Sunday, October 30, 2022

Salt Lake 11th Ward: Interior

A well-known member of the Salt Lake 11th Ward was Lewis Ramsey. He was an artist who was commissioned by the Church to paint Joseph Smith receiving the gold plates in 1923. It was a very popular piece of art--it was printed in the large-print edition of the Book of Mormon--and he painted several copies, including one for the Draper Ward (which now hangs in the Draper Temple) and the Union Stake Tabernacle in Oregon (which now hangs in the Portland Temple). The copy that was painted for his home ward (the Salt Lake 11th Ward) was saved when the building was demolished in 1960, because David O. McKay felt strongly about it. It had been painted on the wall, so the entire wall had been removed and stored.

At some point the painting was lost for 20 years. Richard G. Oman, curator of the Arts Division of the Church Historical Department, tracked it down in an industrial area, finding it in rough shape. Rats had built nests on the painting and it was flaking badly. Over the course of three years, they removed the painting from the wall, reattached the flakes (one by one), and finally, 1982, the painting was restored to the front of the new chapel. It was done very well--I had the impression the chapel was originally built with the mural here.

 
The painting is at the front (behind the rostrum), and the pulpit is off-center so it doesn't impede a view of it. The painting is set back, with electric lights illuminating it from below, and small windows on either side so it's well-lit.
 
 
Modern stained glass is in the chapel as well, and some neat geometric patterns are there and on the pulpit.
 

6 comments:

  1. I visited a ward today that had the pulpit off center. I had never seen a chapel like that. I got online to search to see if there are others. I came across your post, which amazingly you posted the same day I visited. Are you aware of any other LDS chapels with the pulpit off center?

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    1. Many chapels have off-centered pulpits. I wrote about this one in Cambridge, MA a few months ago. I'm sure if you browse this site you'll find more :) https://ldspioneerarchitecture.blogspot.com/search/label/Cambridge%20%28MA%29%20Ward

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    2. Some buildings, like the Garland Tabernacle, even have two pulpits! https://ldspioneerarchitecture.blogspot.com/search/label/Garland%20Tabernacle

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    3. Yes, as Ryan mentioned, the Cambridge one is off-center. I have seen several with off-center pulpits: the ones that come to mind are the Blanding Tabernacle and Salt Lake 12th Ward. Centered pulpits became fairly standard (with a few exceptions) in the early 1900s.

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  3. Family records indicate that this building was built on the site of the homes of Carl Hellstrom and his family. Very cool to find a connection.

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