James Blanding Sloan was born on September 19, 1886, in Corsicana, Texas. He was the first son born to Alexander C. Sloan, a physician and Alabama native, and to Henrietta O. Blanding, a Virginian. At the age of 12 he created the sets and acted in his first play; seven years later, while a student at
Austin College in Sherman, Texas, he slipped hopping a freight train and lost a leg. By 1910 he was studying at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts (today's
School of the Art Institute of Chicago), where he was later made a teacher of color composition. He worked with the renowned color printmakers
George Senseney and
Bror Julius Olsson Nordfeldt and exhibited for the first time in 1914 with the
Chicago Society of Etchers. In 1912 he began his secondary career in theatre scenery, lighting and costume design for
The Players Workshop of Chicago, where he created sets for
Maxwell Bodenheim and
Ben Hecht. Just after America entered
World War I he was arrested for posting signs which urged young men not to register for the military draft, but to claim exemptions as conscientious objectors. A year later he moved to New York City, where he worked in over a dozen Broadway productions, including the
Ziegfeld Follies, as well as The Greenwich Village Follies; he also exhibited his prints and set designs to great acclaim. In 1923 Sloan and his second wife, Mildred Taylor, left New York intending to start a grand tour of Asia by driving across the United States. Due to his temporary illness the couple decided to settle permanently in the
San Francisco Bay Area, where during the next two decades over forty major exhibitions of his work were enthusiastically received. His subject matter was sometimes decorative, but he also focused on controversial social and religious issues; on one occasion a sexually explicit scene of Sloan making love to his wife was restricted to his "private portfolio." By far his most extraordinary undertaking was the creation of a puppet theatre, where initially he intended to produce "original plays" for children, such as
Rastus Plays Pirate, but by 1928 he transformed the idea into the Marionette Theatre Association for adults. Beginning in 1924 the Sloans established a second residence south of the Bay Area in
Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, at that time the largest art colony on the Pacific Coast. Here Blanding was hired by the University of California Extension Division to teach summer classes in etching, theatre design, and painting. By 1931 the Sloans had moved to Los Angeles where there were opportunities to exhibit his prints and work on theatre and puppet productions as well as in Hollywood. During World War II he and his protégée,
Wah Chang, created the East-West Film Company and produced a variety of films, including an interview and performance by the legendary singer Leadbelly as well as
The Way of Peace, a controversial film funded by the Lutheran Church depicting the destruction of the world by nuclear weapons. The latter may have caused his dismissal from the Disney Studios. By 1948 he was living in
Altadena, California, and in the mid-1960s moved to
Berkeley, California, and then to the nearby town of Canyon, where he died at the age of 89. == Professions ==