Highways and high art converge
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Alicia Robinson
A new exhibit at the Orange County Museum of Art may be made up of
paintings, but it serves as a series of snapshots of Southern
California’s architecture and car culture from the 1930s to the
present.
“Cities of Promise: Imaging Urban California” opened Friday at the
museum in Newport Beach. The exhibit was a partnership between the
museum and the Automobile Club of Southern California, which provided
several paintings from its archives.
Museum curator Sarah Vure selected the paintings for the exhibit.
She focused on portrayals of the urban environment showing
architecture and transportation.
One painting depicts the beginning stages of freeway construction,
and another shows an artistic version of a familiar Southern
California roadway sight -- a long line of taillights stretching
toward buildings silhouetted against a darkened sky.
“I had this idea that the built environment, as it’s called in
academia, really gives us a good sense of American aspirations and
ideals and opportunities,” Vure said.
Some of the works are by painters now well-known on the California
art scene, such as Wayne Thiebaud and Peter Alexander.
Six of the paintings in the exhibit are watercolors from the Auto
Club archives that were created as covers for the club’s Westways
magazine.
Since it was first published in 1909, Westways has focused on
places to go in the car, club historian Matthew Roth said.
The paintings displayed at the art museum represent a period of
California impressionism in the 1930s and ‘40s, when artists started
to look at the city around them.
“The reason that they fit into this show is they kind of depict a
landscape that is being formed and transformed before our eyes,” Roth
said.
The Auto Club paintings include one of a San Francisco cable car,
another of boats at Fisherman’s Wharf and a third of the Golden Gate
Bridge.
“I’m very pleased with how the exhibit came together,” Vure said.
“I think there are a lot more paintings of this subject than I could
have possibly included, and this was a very small, focused exhibition
that I hope people will relate to because it has a lot of images of
our community.”
The exhibit will be at the Orange County Museum of Art, at 850 San
Clemente Drive, through April 25.
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