Moving exhibit on display
EYE ON ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT
I am rather excited that fall starts this weekend -- it just seems
like a time of renewal and energy. When I was growing up in Kansas
City, it was the most picturesque time of the year. And from having
spent many years in Colorado, I know the leaves have already started
changing in Boulder and the aspens in Vail usually hit their prime
this weekend.
To me the changing of the leaves, their color, is art in and of
itself. Needless to say, Laguna Beach is picturesque year round, with
tiny little nuances showing up each season -- the flowers, the air.
Well, you live here, you get it.
‘Peace for Humanity’
This weekend Miranda International of Laguna Beach is hosting a
world premiere sculpture unveiling and exhibit of artist Tuan
Nguyen’s “Peace for Humanity†sculpture, a Vietnam Memorial monument.
Tuan won the 2002 Grand Arts Award for outstanding contributions
to the arts by the city of Westminster and was commissioned to create
the 15-foot bronze sculpture.
As a native of Vietnam, he said he related well to the subject.
“I feel I connect because of the Vietnamese community and war --
related to that,†Tuan said.
“When the communists took over we escaped from Vietnam to the
border of Cambodia by walking to Thailand,†Tuan said.
Tuan was in a refugee camp in Thailand for a year.
“No food, no water, just a lot of hope,†Tuan said. “It was very
difficult -- we know why we escaped.â€
The people who lost hope didn’t make it, he said.
“Basically you live out of hope, couldn’t live through it without
it,†Tuan said. “They tried to know who you are, are you a communist,
why you escaped.â€
He explained that art in Vietnamese society doesn’t support
freedom of expression. It is more religious, in the form of Jesus or
Buddha.
“Here I have the freedom to express. Because of that I feel that I
don’t try to be a Vietnamese artist but a universal artist,†Tuan
said. “Everyone can relate to the human condition, relate to life and
feeling.â€
Tuan’s sculpture will be on display next to Miranda Galleries at
the corner of Laguna Avenue and South Coast Highway on Friday,
Saturday and Sunday, with a reception on Saturday evening from 6 to 9
p.m.
For more information, please call 497-4491. Miranda Galleries is
at 417 S. Coast Highway and Miranda International is at 357 S. Coast
Highway.
Ride the Tide at Laguna Art Museum
Laguna Art Museum’s epic, “Surf Culture: The Art History of
Surfing,†continues to offer myriad experiences for Lagunans to
experience. This amazing exhibition and surf culture event series
began in July and runs through Oct. 6, with each week offering new
and unique events.
At 5 p.m. Sunday, LAM will have a slide show and discussion titled
“The Reflections on the Art and Life of Rick Griffin.†The program
features longtime friends of Rick, including surf guitarist Paul
Johnson of the Belairs, as well as celebrity photographer Bob
Seidemann and artist Robert Williams. It will be moderated by Gordon
McClelland.
Gidget Surfs into Laguna at LAM
Gidget galore -- all about Gidget will be presented at Laguna Art
Museum at 5 p.m. Sunday. The real life model for Gidget, Kathy Kohner
Zuckerman, and Deanne Stillman, author and writer for Rolling Stone
and The New York Times, will “vividly recall the world of Gidget,â€
who is definitely a huge part of pop culture and an American icon.
Laguna Art Museum is at 307 Cliff Drive and can be reached at
494-8971.
* SUZIE HARRISON is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at 494-4321.
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