They chalk at the chance
- Share via
Luis Pena
Artists from around the country came to get on all fours and paint
masterpieces of art on asphalt.
Ralph Rodheim, organizer of the first La Strada dell’ Arte: An
Italian Street Painting Festival, said that only the best artists
from other chalk art festivals were invited. The event was not a
competition, he said, but an event to let art come alive before
people’s eyes.
“There is so much quality. Everybody walks here, and they go,
‘Wow, and then they see the next one, and they go, ‘Wow,” Rodheim
said.
A lot of planning went in to ensure that the artists had the
perfect asphalt canvas. The streets on which the artists painted were
washed or had a new coat of slurry placed on them. The cleaning and
the slurring allowed for a darker and smoother surface for the
artists to work on.
Jesse Silva, an artist from West Covina, has been chalk painting
for seven years. Silva painted Michelangelo’s “The Holy Family” at
the festival. He enjoys painting before the crowd, he said, because
of the adulation that he gets from the people watching him.
“Here, you get a lot of compliments from people, which you don’t
get at home or when you’re alone.” Silva said.
Michael Kirby from Baltimore is one of the best street painters in
the world. Kirby heard about the competition while he was at a
festival in Italy and decided that he wanted to be a part of it.
Kirby does all original work. He decided to paint a sphere of the
Balboa Pavilion, and he added angels to the sphere to keep with the
Renaissance theme of the festival.
One of the reasons he enjoys participating in street painting is
the ability to work out in public, Kirby said.
“One of the special things about doing street drawings is the
ability to work in the public and have all forms of people coming up
to you and be able to speak to you,” he said. “It’s a beautiful
thing.”
The Piazza de Bambini, the children’s chalk painting area, started
small on Saturday but was expanded on Sunday to accommodate all of
the children wanting to show their artistic talents.
Chantelle Wolfe from Costa Mesa said that she and her children
draw on their sidewalks at home using chalk. They came to admire the
artists at the festival, she said.
“Its kind of fun to see what the fine art people are down there,”
she said.
Emily Wolfe, 7, drew springtime on the asphalt.
“I am artistic and art is my habit,” she said.
Tracy Lee Stum, an award-winning artist from Los Angeles, came to
the festival to promote street painting in Newport Beach because the
city hasn’t had it before.
Stum has painted murals inside the Venetian Hotel in Las Vegas.
For the festival, Stum painted a section of Caravaggio’s “Madonna of
the Pilgrims.”
A lot of planning goes into the temporary masterpieces. Stum, for
example, plotted a grid to make sure that the oval frame that she was
creating would come out right. Kirby worked out calculations right on
the asphalt.
“Before this is finished, I’m always thinking about the next one,”
Stum said.
Bridget Ashton from Corona del Mar came to see the artists paint
because it was something different.
“Its intense and inspiring,” Ashton said.
Marcia Dossey, who lives on the Balboa Peninsula, said that she
appreciates that such an event was done for the area.
“It’s nice to see it in your own neighborhood.” Dossey said.
Proceeds of the event will go to support the educational programs
at the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum.
* LUIS PENA is the news assistant and may be reached at (949)
574-4298 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.