In March 1904, Marcius-Simon, at his home in Paris, learned that his painting
Where Light and Shadow Meet had been purchased by Teddy Roosevelt, then President of the United States. In a letter dated March 8, Marcius-Simon wrote to Roosevelt: "It is hard for me to express adequately the great pleasure, the help in my life's work, that your appreciation of my art has been to me." He proceeded in several paragraphs to put forth his ideas about art. "As a painter, I stand at the point where the definition between music and pictorial art is lost.…Using the chromatic scale to produce new harmonies of shades and varieties of color, I create as I go, handling my palette to express thoughts through the medium of the painted objects." He concluded, "Such being my convictions, my life struggle and my aim, you can imagine, Mr. President, what the revelation that you have long known and appreciated my efforts, though the possessions of friends, and that you now own one of the finest examples of my brush, has been to me." Roosevelt replied in a letter dated March 19, 1904:Your letter pleased and interested me much. The first work I saw of yours was the
Seats of the Mighty, and it impressed me so powerfully that I have ever since eagerly sought out any of your pictures of which I heard. When I became President, Mrs. Roosevelt and I made up our minds that while I was President we would indulge ourselves in the purchase of one really first-class piece of American art-for we are people whom the respective sizes of our family and our income have never warranted in making such a purchase while I was in private life! As soon as we saw
When [sic] Light and Shadow Meet we made up our minds at once and without speaking to one another that at last we had seen the very thing we wanted.…When I look at [your paintings] I feel a lift in my soul; I feel my imagination stirred. And so, dear Mr. Simons, I believe in you as an artist and I am proud of you as an American." Marcius-Simons followed up by dedicating to
Mrs. Roosevelt and making a gift of his painting
Victory, which he described as "the olive branch tendered to the world but enforced by the sword of justice and might beneath." Edith Roosevelt described the painting in a letter to her sister Emily Carow: "The color is quite beautiful and the picture will always be interesting historically."
Seats of the Mighty, mentioned by Roosevelt, was a painting he had seen and admired at the home of his friend
Lord Arthur Hamilton Lee in London. In 1908, Lee made a gift of the painting to Roosevelt, who in a letter to Lee called it "the source of greater delight to me than any present I ever remember receiving…We have another Simonds [sic], a very beautiful and striking picture [
Where Light and Shadow Meet], altho not to me quite as wonderful a picture as
The Seats of the Mighty." In a letter to Lee from the following year, Roosevelt wrote, "At this moment I am sitting in the North Room [at Sagamore Hill] where of all things that I care for—and I care for many—the one I care for most is the picture that you gave me." File:Pinckney Marcius-Simons, Seats of the Mighty.png|
Seats of the Mighty, before 1904. File:Marcius-Simons--Where Light and Shadows Meet.png|
Where Light and Shadows Meet, by 1904. File:Marcius-Simons--Victory--1904.png|
Victory, 1904. File:Pinckney Marcius-Simons, Porcelain Towers.tif|
Porcelain Towers, c. 1905-1909. ==A Midsummer Night's Dream==