Andy Thomas Designs
Wall Art: The House of Lords | Joplin, MO |Timeless Ed.
Wall Art: The House of Lords | Joplin, MO |Timeless Ed.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Share
All our prints ship rolled in a tube.
Interested in having your canvas arrive to you framed and ready to hang instead? Put one of our plein air frames in the cart with your canvas of choice. We only frame canvas, no paper prints, and must be 30" x 40" or under. "ROLLED ONLY and "STRETCHED" items are not available for framing.
Story:
The House of Lords was an establishment tailored to fit Joplin’s exuberance for adventure in the late 1890’s. Within its opulent walls, patrons were offered the finest service for dining, drinking and gambling. It also had, as quoted from the Joplin Globe in 1922, rooms above where broken flowers from the primrose path sent forth their siren call. The House of Lords had a reputation known throughout the United States.
It also left a legacy of promoting the arts (though in a different way than the Spiva Center for the Arts). It was at the House of Lords that teenager Thomas Hart Benton became enthralled with the fine paintings hanging on the walls, particularly a painting above the bar depicting a young mans discovery of his sister in a brothel.
The musical arts were also promoted there. One of the musicians known to have performed was Scott Joplin, the great Ragtime composer. His unique style affected young Percy Wenrich and, through others, Carthages James Scott. Joplin, Wenrich, and Scott all became major influences in American Music.
