Did you know that the image of George Washington on the one-dollar bill comes from an unfinished painting? The Athenaeum portrait, painted by Gilbert Stuart in 1796, was commissioned by Martha Washington. Stuart painted the faces and a bit of the background but never completed the work. Instead, he kept the unfinished portrait and used it to create replicas, which he sold for profit. This painting was later chosen for the one-dollar bill, flipped but otherwise unchanged.
Another famous unfinished painting is of President Franklin D. Roosevelt by Elizabeth Shumatoff. She began the portrait on April 12, 1945, but Roosevelt passed away that afternoon. The incomplete painting remains a poignant snapshot of his final moments and is displayed at the Little White House in Georgia.
Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales is a cornerstone of English literature, yet it remains unfinished. Chaucer planned for 120 tales, but only 24 were completed before his death in 1400. Some scholars suggest this was intentional, but most agree he simply ran out of time.
Jane Austen’s last novel, Sanditon, was left incomplete when she died in 1817. Only 11 chapters were finished, but the novel has inspired many continuations and even a television series.
Charles Dickens’ The Mystery of Edwin Drood was also left unfinished. Only half of the planned installments were completed, leaving the mystery unsolved. Many have attempted to finish the story, but none have been universally accepted.
Alejandro Jodorowsky’s adaptation of Dune is a legendary unfinished film project. Planned in the 1970s, it was to feature a star-studded cast and a soundtrack by Pink Floyd. Despite extensive pre-production, the film was never made, though Dune was later adapted by David Lynch in 1984.
The Cincinnati subway is an unfinished urban project. Construction began in the early 20th century but was halted due to budget constraints. Today, the tunnels are used for utilities and attract urban explorers.
The Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in New York City began construction in 1892 but remains incomplete. Despite this, it is one of the largest cathedrals in the world and hosts various cultural events.
Barcelona’s Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, designed by Antoni Gaudí, is another famous unfinished church. Construction started in 1882 and is expected to be completed by 2026.
The National Monument of Scotland was intended to be a replica of the Parthenon but was never finished due to funding issues. It stands as a reminder of ambitious plans left incomplete.
At the time of the Chernobyl disaster in 1986, two additional reactors were under construction. Work continued briefly after the disaster but was eventually abandoned, leaving them as eerie remnants of the past.
The Who’s Lifehouse was an ambitious multimedia project that never came to fruition. It was intended to include an album, film, and live concert experience. Although the project was never completed, elements of it were incorporated into their successful album Who’s Next.
Bolt Castle on Heart Island was a grand project by George Bolt for his wife, Louise. Construction stopped abruptly when she passed away, leaving the castle incomplete for decades. Today, it has been restored and is open to visitors, serving as a tribute to their love.
These unfinished projects remind us of the complexities and challenges in bringing ambitious ideas to life. They stand as fascinating glimpses into what might have been, capturing our imagination and inspiring future generations.
Imagine you are an artist like Gilbert Stuart or Elizabeth Shumatoff. Create a portrait or a piece of art that is intentionally left unfinished. Consider what elements you would complete and which you would leave incomplete. Present your artwork to the class and explain your choices.
Choose one of the unfinished literary works mentioned, such as The Canterbury Tales, Sanditon, or The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Write your own ending or continuation of the story. Share your version with the class and discuss how it aligns or diverges from the original themes.
Research one of the unfinished architectural projects like the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine or the Basilica de la Sagrada Familia. Design your own architectural project that remains unfinished. Create a model or drawing and present your vision, explaining why it remains incomplete and what it symbolizes.
Inspired by Alejandro Jodorowsky’s unfinished adaptation of Dune, plan your own film project. Develop a storyboard or script outline for a movie that remains unfinished. Discuss the challenges you might face in completing the project and how you would overcome them.
Listen to The Who’s Lifehouse project and other unfinished musical works. Create a playlist or a short composition inspired by these projects. Present your musical piece to the class and explain how the concept of being unfinished influenced your creation.
Here’s a sanitized version of the provided YouTube transcript:
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Did you know that the portrait used for George Washington’s likeness on the one-dollar bill comes from an unfinished painting? Hi, I’m Erin McCarthy, editor-in-chief of Mental Floss, and welcome to the List Show from my living room. The Athenaeum portrait, as it’s known, was painted by Gilbert Stuart in 1796. It was commissioned by Martha Washington, who had requested a portrait of herself as well. Stuart painted the faces of both subjects and a bit of the shoulders and brown background for George, but that’s about where he stopped. The paintings were never delivered; Stuart reportedly kept the unfinished Washington portrait for himself and used it to recreate at least 75 replicas of the painting, which he sold for a hundred dollars each. Upon Stuart’s death, the Athenaeum portrait was passed down to his daughter and was eventually bought and given to the Boston Athenaeum, hence the name it’s now known by. Years later, this depiction of Washington was chosen for the engraving of the one-dollar bill. The image was flipped, but otherwise, it’s the same George that Gilbert Stuart painted 200 years ago—stopped partway through and then kept for himself for profit. You’ve got to respect the hustle, I guess.
Stuart’s Washington portrait is just the first of many interesting and oftentimes tragic unfinished projects that I’m going to share with you today. The unfinished portrait is another famous painting of a president that was well unfinished. It was by Elizabeth Shumatoff, and she started working on it around noon on April 12, 1945. The subject was Franklin D. Roosevelt, as he was being served lunch. The president reportedly complained of a pain in the back of his head. At 3:35 PM that day, he was pronounced dead by his doctor from a cerebral hemorrhage. Shumatoff did later make a new portrait of the president, but the original unfinished one remains a partial snapshot of Roosevelt just moments before his passing. It currently hangs at FDR’s one-time retreat, the Little White House in Georgia.
The Canterbury Tales is considered Geoffrey Chaucer’s magnum opus and one of the most influential pieces of English literature. Chaucer, however, never got around to finishing it. The story begins at the Tabard Inn with 30 travelers about to embark on a pilgrimage. The innkeeper proposes a storytelling contest that requires each pilgrim to tell two tales on the way up and two on the way back. Quick math: that should give us 120 tales by the end of the story, which would hypothetically end with the winner of the contest being crowned. If you’ve read The Canterbury Tales, you know there aren’t nearly that many; there’s only 24 stories, and it doesn’t have a proper ending. Chaucer is thought to have been working on the manuscript for over a decade up until his death in 1400. The tales were distributed posthumously, but most scholars believe he never had a chance to properly conclude them. Some blame Chaucer’s busy life; at various times, he worked at the Port of London, moved to Kent to be a justice of the peace, later became a member of Parliament, and then returned to London as clerk of the king’s works. Moonlighting as a seminal literary figure seems like an exhausting hobby. While some, like Professor Michaela Pashgruden, have argued that The Canterbury Tales were a deliberate attempt to challenge classic narrative structure by not having a proper ending, the general consensus is that Chaucer just couldn’t finish all 120 stories before his death.
Many other famous authors have left behind incomplete works. Jane Austen’s final novel was a book that we now call Sanditon, but she stopped work on it in March 1817, just a few months before her death. She completed 11 chapters of the novel, which takes place in the seaside town of Sanditon, believed to be based on Worthing, England. Over a century later, the book was published as is, though it was far from complete. Because of Austen’s legacy, it has been the subject of multiple continuations, where an author attempts to complete the novel within Austen’s presumed vision and style. “A Completion of Sanditon,” “A Return to Sanditon,” and “Jane Austen’s Sanditon: A Continuation” are just a few examples of attempts to finish what the famed author left behind. There’s even a television series that first aired in 2019 called Sanditon.
Charles Dickens’ final novel met a very similar fate. He completed just half of the 12 planned installments of “The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” leaving the whodunit unsolved for generations. What happened to Edwin Drood? Was it the butler? It’s always the butler, even if there’s not actually a butler in the story. Just like with Sanditon, “The Mystery of Edwin Drood” has been the subject of many continuations, including one by a man named Thomas P. James, who claimed to have literally ghostwritten the novel as if Dickens’s spirit was channeled through him. Some, including Arthur Conan Doyle, the author and creator of Sherlock Holmes, praised this version, while others, like scholar Jay Coming Walters, said that the work was “self-condemned by its futility, illiteracy, and hideous American mannerisms.” The mystery itself becomes a nightmare, and the solution only deepens the obscurity. Even Doyle eventually debunked the ghostly Dickens authorship, though his methods were a bit suspect. He wrote in “The Edge of the Unknown” that at a séance, he asked Dickens’s spirit if the American who finished Edwin Drood was inspired, to which Dickens’s spirit responded, “Not by me.”
Shortly before Edwin Drood was beginning publication, Dickens sent an installment to Queen Victoria and commented that if her majesty should ever be sufficiently interested in the tale to desire to know a little more of it in advance of her subjects, he’d be very pleased to help. Sadly, Victoria never seems to have taken him up on the offer.
One of cinema’s great boondoggles was Alejandro Jodorowsky’s planned adaptation of “Dune,” Frank Herbert’s 1965 sci-fi novel. Jodorowsky began production for his film in 1975. Obviously, the film was never made, but the stories about it are the stuff of Hollywood legend. It was supposed to be more than 10 hours long. Jodorowsky’s storyboards were made up of over 3,000 individual drawings. The would-be cast included Mick Jagger as Fade Rautha, Salvador Dalí as Shaddam IV, and Geraldine Chaplin, who was the daughter of Charlie Chaplin, as Lady Jessica. Orson Welles was slated to play the villain, Baron Harkonnen, a commitment Jodorowsky was only able to secure reportedly by promising Welles that his favorite chef would make him food on set every day. Dalí also allegedly demanded a hundred thousand dollars per hour for his work, which Jodorowsky agreed to, with the plan to only film with the famed surrealist for one hour. A mechanical mannequin would have been used for the rest of the production. The soundtrack was to be provided by Pink Floyd. Even after millions of dollars were spent pre-producing the movie, with elaborate costumes and set pieces already made, the film was scrapped. “Dune” was eventually made into a film in 1984, directed by surrealist David Lynch, while a new adaptation starring Timothée Chalamet is scheduled to come out in 2021.
But it’s not just artists that don’t finish their work. The Cincinnati subway is an abandoned city project underneath the streets of the Ohio metropolis. Construction began in the early 20th century in an attempt to upgrade the city’s public transportation system, which at the time relied on their above-ground streetcar system. A few miles of tunnels were dug out and built, but unfortunately, the cost of the project proved too great. Six million dollars was allocated to the project, but post-World War I inflation increased the cost of production well past that budget. By the end of the 1920s, the project was effectively abandoned. A few people did have ideas on what the tunnels could be used for. Meyer’s Wine Cellars Inc. wanted to use it for wine storage and production, but that didn’t pan out. In the 1970s, George Clooney’s father, Nick Clooney, wanted to turn part of it into an underground mall and nightclub, but that idea never came to fruition either. Today, the tunnels are partially used to carry the city’s water main and optical fiber cables, and they’re a frequent destination for urban explorers, though those expeditions are generally illegal.
Another incomplete structure is the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in New York City. The church is a landmark in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan. Its construction began in 1892, and its original design was in the Byzantine Revival and Romanesque Revival styles. About 15 years into the construction, the architect died, and the cathedral’s design eventually moved in a Gothic Revival direction. The nave wasn’t completed until 1941 after various funding issues, and construction has been intermittent since then. A large fire damaged the cathedral in 2001, and it was reopened in 2008. Today, it’s estimated that the church is only two-thirds complete according to the original plan. It’s still missing its spires. Despite being unfinished, it is still one of the biggest and most impressive standing cathedrals. Its floor covers 121,000 square feet, and its roof reaches 177 feet into the air, making it the sixth largest church in the world. It not only serves as an Episcopal church but is also home to various cultural events and art showings.
Barcelona’s breathtaking Basilica de la Sagrada Familia is another famously unfinished church. The cornerstone was laid well over a century ago, but construction isn’t expected to be completed until 2026. The National Monument of Scotland has been referred to by locals as a national disgrace. The monument was supposed to be a recreation of the Parthenon in Greece, but as you can see, it never quite got there. The foundation stone was laid in 1822, and by 1829, just 12 columns had been put up. Nearly 200 years later, that’s still the most complete this monument has ever been. It was meant to commemorate Scots who died in the Napoleonic Wars, but the organizers only received about half of the funding needed. In the years since, various proposals have been made to reinvent the monument, such as turning it into a monument for Queen Victoria or transforming it into the Scottish National Gallery. None of those plans took off, and Scotland’s folly, as it’s sometimes known, still stands as an unfinished relic.
Reactor number four at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant is one of the most infamous structures in recent history. There, in the early hours of April 26, 1986, disaster struck, causing lasting damage for generations. But did you know that at the time of the Chernobyl disaster, there were two other reactors being built? The new reactors were to be built about one kilometer away from the old site. Reportedly, the 286 construction workers at reactors five and six continued to work through the night of the disaster. It wasn’t until the following morning that construction was officially halted. Only a few months later, construction resumed until it was halted again in April 1987. In 1989, the Soviet Council of Ministers made the official decision to abandon the construction of both reactors. The fifth reactor was 70% complete at the time and is now an eerie piece of incomplete history.
If we weren’t in the middle of a pandemic, there’s a good chance I would be at a karaoke bar this weekend singing my lungs out. While I personally would stick to one of my go-tos like Bonnie Raitt’s “Something to Talk About” or Celine Dion’s “It’s All Coming Back to Me Now,” I’m almost positive that I would hear someone’s slightly off-key rendition of The Who’s “Behind Blue Eyes” by the end of the night—or, God forbid, the Limp Bizkit version. But did you know that the song was originally written as part of an unfinished sci-fi rock opera? Yeah, you heard that right. If you’re a fan of the English rock band The Who, you’ve likely heard of “Lifehouse.” It was supposed to be the follow-up to the 1969 album “Tommy,” but it never quite came to life. “Lifehouse” was intended to be a multimedia project that included an album, a sci-fi film, and an experimental live concert experience that involved music based on individual audience members. All pieces of the project were based on a futuristic story that Pete Townshend had conceived, inspired by the Indian spiritual master Meher Baba. Townshend described the plot as a fantasy set at a time when rock and roll didn’t exist. The enemies were people who gave us entertainment intravenously, and the heroes were savages who kept rock and roll as a primitive force and had to live with it in the woods. The story was about these two sides coming together and having a brief battle. The idea never came to fruition, and The Who instead released “Who’s Next” in 1971, which would go on to become known to many as their greatest album. A radio play was produced based on Townshend’s original concept, which was released on BBC in 1999. In 2007, Townshend released a website called “The Lifehouse Method,” which was able to, in a way, bring part of his futuristic concert to life. The Lifehouse Method would have users sit down for a musical portrait that would be composed by a program based on information they entered about themselves. Over the course of 15 months, the site generated around 10,500 portraits before it was closed. An album was later released with music based on songs created by the Lifehouse Method. It was also reported that a graphic novel would be released based on the Lifehouse story, but a release date has yet to be announced, and its eventual publication seems far from certain.
Let’s end the episode with a love story—the story of Bolt Castle. Fair warning, it’s a bit tragic. On Heart Island, which is located in the Saint Lawrence River in New York, there lies a castle. Its construction began at the turn of the 20th century by millionaire George Bolt. Bolt was a hospitality mogul of sorts, running multiple luxury hotels. Around 1900, he began an ambitious project to construct a huge six-story estate on a private island. It was meant to be a gift to his wife, Louise—a monument to his love for her. He hired hundreds of workers to build the castle, which had 120 rooms, a drawbridge, its own tunnel system, and a polo pitch. Talk about a great present! In early 1904, Bolt telegraphed the island with an order to stop all construction; Louise had suddenly passed away. Bolt abandoned the castle and reportedly never stepped foot on the island again. For 73 years, the structure stood incomplete—an unfinished love letter to a lost lover. Don’t worry, there’s sort of a happy ending. In 1977, the Thousand Islands Bridge Authority purchased the island and the nearby Bolt Yacht House with the promise that all revenue gained from the castle would be put toward renovation and upkeep of the castle for future generations. Today, you can visit Heart Island by ferry and explore the castle. Make sure to check out the bowling alley in the basement and the epic stained glass ceiling. I think Louise and George would both be quite happy with how it turned out.
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Unfinished – Not completed or lacking the final touches – The artist left the canvas unfinished, allowing viewers to imagine their own conclusions to the painting.
Painting – A work of art created using pigments on a surface such as canvas or paper – The painting of the serene landscape captured the essence of the countryside beautifully.
Literature – Written works, especially those considered of superior or lasting artistic merit – The literature of the Romantic period often explores themes of nature and emotion.
Portrait – A painting, drawing, or photograph of a person, especially one depicting only the face or head and shoulders – The portrait of the author hung prominently in the library, capturing his thoughtful expression.
Tales – Stories, especially those that are imaginative or fictitious – The tales of ancient heroes were passed down through generations, inspiring countless readers.
Novel – A long narrative work of fiction, typically published as a book – The novel explored complex themes of identity and belonging, resonating with readers worldwide.
Mystery – A genre of literature involving suspense and the solving of a crime or puzzle – The mystery novel kept readers on the edge of their seats, eager to uncover the truth behind the crime.
Project – A planned undertaking or assignment, often involving research or creative work – The students’ project on Renaissance art required them to analyze and present their findings on famous paintings.
Cathedral – A large and important church, often the seat of a bishop – The cathedral’s stunning architecture and intricate stained glass windows were a testament to the artistry of its builders.
Castle – A large fortified building or set of buildings, typically from the medieval period – The ancient castle stood atop the hill, its towers and battlements evoking stories of knights and royalty.