410 South Michigan Avenue
The Fine Arts is one of those dark, nubbly old buildings that
is completely invisible to the average passerby. Raise your eyes
to its marvelous details and the robust massing of this Michigan
Avenue survivor, and you may be swept up in the visible history
before you.
Built for the Studebaker Carriage Company in the days before
they made sleek little automobiles, the structure was designed
by architect Solon S. Beman in 1885 as a showroom, with assembly
floors above. Eleven years later, Studebaker relocated to
Wabash, and converted the original building to artists’ and
musicians’ studios. Beman razed the top floor and added three
stories with a modernized roofline. You’d never know by
looking that the marquee for the Fine Arts Theater was once a
driveway into the carriage showroom.
The “Studebaker Theater” and “The Playhouse” on the
ground floor are Sony movie theaters now, but the Studebaker
survived the four-plexing relatively intact. The vaulted passage
between the theaters is punctuated by four elaborately decorated
elevator cars, only one of which is currently in
operation.
Upstairs, the painful strains of beginning violin mingle with
more accomplished archipeggios spilling over the transoms from
individual music lessons. Wandering the halls, look for small
markers identifying past residents of note. Margaret Anderson’s
“The Little Review” was published here, circa 1914-17, and
other “little” magazines such as “Dial” and “Poetry”
had offices in the Fine Arts, too. Architects Frank Lloyd Wright
and Howard Van Doren Shaw worked here. Today, architects
continue to enjoy the building’s unique features, including
the Fine Art’s interior light well.
Turn-of-the-century details endure, from the graceful harp
and garland motif on the exterior doors to the advice overhead
in each foyer that “All passes - ART alone endures.”
Terrazzo floors edged with mosaic tiles have stood up to a
hundred years of shoe leather. The woodwork throughout the
building is remarkable, but the carved brackets of the staircase
leading from the 9th floor to the top are worth special
scrutiny. On the 10th floor are some lovely murals suffering
from benign neglect.
Longtime tenants on the street level include the Artists’
Snack Shop, and Booksellers’ Row, a great used bookstore with
knowledgeable staff.