If
you’ve ever spent one of those unforgettable evenings
basking in the ambiance of Paris’ Champs Elysees, inhaling
the flowered beauty of Copenhagen’s Tivoli Gardens, mingling
with a fun-loving crowd in Barcelona’s mid city, or ambling
along San Antonio’s River Walk, you’ve already experienced
something of the feeling desired by the organizers of San Clemente’s
forthcoming Art Walk.
George Gooch and Dave Donaldson,
community activists, are cooking up a caldron of art, culture,
cuisine and atmosphere to create five “enchanted evenings”
for our community this summer. Following the success of last
year’s Art Walk, Gooch, a professional photographer and
President of both the San Clemente Art Association and Garden
Club, and Donaldson, owner of the Beachfire Restaurant, founder
of the Downtown Restaurant Association and contributing member
of the Downtown Business Association (DBA), are inspired to
bring a European touch to our Southern California enclave.
“We’re not asking
for the moon,” Gooch commented. “We just want to
encourage people to come downtown one balmy summer evening each
month to savor what’s happening here. To view artists
working on their easels; sip a varietal, gratis glass of wine;
munch on cheese and crackers; listen to the soft melodies of
a musician playing a violin or mandolin; take pleasure in a
romantic meal in one of our first class restaurants; meander
by or drop into one of our downtown stores or shops - to genuinely
enjoy a special San Clemente evening.”
Added Donaldson, “ I can
see hundreds of people walking up and down Del Mar and El Camino’s
T-Zone, taking in all the art and artists who don’t get
that much exposure. As well as our art gallery, exhibitor and
restaurant involvement, by adding a wine and food aspect to
the event. It’s also an opportunity for the DBA to encourage
merchants to open up at night. It’s all about the maturing
of San Clemente and downtown reaching its full potential, having
something for everybody: food lovers, art lovers, shoppers of
eclectic gifts. We want to make it different from a mall-type
experience. We want people to enjoy our own special, beautiful,
natural outdoor mall, one that’s superior in character
to anything else in Orange County.”
The 2004 version of the Art Walk
is a summer series of Thursday evenings, from 6 to 9 pm, on
May 27, June 24, July 29, August 26 and September 30, 2004.
A time when members of the residential and business communities
converge in a fashion only a town like effervescent San Clemente
can host. Artists, both professional and amateur will be “judged
in” by Gooch and Donaldson. 
“We’ll invite artists who can do demonstration work,
who’ve proven a high level of quality, whether they’re
amateurs or professionals. First space priority will go to working
artists who’re members of the San Clemente Art Association,”
promised Donaldson. “Up to twelve artists will be in different
locations on sidewalks in front of San Clemente restaurants
and stores, painting and drawing, performing their art under
observation, all exhibiting different types of art.”
“We’ll have our top
artists here, painting originals; several are world class,”
added Gooch. “At the Art Association Gallery, besides
the works on display, there’ll be “hands-on”
experiences for children and potential Michelangelos to try
out watercolors or acrylics, mix oils, sketch in perspective,
wax encaustic, sculpt and make wood cuts - all under the supervision
of an expert in the medium.”
Members of San Clemente’s
Downtown Restaurant Association planning to participate include:
the Vine, Gordon James, Café 207, Antoine’s, Carbonara’s,
The Village, A Matter of Taste, The Library, El Ranchito, The
Village Gourmet and the Beachfire Restaurant. Owners and managers
are enthusiastically supportive of the concept, promising especially
delicious dinners and atmospheres contributing to the Art Walk
theme. They will rotate over the six Thursdays, providing free
wine for passerby and patron tasting.
“Can’t you visualize
it?” asked Gooch, “People happily strolling casually
down our streets, pausing at the corner to view a painter at
work, walking on to the next spot on the tour. At the new bulb-outs,
wine tasting, dining, just enjoying a pleasurable evening in
our beloved San Clemente…people who want to be involved
in something evolving - to help make it grow.”
Gooch is taking care of the program
and map; Donaldson is lining up the galleries, restaurants,
and members of the DBA to participate. It will be an opportunity
for many downtown businesses to keep their doors open during
the Art Walk, for the purchases of paintings, gifts and other
merchandise.
“This
is not an event just to make money,” Gooch suggested,
“In fact, the only art sold will be in the stores, not
out in the streets. Prices will be ‘just right.’
We’re creating a happening, an opportunity for cultural
enjoyment. Nothing will be peddled on the streets; it’s
not a street vendor faire.” He added, “We’re
a beach town, and we’re trying to elevate this event.
It’s not going to be high class nor will it be a “sand-in-the-shoes”
walking type thing. It’s going to be an evening in town,
a nice, tasteful, social experience.”
Last year’s first ever Art
Walk was modestly successful. Eleven art galleries participated
and contributed funds, the Art Association and the DBA helped
with expenses, and Gooch contributed some of his own money.
“Now we have the talent
and influence to obtain support collectively rather than singly.
Some of the galleries don’t have a lot of money and just
get by. We want to help them, too. We want to keep the art galleries
we have,” said Donaldson.
Other elements being added to
the tasteful caldron may include, the organizers hope, a shuttle
bus to enable the tour to extend to other locations such as
Jason Kuncas’ JK Art and Design Gallery and the Art Supply
Company. The participation of the Casa Romantica, which may
become an anchor for this particular Art Walk, is also in the
planning picture.
“The Art Walk can bring
together so much of what I like about our town,” mused
Donaldson, “We have the opportunity to give it the ‘San
Clemente twist,’ which, to George and me, means being
socially relaxed and friendly. Similar events elsewhere may
have all the weight of gifts, music, art, food, but we have
a special San Clemente style, a little more casual and accessible.
I sometimes become a little uncomfortable in some of the galleries
in other cities. You’re expected to be an art expert.
We want everyone to come; it’s as much social as anything
else. Ultimately, to me, it’s about connecting the community,
a big opportunity to bring a lot of different parts of the community
together to share an awesome experience. I think it’ll
be cemented as one of the best events in San Clemente in bringing
people together.” b