Grundmann Studios

[3] Tenants included the Copley Society (formerly Boston Art Students' Association); artists Henry R. Blaney,[4] Herman Dudley Murphy,[5] Frank Richmond,[6] Mary Bradish Titcomb;[7] sculptor John A. Wilson, architect Josephine Wright Chapman; and the College Club.

The first floor included club rooms—library, parlor, smoking room and life class room—and two large halls, each lit with "an immense skylight or glass roof".

The larger room, Copley Hall, could seat up to eight hundred people and was used for lectures, concerts, dancing parties and art exhibitions.

The second floor contained thirty-four suites of one, two, or three rooms, described as "so delightfully picturesque, with little, overhanging galleries, which are reached by the tiniest flight of stairs, it seems like climbing into a doll's house.

"[10] The building was demolished in 1917 to allow for the extension of Stuart street, part of the "broad highway" civic improvement project.

Grundmann Studios, 1894
Sculptor Max Bachmann's studio