Original Oil on Canvas by Eleanor Massey Bridges, American Artist, Birmingham, Alabama
Listing ID#: 325847

Sale Location

Alabaster, AL 35007
Sale Dates and TimesSALE IS COMPLETED
Bidding Ends: Friday Jul 17
Sale Type
 Online Auction  VIEW ONLINE CATALOG
Company Information
Pearce Auction Co

Contact: Andrew Pearce
Phone: 205 664 4300
Email: leestreeservice100@yahoo.com
Website: www.auctionsbypearce.com

EstateSale.com ID#: 6155
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Listing Terms and Conditions
Auction Terms:

Please read the terms carefully as they are a legal binding contract between you and Pearce & Associates Auctioneers.

All disputes will be settled in Shelby County, Alabama.

We encourage you to inspect the items in person.
If purchases are not settled within 3 business days of the close of the auction,
it is in default. Upon default the bidder will be black listed on Pearce &
Associates Auctioneers auctions as well as MarkNet auctions and
will be charged for the merchandise. Defaulted items will be forfeited back to
the owner or Pearce & Associates.

No refunds will be given.

Please check back and review these terms as every time you use this site you are agreeing to the terms as they are written at that time.

Pearce & Associates Auctioneers reserves the right to cancel any auction at any time for any reason.

There will be a 15% buyer’s premium added to final bid price.
Sales tax collected unless you provide Pearce with a copy of your tax resale certificate.
Payment By Certified Funds or Bank Wire transfer to Pearce & Associates

Bidding info- When you bid your max the current bid price doesn't automatically go to
your max bid. Someone else has to bid to increase the current price and the
computer will automatically bid up to your max in the increments specified.

This auction has what is called an auto extend feature, meaning the auction will not close until all bidding parties are satisfied. If any bids are placed within the last 5 minutes of the auction, the bid on lot(s) will extend for 5 minutes. The bidding will extend
in 5 minute increments from the time the last bid is placed until there are
no more bids, and the lot sits idle for 5 minutes.

Pearce & Associates Auctioneers have put forth every effort to make accurate
description of the items. Printed or verbal statements made by staff are
matters of opinion and are made in good faith. However, all items are sold As
Is Where IS. You are responsible for your own inspection during inspection
periods.

No allowance will be made for errors in cataloging, genuineness, defects, or imperfections not noted.

Pearce & Associates reserve the right to reject any and all bids for any reason.

Bidder responsibilities include, but are not limited to:

Bidders agree to keep their username and password confidential as they are responsible for ANY and ALL activity involving their account.

When using the web site you must obey any and all local state and federal laws. Violations will result in termination of web site use privileges. We gather aggregate information from this web site which may include but is not limited to: number of page visitors,
most visited pages, any and all correspondence.

CREDIT CARD POLICY: Pearce & Associates requires that you use a valid credit card in order to set up a bidding account. By registering with your credit card, you, the purchaser agree to the following credit card terms:
1. I, the buyer hereby authorize the auction company (Pearce & Associates) to charge my credit card that I have set up my bidder account with, for the full amount of my bill, if I do not settle my unpaid account within 3 business days of the auctions ending.
2. I, the buyer, understand the terms of the auction including pickup and payment dates and timelines, and agree that I have placed bids with the intent of abiding by the auctions set terms and conditions.
3. I, the buyer, have been given the opportunity to inspect the items in person and understand the the auction company is selling the items in AS IS, WHERE IS, condition.
4. I, the buyer, hereby agrees to authorize the auction company to charge my credit card for my purchases in the event that I do not show up to pickup my items in person and make other payment arrangements. I also agree that the auction company is not responsible for handling, moving or storing the items I have purchased and that I risk the chance of those items being stolen or damaged if left behind.
5. I, the buyer, hereby agrees to not challenge or deny payment to the auction company for purchases made with the credit card that I have placed on file with the auction company. I fully understand the terms and conditions of the auction and hereby agree to this Credit Card Policy or I will not place bids with this auction website.
Listing Information

Original, Oil on Canvas by American Artist, Eleanor Massey Bridges 1899-1987

Selling for the Heirs of the late Bobbie Jo Staples, Helena, Alabama.  Online Public Auction ending on July 17th @ 1:00pm central time.

THE PAINTING:

This signed, original oil painting was owned by the late Bobbie Jo Staples of Helena, Alabama and hung in her home until her recent death.                                                     The painting is large (46" wide X 72" tall) and is in Excellent Condition.  It is a depiction of the iron & steel industry in Birmingham Alabama which was the nations leading iron producer for decades after the Civil War.   We assume that this piece was commissioned by a Museum due to the size and nature of the painting.  This is a remarkable find!

Early life

Bridges was born to Richard and Bessie Spencer Massey. Her father was the founder of the Massey Business College. The family moved to Birmingham when she was a few months old, and she grew up, with eight siblings, in the Richard Massey residence on Red Mountain, famed for its Italian gardens which were the setting for numerous parties and dances. Because she preferred only silver and blue in her bedroom, her father agreed to have the room's chandelier sent off for silver-plating. Eleanor befriended her neighbors, Mildred Kettig and Mary Hard, and chatted up President Taft when he was a guest at the house during his 1909 tour. The house was later demolished for the Elton B. Stephens Expressway.

Eleanor decided as a child to pursue a career as an artist. She attended the Margaret Allen School and took lessons from local artists such as Hannah Elliot, though her father had disapproved. She continued at the Ogontz School for Young Ladies in Abington, Pennsylvania, where, for a year, she was the roommate of Amelia Earhart. On a whim, she joined a suffragists' parade in Philadelphia, missing an appointment with her school chaperone. The incident nearly led to her expulsion, but she was able to continue at the Pennsylvania Academy and studies sociology at the University of Pennsylvania. During the summer she operated a tractor and filled in as a cook at a local farm, until the lady of the house heard that she was an Ogontz girl and threw a party in her honor. She continued her studies throughout her life, at prestigious institutions such as Harvard, the Sorbonne and the Académie Julian. In Birmingham she took classes at Birmingham-Southern College and Samford University.

At the age of 19 she met World War I veteran and aspiring sculptor Georges Bridges at a debutante party in Birmingham. They were engaged within a week, despite the strong objections of her father. They were married at her family house in front of friends while the family remained upstairs, then honeymooned at a camp on the Warrior River. They studied together at the Cincinnati Academy of Fine Arts until their first daughter, Mary Eleanor, called "London", was born. In 1921 they built a large pink stucco house on Edgewood Boulevard where Georges devoted himself to sculpting, soon winning prizes and commissions. They stabled horses to ride through Shades Valley and around Edgewood Lake and summered at Lake George.

Expatriates

Soon the couple moved to Paris and circulated in the expatriate community there, which included Tallulah Bankhead, Norman Bel Geddes, Bud Fisher, Ernest Hemingway, and F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. Because of Georges' strong resemblance to the actor Douglas Fairbanks, the two often played pranks on others. They later lived in Greece, Turkey, Morocco and Mallorca, where she founded an art colony. There she met the Duchess of Malta who arranged an exhibition of her paintings in Madrid.

Return to Birmingham

In 1928 the Bridgeses returned to Birmingham on a freighter, via Cuba. They had not intended to stay, but, when the Great Depression came, they took in several children who had been abandoned at mining towns in the district. Over the next decade as many as eighteen children lived with them in dormitories added on to the house.

Bridges styled the undertaking as a boarding school and developed her own curriculum, focusing on art and literature. Her theories on education attracted attention and she often made presentations to share her experiences. A county delinquency officer visited one day to insist that the children be enrolled in public schools. Incensed, Bridges packed them all up to move to Taxco, Mexico, where she ran a winter art colony. The subsequent winter found them in California. No formal adoption papers were filed and most of the children returned to their families when the economy recovered. Later they used the same rooms to house recovering alcoholics under a local doctor's care.

The Bridges' parlor was a landmark in the progressive social and cultural scene. They hosted themed discussions each Sunday evening. The Little Theatre had its beginnings in those salons. Years later they launched the Valley Civic Theatre with a performance of Oscar Wilde's "Salome" in the front yard. The gardens surrounding the house on the 2-acre estate were filled with large trees, flowers and fountains. When Carmen Miranda made platform shoes famous, Eleanor began buying them. To Georges' eye they gave her petite 5'-3" frame "a better line", so she turned to having them custom made when they later fell out of fashion. 

Throughout her life, Bridges was a prolific painter, most known for her portraits, which hang in private collections around the world. She painted the official portraits for GovernorLurleen Wallace and Senator James Allen

A favorite genre was portraits of dogs, including commissions to paint Presidential pets "Fala" (Franklin Roosevelt's scottie) and "Liberty" (Gerald Ford's golden retriever). One hundred of her canine portraits were exhibited at the Birmingham Museum of Art. Fifty of them were re-assembled for a "Dog Daze" tour, which was exhibited around the state during the American Revolution Bicentennial. She donated a portion of her pet commissions to animal welfare charities. She also served as president of the Alabama Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Bridges was commissioned to paint a 18-foot x 35-foot mural depicting the construction of the Old State Bank Building in Decatur in the 1950s. She also painted the reading-room mural at the Woodlawn Public Library. In 1980 she was commissioned by Gary Smith to paint a mural for the lobby of the Brown-Marx Building. Because the lobby was paneled in pink marble, she suggested installing a constructed cylinder in the center of the room to support the mural. The resulting Cyclorama of Birmingham History was left incomplete as her health declined. It was displayed in that state at the BellSouth Building and then stored in the Lyric Theater until the opening of the Birmingham History Center, where it is now on display.

In her later work, Bridges took care to use archival-quality materials and painted strictly in oils, with an eye toward the longevity of her artwork.

Civic work

 

Bridges gave up her studio there to spend more time in Birmingham in the 1950s, joining several civic boards. She was an officer of the Birmingham Beautification Board, the Women's Civic Club of Birmingham, the Birmingham Festival of Arts, and the Birmingham Art Association. Among her achievements were establishing the Festival of Arts as a major cultural event. She also helped launch the Artist's Guild, the Birmingham Civic Opera and the Women's Committee of 100. She headed the women's division of the Community Chest in 1939 and organized innumerable fund-raisers for everything from a Birmingham performance by the New York Metropolitan Opera to developmental projects in China.

She and her husband provided free art classes to students from Homewood City Schools and Parker High School. She taught programs at Vasser College and was on the board of the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania and spoke annually on the importance of cultural education at Miles College. She was inducted into the Birmingham Post-Herald's "Roll of Honor" in 1938 and named Birmingham Woman of the Year in 1953. She was also vice president for art and culture for the Birmingham Centennial committee.


As a spokeswoman for Birmingham's cultural life, Bridges was interviewed (at The Club) by Howard K. Smith for the 1961 CBS documentary "Who Speaks for Birmingham?". Her ignorance of injustices was contrasted with testimony from leaders in the African American community and highlighted the sharp distinctions in perceptions of life under segregation.

Bridges had intended for her period of civic work to be short-lived, but found the effort engrossing and unending. Her grand scheme was a "100-year plan to make Birmingham the cultural center of the South". When Georges fell ill in 1975, she resigned many of her positions to care for him. He died in February 1976.

Artwork

Throughout her life, Bridges was a prolific painter, most known for her portraits, which hang in private collections around the world. She painted the official portraits for GovernorLurleen Wallace and Senator James Allen.


A favorite genre was portraits of dogs, including commissions to paint Presidential pets "Fala" (Franklin Roosevelt's scottie) and "Liberty" (Gerald Ford's golden retriever). One hundred of her canine portraits were exhibited at the Birmingham Museum of Art. Fifty of them were re-assembled for a "Dog Daze" tour, which was exhibited around the state during the American Revolution Bicentennial. She donated a portion of her pet commissions to animal welfare charities. She also served as president of the Alabama Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Bridges was commissioned to paint a 18-foot x 35-foot mural depicting the construction of the Old State Bank Building in Decatur in the 1950s. She also painted the reading-room mural at the Woodlawn Public Library. In 1980 she was commissioned by Gary Smith to paint a mural for the lobby of the Brown-Marx Building. Because the lobby was paneled in pink marble, she suggested installing a constructed cylinder in the center of the room to support the mural. The resulting Cyclorama of Birmingham History was left incomplete as her health declined. It was displayed in that state at the BellSouth Building and then stored in the Lyric Theater until the opening of the Birmingham History Center, where it is now on display.

In her later work, Bridges took care to use archival-quality materials and painted strictly in oils, with an eye toward the longevity of her artwork.

Other interests

Always interested in academics, Bridges frequently took classes at area colleges. In 1977 she enrolled in the general studies program at Samford University to complete her degree. She was a frequent public lecturer and taught a UAB Special Studies course called "More Power to You", aimed at helping older women further themselves as individuals. Bridges was also a collector of bells and antique hats, an active gardner, and a member of the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Daughters of the American Revolution.

Bridges died in 1987. She was survived by three of her siblings and her daughter, London. 

All information about Mrs Bridges is directly from Bhamwiki:

https://www.bhamwiki.com/w/Eleanor_Bridges

More about Eleanor Bridges - Documentary by Kenzie Greer for the Homewood Historic Preservation Commission "The Pink House", Homewood's Secret Treasure:

https://youtu.be/RfBytXz86Pg

This painting is located at the Pearce Auction Center, 720 Fulton Springs Road, Alabaster, Alabama and is available for personal inspection Monday through Friday, 9am - 4pm.  Check back to this website as we are preparing for an Online Auction.




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Original Oil on Canvas by Eleanor Massey Bridges, American Artist, Birmingham, Alabama

Pearce Auction Co

Pearce Auction Co


Contact: Andrew Pearce
Phone: 205 664 4300
Sale Location
720 Fulton Springs Road
Alabaster, AL 35007
Sale Dates and Times
Sale Terms and Conditions
Auction Terms: Please read the terms carefully as they are a legal binding contract between you and Pearce & Associates Auctioneers. All disputes will be settled in Shelby County, Alabama. We encourage you to inspect the items in person. If purchases are not settled within 3 business days of the close of the auction, it is in default. Upon default the bidder will be black listed on Pearce & Associates Auctioneers auctions as well as MarkNet auctions and will be charged for the merchandise. Defaulted items will be forfeited back to the owner or Pearce & Associates. No refunds will be given. Please check back and review these terms as every time you use this site you are agreeing to the terms as they are written at that time. Pearce & Associates Auctioneers reserves the right to cancel any auction at any time for any reason. There will be a 15% buyer’s premium added to final bid price. Sales tax collected unless you provide Pearce with a copy of your tax resale certificate. Payment By Certified Funds or Bank Wire transfer to Pearce & Associates Bidding info- When you bid your max the current bid price doesn't automatically go to your max bid. Someone else has to bid to increase the current price and the computer will automatically bid up to your max in the increments specified. This auction has what is called an auto extend feature, meaning the auction will not close until all bidding parties are satisfied. If any bids are placed within the last 5 minutes of the auction, the bid on lot(s) will extend for 5 minutes. The bidding will extend in 5 minute increments from the time the last bid is placed until there are no more bids, and the lot sits idle for 5 minutes. Pearce & Associates Auctioneers have put forth every effort to make accurate description of the items. Printed or verbal statements made by staff are matters of opinion and are made in good faith. However, all items are sold As Is Where IS. You are responsible for your own inspection during inspection periods. No allowance will be made for errors in cataloging, genuineness, defects, or imperfections not noted. Pearce & Associates reserve the right to reject any and all bids for any reason. Bidder responsibilities include, but are not limited to: Bidders agree to keep their username and password confidential as they are responsible for ANY and ALL activity involving their account. When using the web site you must obey any and all local state and federal laws. Violations will result in termination of web site use privileges. We gather aggregate information from this web site which may include but is not limited to: number of page visitors, most visited pages, any and all correspondence. CREDIT CARD POLICY: Pearce & Associates requires that you use a valid credit card in order to set up a bidding account. By registering with your credit card, you, the purchaser agree to the following credit card terms: 1. I, the buyer hereby authorize the auction company (Pearce & Associates) to charge my credit card that I have set up my bidder account with, for the full amount of my bill, if I do not settle my unpaid account within 3 business days of the auctions ending. 2. I, the buyer, understand the terms of the auction including pickup and payment dates and timelines, and agree that I have placed bids with the intent of abiding by the auctions set terms and conditions. 3. I, the buyer, have been given the opportunity to inspect the items in person and understand the the auction company is selling the items in AS IS, WHERE IS, condition. 4. I, the buyer, hereby agrees to authorize the auction company to charge my credit card for my purchases in the event that I do not show up to pickup my items in person and make other payment arrangements. I also agree that the auction company is not responsible for handling, moving or storing the items I have purchased and that I risk the chance of those items being stolen or damaged if left behind. 5. I, the buyer, hereby agrees to not challenge or deny payment to the auction company for purchases made with the credit card that I have placed on file with the auction company. I fully understand the terms and conditions of the auction and hereby agree to this Credit Card Policy or I will not place bids with this auction website.
Listing Details

Original, Oil on Canvas by American Artist, Eleanor Massey Bridges 1899-1987

Selling for the Heirs of the late Bobbie Jo Staples, Helena, Alabama.  Online Public Auction ending on July 17th @ 1:00pm central time.

THE PAINTING:

This signed, original oil painting was owned by the late Bobbie Jo Staples of Helena, Alabama and hung in her home until her recent death.                                                     The painting is large (46" wide X 72" tall) and is in Excellent Condition.  It is a depiction of the iron & steel industry in Birmingham Alabama which was the nations leading iron producer for decades after the Civil War.   We assume that this piece was commissioned by a Museum due to the size and nature of the painting.  This is a remarkable find!

Early life

Bridges was born to Richard and Bessie Spencer Massey. Her father was the founder of the Massey Business College. The family moved to Birmingham when she was a few months old, and she grew up, with eight siblings, in the Richard Massey residence on Red Mountain, famed for its Italian gardens which were the setting for numerous parties and dances. Because she preferred only silver and blue in her bedroom, her father agreed to have the room's chandelier sent off for silver-plating. Eleanor befriended her neighbors, Mildred Kettig and Mary Hard, and chatted up President Taft when he was a guest at the house during his 1909 tour. The house was later demolished for the Elton B. Stephens Expressway.

Eleanor decided as a child to pursue a career as an artist. She attended the Margaret Allen School and took lessons from local artists such as Hannah Elliot, though her father had disapproved. She continued at the Ogontz School for Young Ladies in Abington, Pennsylvania, where, for a year, she was the roommate of Amelia Earhart. On a whim, she joined a suffragists' parade in Philadelphia, missing an appointment with her school chaperone. The incident nearly led to her expulsion, but she was able to continue at the Pennsylvania Academy and studies sociology at the University of Pennsylvania. During the summer she operated a tractor and filled in as a cook at a local farm, until the lady of the house heard that she was an Ogontz girl and threw a party in her honor. She continued her studies throughout her life, at prestigious institutions such as Harvard, the Sorbonne and the Académie Julian. In Birmingham she took classes at Birmingham-Southern College and Samford University.

At the age of 19 she met World War I veteran and aspiring sculptor Georges Bridges at a debutante party in Birmingham. They were engaged within a week, despite the strong objections of her father. They were married at her family house in front of friends while the family remained upstairs, then honeymooned at a camp on the Warrior River. They studied together at the Cincinnati Academy of Fine Arts until their first daughter, Mary Eleanor, called "London", was born. In 1921 they built a large pink stucco house on Edgewood Boulevard where Georges devoted himself to sculpting, soon winning prizes and commissions. They stabled horses to ride through Shades Valley and around Edgewood Lake and summered at Lake George.

Expatriates

Soon the couple moved to Paris and circulated in the expatriate community there, which included Tallulah Bankhead, Norman Bel Geddes, Bud Fisher, Ernest Hemingway, and F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. Because of Georges' strong resemblance to the actor Douglas Fairbanks, the two often played pranks on others. They later lived in Greece, Turkey, Morocco and Mallorca, where she founded an art colony. There she met the Duchess of Malta who arranged an exhibition of her paintings in Madrid.

Return to Birmingham

In 1928 the Bridgeses returned to Birmingham on a freighter, via Cuba. They had not intended to stay, but, when the Great Depression came, they took in several children who had been abandoned at mining towns in the district. Over the next decade as many as eighteen children lived with them in dormitories added on to the house.

Bridges styled the undertaking as a boarding school and developed her own curriculum, focusing on art and literature. Her theories on education attracted attention and she often made presentations to share her experiences. A county delinquency officer visited one day to insist that the children be enrolled in public schools. Incensed, Bridges packed them all up to move to Taxco, Mexico, where she ran a winter art colony. The subsequent winter found them in California. No formal adoption papers were filed and most of the children returned to their families when the economy recovered. Later they used the same rooms to house recovering alcoholics under a local doctor's care.

The Bridges' parlor was a landmark in the progressive social and cultural scene. They hosted themed discussions each Sunday evening. The Little Theatre had its beginnings in those salons. Years later they launched the Valley Civic Theatre with a performance of Oscar Wilde's "Salome" in the front yard. The gardens surrounding the house on the 2-acre estate were filled with large trees, flowers and fountains. When Carmen Miranda made platform shoes famous, Eleanor began buying them. To Georges' eye they gave her petite 5'-3" frame "a better line", so she turned to having them custom made when they later fell out of fashion. 

Throughout her life, Bridges was a prolific painter, most known for her portraits, which hang in private collections around the world. She painted the official portraits for GovernorLurleen Wallace and Senator James Allen

A favorite genre was portraits of dogs, including commissions to paint Presidential pets "Fala" (Franklin Roosevelt's scottie) and "Liberty" (Gerald Ford's golden retriever). One hundred of her canine portraits were exhibited at the Birmingham Museum of Art. Fifty of them were re-assembled for a "Dog Daze" tour, which was exhibited around the state during the American Revolution Bicentennial. She donated a portion of her pet commissions to animal welfare charities. She also served as president of the Alabama Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Bridges was commissioned to paint a 18-foot x 35-foot mural depicting the construction of the Old State Bank Building in Decatur in the 1950s. She also painted the reading-room mural at the Woodlawn Public Library. In 1980 she was commissioned by Gary Smith to paint a mural for the lobby of the Brown-Marx Building. Because the lobby was paneled in pink marble, she suggested installing a constructed cylinder in the center of the room to support the mural. The resulting Cyclorama of Birmingham History was left incomplete as her health declined. It was displayed in that state at the BellSouth Building and then stored in the Lyric Theater until the opening of the Birmingham History Center, where it is now on display.

In her later work, Bridges took care to use archival-quality materials and painted strictly in oils, with an eye toward the longevity of her artwork.

Civic work

 

Bridges gave up her studio there to spend more time in Birmingham in the 1950s, joining several civic boards. She was an officer of the Birmingham Beautification Board, the Women's Civic Club of Birmingham, the Birmingham Festival of Arts, and the Birmingham Art Association. Among her achievements were establishing the Festival of Arts as a major cultural event. She also helped launch the Artist's Guild, the Birmingham Civic Opera and the Women's Committee of 100. She headed the women's division of the Community Chest in 1939 and organized innumerable fund-raisers for everything from a Birmingham performance by the New York Metropolitan Opera to developmental projects in China.

She and her husband provided free art classes to students from Homewood City Schools and Parker High School. She taught programs at Vasser College and was on the board of the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania and spoke annually on the importance of cultural education at Miles College. She was inducted into the Birmingham Post-Herald's "Roll of Honor" in 1938 and named Birmingham Woman of the Year in 1953. She was also vice president for art and culture for the Birmingham Centennial committee.


As a spokeswoman for Birmingham's cultural life, Bridges was interviewed (at The Club) by Howard K. Smith for the 1961 CBS documentary "Who Speaks for Birmingham?". Her ignorance of injustices was contrasted with testimony from leaders in the African American community and highlighted the sharp distinctions in perceptions of life under segregation.

Bridges had intended for her period of civic work to be short-lived, but found the effort engrossing and unending. Her grand scheme was a "100-year plan to make Birmingham the cultural center of the South". When Georges fell ill in 1975, she resigned many of her positions to care for him. He died in February 1976.

Artwork

Throughout her life, Bridges was a prolific painter, most known for her portraits, which hang in private collections around the world. She painted the official portraits for GovernorLurleen Wallace and Senator James Allen.


A favorite genre was portraits of dogs, including commissions to paint Presidential pets "Fala" (Franklin Roosevelt's scottie) and "Liberty" (Gerald Ford's golden retriever). One hundred of her canine portraits were exhibited at the Birmingham Museum of Art. Fifty of them were re-assembled for a "Dog Daze" tour, which was exhibited around the state during the American Revolution Bicentennial. She donated a portion of her pet commissions to animal welfare charities. She also served as president of the Alabama Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Bridges was commissioned to paint a 18-foot x 35-foot mural depicting the construction of the Old State Bank Building in Decatur in the 1950s. She also painted the reading-room mural at the Woodlawn Public Library. In 1980 she was commissioned by Gary Smith to paint a mural for the lobby of the Brown-Marx Building. Because the lobby was paneled in pink marble, she suggested installing a constructed cylinder in the center of the room to support the mural. The resulting Cyclorama of Birmingham History was left incomplete as her health declined. It was displayed in that state at the BellSouth Building and then stored in the Lyric Theater until the opening of the Birmingham History Center, where it is now on display.

In her later work, Bridges took care to use archival-quality materials and painted strictly in oils, with an eye toward the longevity of her artwork.

Other interests

Always interested in academics, Bridges frequently took classes at area colleges. In 1977 she enrolled in the general studies program at Samford University to complete her degree. She was a frequent public lecturer and taught a UAB Special Studies course called "More Power to You", aimed at helping older women further themselves as individuals. Bridges was also a collector of bells and antique hats, an active gardner, and a member of the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Daughters of the American Revolution.

Bridges died in 1987. She was survived by three of her siblings and her daughter, London. 

All information about Mrs Bridges is directly from Bhamwiki:

https://www.bhamwiki.com/w/Eleanor_Bridges

More about Eleanor Bridges - Documentary by Kenzie Greer for the Homewood Historic Preservation Commission "The Pink House", Homewood's Secret Treasure:

https://youtu.be/RfBytXz86Pg

This painting is located at the Pearce Auction Center, 720 Fulton Springs Road, Alabaster, Alabama and is available for personal inspection Monday through Friday, 9am - 4pm.  Check back to this website as we are preparing for an Online Auction.




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Original Oil on Canvas by Eleanor Massey Bridges, American Artist, Birmingham, Alabama
 Online Only Auction
Sale Date(s)
Bidding Starts: Wednesday Nov 30 , 12:00 AM
Bidding Ends: Friday Jul 17 ,
Sale Location

Alabaster, AL 35007
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Original, Oil on Canvas by American Artist, Eleanor Massey Bridges 1899-1987

Selling for the Heirs of the late Bobbie Jo Staples, Helena, Alabama.  Online Public Auction ending on July 17th @ 1:00pm central time.

THE PAINTING:

This signed, original oil painting was owned by the late Bobbie Jo Staples of Helena, Alabama and hung in her home until her recent death.                                                     The painting is large (46" wide X 72" tall) and is in Excellent Condition.  It is a depiction of the iron & steel industry in Birmingham Alabama which was the nations leading iron producer for decades after the Civil War.   We assume that this piece was commissioned by a Museum due to the size and nature of the painting.  This is a remarkable find!

Early life

Bridges was born to Richard and Bessie Spencer Massey. Her father was the founder of the Massey Business College. The family moved to Birmingham when she was a few months old, and she grew up, with eight siblings, in the Richard Massey residence on Red Mountain, famed for its Italian gardens which were the setting for numerous parties and dances. Because she preferred only silver and blue in her bedroom, her father agreed to have the room's chandelier sent off for silver-plating. Eleanor befriended her neighbors, Mildred Kettig and Mary Hard, and chatted up President Taft when he was a guest at the house during his 1909 tour. The house was later demolished for the Elton B. Stephens Expressway.

Eleanor decided as a child to pursue a career as an artist. She attended the Margaret Allen School and took lessons from local artists such as Hannah Elliot, though her father had disapproved. She continued at the Ogontz School for Young Ladies in Abington, Pennsylvania, where, for a year, she was the roommate of Amelia Earhart. On a whim, she joined a suffragists' parade in Philadelphia, missing an appointment with her school chaperone. The incident nearly led to her expulsion, but she was able to continue at the Pennsylvania Academy and studies sociology at the University of Pennsylvania. During the summer she operated a tractor and filled in as a cook at a local farm, until the lady of the house heard that she was an Ogontz girl and threw a party in her honor. She continued her studies throughout her life, at prestigious institutions such as Harvard, the Sorbonne and the Académie Julian. In Birmingham she took classes at Birmingham-Southern College and Samford University.

At the age of 19 she met World War I veteran and aspiring sculptor Georges Bridges at a debutante party in Birmingham. They were engaged within a week, despite the strong objections of her father. They were married at her family house in front of friends while the family remained upstairs, then honeymooned at a camp on the Warrior River. They studied together at the Cincinnati Academy of Fine Arts until their first daughter, Mary Eleanor, called "London", was born. In 1921 they built a large pink stucco house on Edgewood Boulevard where Georges devoted himself to sculpting, soon winning prizes and commissions. They stabled horses to ride through Shades Valley and around Edgewood Lake and summered at Lake George.

Expatriates

Soon the couple moved to Paris and circulated in the expatriate community there, which included Tallulah Bankhead, Norman Bel Geddes, Bud Fisher, Ernest Hemingway, and F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. Because of Georges' strong resemblance to the actor Douglas Fairbanks, the two often played pranks on others. They later lived in Greece, Turkey, Morocco and Mallorca, where she founded an art colony. There she met the Duchess of Malta who arranged an exhibition of her paintings in Madrid.

Return to Birmingham

In 1928 the Bridgeses returned to Birmingham on a freighter, via Cuba. They had not intended to stay, but, when the Great Depression came, they took in several children who had been abandoned at mining towns in the district. Over the next decade as many as eighteen children lived with them in dormitories added on to the house.

Bridges styled the undertaking as a boarding school and developed her own curriculum, focusing on art and literature. Her theories on education attracted attention and she often made presentations to share her experiences. A county delinquency officer visited one day to insist that the children be enrolled in public schools. Incensed, Bridges packed them all up to move to Taxco, Mexico, where she ran a winter art colony. The subsequent winter found them in California. No formal adoption papers were filed and most of the children returned to their families when the economy recovered. Later they used the same rooms to house recovering alcoholics under a local doctor's care.

The Bridges' parlor was a landmark in the progressive social and cultural scene. They hosted themed discussions each Sunday evening. The Little Theatre had its beginnings in those salons. Years later they launched the Valley Civic Theatre with a performance of Oscar Wilde's "Salome" in the front yard. The gardens surrounding the house on the 2-acre estate were filled with large trees, flowers and fountains. When Carmen Miranda made platform shoes famous, Eleanor began buying them. To Georges' eye they gave her petite 5'-3" frame "a better line", so she turned to having them custom made when they later fell out of fashion. 

Throughout her life, Bridges was a prolific painter, most known for her portraits, which hang in private collections around the world. She painted the official portraits for GovernorLurleen Wallace and Senator James Allen

A favorite genre was portraits of dogs, including commissions to paint Presidential pets "Fala" (Franklin Roosevelt's scottie) and "Liberty" (Gerald Ford's golden retriever). One hundred of her canine portraits were exhibited at the Birmingham Museum of Art. Fifty of them were re-assembled for a "Dog Daze" tour, which was exhibited around the state during the American Revolution Bicentennial. She donated a portion of her pet commissions to animal welfare charities. She also served as president of the Alabama Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Bridges was commissioned to paint a 18-foot x 35-foot mural depicting the construction of the Old State Bank Building in Decatur in the 1950s. She also painted the reading-room mural at the Woodlawn Public Library. In 1980 she was commissioned by Gary Smith to paint a mural for the lobby of the Brown-Marx Building. Because the lobby was paneled in pink marble, she suggested installing a constructed cylinder in the center of the room to support the mural. The resulting Cyclorama of Birmingham History was left incomplete as her health declined. It was displayed in that state at the BellSouth Building and then stored in the Lyric Theater until the opening of the Birmingham History Center, where it is now on display.

In her later work, Bridges took care to use archival-quality materials and painted strictly in oils, with an eye toward the longevity of her artwork.

Civic work

 

Bridges gave up her studio there to spend more time in Birmingham in the 1950s, joining several civic boards. She was an officer of the Birmingham Beautification Board, the Women's Civic Club of Birmingham, the Birmingham Festival of Arts, and the Birmingham Art Association. Among her achievements were establishing the Festival of Arts as a major cultural event. She also helped launch the Artist's Guild, the Birmingham Civic Opera and the Women's Committee of 100. She headed the women's division of the Community Chest in 1939 and organized innumerable fund-raisers for everything from a Birmingham performance by the New York Metropolitan Opera to developmental projects in China.

She and her husband provided free art classes to students from Homewood City Schools and Parker High School. She taught programs at Vasser College and was on the board of the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania and spoke annually on the importance of cultural education at Miles College. She was inducted into the Birmingham Post-Herald's "Roll of Honor" in 1938 and named Birmingham Woman of the Year in 1953. She was also vice president for art and culture for the Birmingham Centennial committee.


As a spokeswoman for Birmingham's cultural life, Bridges was interviewed (at The Club) by Howard K. Smith for the 1961 CBS documentary "Who Speaks for Birmingham?". Her ignorance of injustices was contrasted with testimony from leaders in the African American community and highlighted the sharp distinctions in perceptions of life under segregation.

Bridges had intended for her period of civic work to be short-lived, but found the effort engrossing and unending. Her grand scheme was a "100-year plan to make Birmingham the cultural center of the South". When Georges fell ill in 1975, she resigned many of her positions to care for him. He died in February 1976.

Artwork

Throughout her life, Bridges was a prolific painter, most known for her portraits, which hang in private collections around the world. She painted the official portraits for GovernorLurleen Wallace and Senator James Allen.


A favorite genre was portraits of dogs, including commissions to paint Presidential pets "Fala" (Franklin Roosevelt's scottie) and "Liberty" (Gerald Ford's golden retriever). One hundred of her canine portraits were exhibited at the Birmingham Museum of Art. Fifty of them were re-assembled for a "Dog Daze" tour, which was exhibited around the state during the American Revolution Bicentennial. She donated a portion of her pet commissions to animal welfare charities. She also served as president of the Alabama Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Bridges was commissioned to paint a 18-foot x 35-foot mural depicting the construction of the Old State Bank Building in Decatur in the 1950s. She also painted the reading-room mural at the Woodlawn Public Library. In 1980 she was commissioned by Gary Smith to paint a mural for the lobby of the Brown-Marx Building. Because the lobby was paneled in pink marble, she suggested installing a constructed cylinder in the center of the room to support the mural. The resulting Cyclorama of Birmingham History was left incomplete as her health declined. It was displayed in that state at the BellSouth Building and then stored in the Lyric Theater until the opening of the Birmingham History Center, where it is now on display.

In her later work, Bridges took care to use archival-quality materials and painted strictly in oils, with an eye toward the longevity of her artwork.

Other interests

Always interested in academics, Bridges frequently took classes at area colleges. In 1977 she enrolled in the general studies program at Samford University to complete her degree. She was a frequent public lecturer and taught a UAB Special Studies course called "More Power to You", aimed at helping older women further themselves as individuals. Bridges was also a collector of bells and antique hats, an active gardner, and a member of the United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Daughters of the American Revolution.

Bridges died in 1987. She was survived by three of her siblings and her daughter, London. 

All information about Mrs Bridges is directly from Bhamwiki:

https://www.bhamwiki.com/w/Eleanor_Bridges

More about Eleanor Bridges - Documentary by Kenzie Greer for the Homewood Historic Preservation Commission "The Pink House", Homewood's Secret Treasure:

https://youtu.be/RfBytXz86Pg

This painting is located at the Pearce Auction Center, 720 Fulton Springs Road, Alabaster, Alabama and is available for personal inspection Monday through Friday, 9am - 4pm.  Check back to this website as we are preparing for an Online Auction.