Museum gala tops off Plein Air Painting Invitational
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BARBARA DIAMOND
A gala dinner and collectors preview sale Saturday night at the
Laguna Art Museum concluded the weeklong Plein Air Painting
Invitational.
More than 400 people attended the gala, where artists were honored
and works of art were displayed and sold before the public sale on
Sunday. What once might have been a closer-than-cozy crowd fit
comfortably into the remodeled Steele Gallery, where the hole in the
center of the room has been covered to add space.
The event grossed $190,000, with proceeds split between the Plein
Air Painters Assn., the painters and the museum’s educational
programs. The lower level of the museum will be converted into a
learning center under the direction of Ann Camp, education curator.
Awards were presented at the gala in four categories. Artists and
patrons made the choices. Laguna Beach painter John Cosby, a past
winner and past association president, was the artists’ choice in the
Quick Draw competition, and Jacobus Baas, also of Laguna Beach, was
the people’s choice.
Quick Draw Paintout participants were allowed two hours at each of
two sites: Monarch Beach at sunset on July 12 and Heisler Park the
Friday morning before Saturday’s festivities.
Ray Roberts was the overall Artists Choice winner, an award he
shared last year.
Calvin Liang of Corona was Overall People’s Choice winner. Alison
and Kim McCormick of Newport Beach purchased Liang’s “Rocky Coast.”
Other buyers included Lisa and Athens Group Vice President of
Development John Mansour and Rick Silver.
The gala was chaired by Laguna Beach residents Jim Rogers and Ken
Auster, Festival of Arts exhibitor and former invitational winner.
Their committee included Teresa Marino, a founder of the Laguna Beach
Community Concert Band; Jan Fulton; Marnie Wall, museum events
coordinator; Patti Oshlund and Joyce Pekala-Bak.
Rogers and Auster joined museum Director Bolton Colburn to present
the awards and thank the committee and event sponsors: Coast
magazine; Comerica Private Banking; Cottage Restaurant, which hosted
a dinner for the artists on July 16; Plein Air Magazine; Redfern
Gallery on South Coast Highway, which specializes in plein air
paintings; St. Regis Monarch Beach Resort and Spa, which has forged
an alliance with the museum for fundraising events; and Young’s
Market.
Sundried Tomato catered the dinner. Rick Lang photographed the
event.
Guests included Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson; Arts Commissioners
Mike Tauber, Pat Kollenda, with husband, Jim, and Nancy Beverage,
with husband Gary, president of the North Laguna Community Assn.;
museum treasurer Cathy Conway, escorted by husband Mike; Matt and
Mary Lawson, co-chairs of the museum’s Advisory Committee; Gene and
museum board member Johanna Felder and Stuart Byer, museum director
of marketing and public relations.
Also, hotelier Claes Anderson, Hobie and Tuvalo owner Mark
Christy, Irvine Museum Director Jean Stern, Judith and Keith Swayne,
Festival of Arts Marketing Director Sharbie Higuchi and gallery owner
Ray Redfern.
Works by the 50 painters in the invitational were displayed from
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday at the museum. Any of the pieces not snapped
up at the gala were for sale. The exhibition was taken down to make
way for the installation of “100 Artists See God,” which opens this
weekend.
Summer museum hours from Aug. 1 to Sept. 5 are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday through Thursday, until 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and until 9
p.m. on the first Thursday of each month for the Laguna Beach Art
Walk. The museum is closed only on Thanksgiving, Christmas and New
Year’s Day.
General admission is $7; students with identification and seniors
65 or older are $5; children under 12, accompanied by an adult, and
museum members are free.
The museum is at 307 Cliff Drive, just north of Main Beach. For
more information, call (949) 497-8971.
THANK YOU
Brothers Eric and Shawn Borg have donated two patrol-ready
bicycles to the city’s “Cop on the Corner” program, which increases
the visibility of officers and considerably increases their
maneuverability on congested Downtown streets.
The Borgs had met the city’s bicycle officer on his patrol. They
were impressed and approached the police department to see if a
donation would be accepted.
There is a precedent. The program has historically been supported
by donations from local business owners, but it has been five years,
and the bicycles were showing a great deal of wear.
The City Council on Tuesday accepted the donation of two $825 Trek
Manitou black, elite, police-ready bicycles from the Borgs, owners of
Laguna Beach Financial on South Coast Highway.
SITTING PRETTY
The City Council also approved the Arts Commission’s selection of
a bench for the Bus Depot on Broadway, designed to reflect the canyon
setting and architecture of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
Laguna Beach artists Jorg Dubin, David Cooke and Jeff Peterson
created “Canyon View,” which consists of six seating areas and a bus
shelter, replacing those already on the site.
They will be paid $65,000 for their winning entry in the annual
Artist Designed Bench competition, funded by the Business Improvement
District’s self-imposed levy on hotels. Another $1,000 will be
provided for installation of a bronze plaque and miscellaneous costs.
The benches will be constructed of reinforced concrete with cedar
seats, some with backrests. The shelter will take advantage of
existing concrete pillars, combined with a roof of stainless steel
and mahogany and back panel, in the shape of a tree.
A cloud and sunburst panel at the peak of the front of the shelter
provides the elements of a lasting “canyon view” of the sky, the
artists said.
Caltrans and the city Planning Commission had to approve the
project. The commission gave it five thumbs up.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22;
call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949) 494-8979.
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