Summer is for art lovers
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Cindy Frazier
It’s all a matter of taste.
The city’s three major art festivals open this week, turning
Laguna Beach into a destination for art lovers and truly providing
“something for everybody” in the realm of art.
Summer art festivals have been a Laguna tradition since the Great
Depression in the 1930s. Over the years, the three festivals have
engaged in a friendly competition as they vie for the admiring eyes--
and dollars -- of the public.
The shows keep their doors open seven days a week -- with some
exceptions -- until Sept. 4, all within walking distance of each
other on Laguna Canyon Road.
Two festivals that open Friday -- Sawdust Art Festival and
Art-A-Fair -- have been around for 39 years.
Festival of Arts -- the city’s oldest and original art festival --
will open its doors to the public on Sunday, then will close Monday
for the Independence Day holiday, and reopen Tuesday.
“Established in 1932, the Festival of Arts is the longest-running
art show in Laguna Beach,” said Sharbie Higuchi, Festival of Arts
spokeswoman.
“It was created to lift the spirits of the community during the
Depression and as a means for artists to sell their artwork during
difficult times. Over seven decades later, the Festival of Arts has
matured into a world-renowned cultural institution.”
The “other” festivals each cropped up during the protest years of
the mid-1960s -- as an alternative venue for artists who felt shut
out of the Festival of Arts by policies that limited the type of
artists permitted to exhibit.
The Sawdust and Art-A-Fair each answered a need of various artists
who wanted to be part of the summer Laguna art scene.
Sawdust started out in a vacant lot on Coast Highway -- using
sawdust to keep the dust down on hot summer days.
“In 1966, the year it all began, the Sawdust Art Festival was
viewed as the renegade offshoot from the local art establishment,
though the heart of the matter was aimed at providing a venue for all
artists without a stringent jury system to preclude those with
‘out-there’ art,” according to Sawdust organizers.
Despite its humble beginnings, organizers report the Sawdust was
recently named the “Best in the West” for art shows by a readership
poll through AmericanStyle Magazine, which covers arts and crafts.
New this year at Sawdust is a “Concentration”-style puzzler game
show, “Art on Stage,” in which contestants try to figure out how to
put an original work of art back together. The contest will be staged
every Saturday from 4 to 5:30 p.m.
Organizers of the Art-A-Fair call their festival “the ultimate
destination for lovers of art to visit this summer. Nestled in a
colorful garden setting in romantic Laguna Canyon, the festival is an
enjoyable place to spend a summer day in the historic art community
of Laguna Beach.”
The arts festival organizers have apparently decided that fine art
cannot be properly enjoyed without fine food, fine music and fine
wine.
While Art-A-Fair organizers boast of the quality of their food --
and “the best Margaritas in Southern California” -- provided by the
gourmet cooks at Tivoli, Too restaurant located on the fair grounds,
the fact is that the original Tivoli restaurant is located on the
grounds of the Festival of Arts.
The festivals have all branched out to offer more than artwork
sitting on tables or hanging on walls -- workshops, demonstrations
and even cooking classes can be enjoyed for the price of admission.
This year, Festival of Arts is holding “special events” during the
season, including Wildlife Art Day (July 16), Hawaiian Cultural Day
(July 30), “Surf’s Up” (August 6) and Asian Arts Day (August 20).
But it’s the artists themselves who are the backbone of the three
arts festivals, and each of the festivals has a somewhat different
slant on the arts -- and the kind of artists who exhibit and sell
their creations.
Art-A-Fair and Festival of the Arts are juried, meaning that
artists must apply and be accepted to the shows.
The Festival of the Arts reserves its booth spots for artists who
live in coastal Orange County -- from Costa Mesa to the north and to
Dana Point on the south.
Art-A-Fair accepts all artists, and each year exhibits several
from foreign countries, allowing the festival organizers to bill it
as “Laguna’s only internationally juried art show.”
Artists at the Art-A-Fair also work at sales booths, and a
percentage of art sales goes to the fair itself, according to
spokesman Floyd O’Neil.
The Sawdust Art Festival limits its artists to those who live in
Laguna Beach, and a lottery system determines who gets a coveted spot
on the grounds.
It pays to live in Laguna during festival time.
Residents are given free admission any time to the Festival of
Arts, while Sawdust has a “resident” day on the first Friday of the
month, giving free admission for those with I.D. showing a local
address.
At Art-A-Fair and Festival of Arts, those who buy a ticket have
also paid for a season pass to the show.
Those who buy a ticket to the Pageant of the Masters -- the
performance art wing of the Festival of Arts -- have also purchased a
season pass to the Festival of Arts.
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