Showing posts with label Denver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denver. Show all posts

Friday, January 24, 2020

STREET PAINTINGS OF EARLY DENVER BY A CIA ARTIST


     Antonio Joseph Mendez was a man with many stories. Born in 1940, in Eureka, Nevada, current population 610 persons and once labeled “the loneliest town in America, he arrived in Denver in his early teens. After a short stint at the University of Colorado, he was employed as a technical drawing artist
Aerial photograph showing the Park Lane Hotel and looking south
at Washington Park. Circa mid 19960s before the hotel was demolished.
courtesy of Stephen H.Hart Library and Research Center, History Colorado.

and did commission art on the side. His “legacy” to Denver are two large oil paintings of early Denver which he did for the no longer existing Park Lane Hotel in 1964.

Denver Street Scene by Tony Mendez, 1964
Courtesy of Mr. Simon Lofts, WorkAbility

     The Mendez paintings are early Denver street scenes which Mendez painted from photographs. They are very bright oil on masonite and were cleaned for display.  They were displayed at the Park Lane for only a few years and apparently were carefully packed for storage.

Early Denver Street Scene by Tony Mendez, 1964
Courtesy of Mr. Simon Lofts, WorkAbility

     When the hotel was demolished in the late 1960s, the 300 pound paintings were stored in a warehouse until acquired by a Denver man and stored in his garage for years. After Mendez’s death in January 2019, the paintings were rescued by Simon Lofts, a co-founder of WorkAbility, a co-working space located near the Colorado Capitol Building. The paintings are now displayed in the Workability offices and open to the public for viewing.

     But …. there is more to this story. Who was this man, Mendez, and what makes his paintings of interest? In 1965 while working as a technical artist for Martin Marietta in Denver, Mendez answered a blind newspaper ad which turned out to have been placed by the Central Intelligence Agency. Hired as an artist to specialize in counterfeits and forgeries, Mendez rose higher in the CIA.

     When Islamic militants took over the US Embassy in Tehran in 1979, six American diplomats escaped and were sheltered by Canadian diplomats until a dramatic rescue plan devised by Mendez brought them out of Iran. This escape was depicted in a 1997 movie, “Argo”, which won three Oscars. The American diplomats were posed as a Canadian film crew, and spirited out of the country with Canadian identities by Mendez himself! No surprise, then that Mendez became known as a specialist in “exfiltration”.

     Mendez continued to paint before and after his retirement in 1990. He wrote with others, including his wife Jonna, four books on the CIA, disguises, and the Argo operation. You can see Mendez’s Denver Street Paintings at the WorkAbility offices, 1576 Sherman Street in Denver.
Roger Doherty


Thursday, August 6, 2015

Park of the Red Rocks Photographs

On Tuesday, August 4th, 2015, Governor Hickenlooper of Colorado announced the designation of Red Rocks Park as the state's 25th National Historic Site. Red Rocks was acquired by the City and County of Denver in 1928. During the depression, the Red Rocks Amphitheater was constructed through the joint efforts of Denver, the Civilian Conservation Corps, and the Works Progress Administration. The amphitheater has been in use since 1941. Here are two previously unpublished photographs of the amphitheater during construction.

Front of the stage, facing the seat section of the
open air theater at the Park of the Red Rocks,
June, 1938.

The seat section, Red Rocks, June, 1938

These photographs were taken by Iris Ann Maen, who died in April, 1995, at age ninety.