At the Rough Ashlar"). It is made of ivory. At the frontal area, enclosing the letter "G", square and compasses are laid in, and at the knocking areas there are a level and a plumb rule.
http://www.internetloge.de/kunst/kunstabe.htm
 
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