The newest
entry in San Clemente's budding art world is the WestEdge Gallery.
Opening in June, 2004, over 200 paintings - primarily oils,
watercolors, and acrylics - and randomly scattered sculpture
pieces represent the work of thirteen artists banding together
to form their own art colony - a place to create, show their
works and interact with one another. There are seven small studios
(9'x9'), two of them shared, in which the artists work; others
exhibit only. All have great admiration for the talent of the
accomplished Kirk Saber who brought them together. Who are the
merry members of this unique band of art entrepreneurs and what
makes them tick? What chances for success does the newest new
art gallery in town have?
Irene Licini and her husband recently retired from running their
Sizzler restaurant; Irene, with children raised, began painting
in earnest six years ago. To her, WestEdge was a real find.
"When I walked in, I fell in love with the atmosphere and
the artists. The place was appealing and fun-filled. It wasn't
a pretentious gallery where people would be afraid to go in
because it's so informal. It's a super gallery; everybody's
real friendly. I immediately knew I wanted to be a part of it."
Irene sold one of her paintings shortly after she hung it up.
"It was called "A Kelp Forest," an underwater
abstract," Irene noted. "I had never attempted an
abstract before. The other artists have made me stretch myself.
I look at their art, talk with them. I'm surrounded by their
inspiration. It's easier to paint here than at home. There's
a vibration, which makes me feel very creative. Sometimes art
is such an expression you don't understand what comes out of
you onto the canvas. I want to see how far I can stretch. I
want to be original and grow in my own style. Whether you give
a painting away or sell it or hang it for yourself, it's the
discoveries about yourself when you do art that give you personal
satisfaction. Many of the ones you really like stay in your
own house, like children who don't want to leave home yet."
Dan Tangeman, a man of all seasons, who has traveled worldwide
in his admiration of the art world, is currently involved in
theatre, contracting, swimming pool design and scenic design,
as well as painting. In combining realism with the abstract,
Dan has also been creating wood sculptures of ducks, which he
carves, oils, and adds feathers to. Previously, at various times,
he's been a helicopter mechanic, a musician, a road racer, a
disc jockey, a limousine driver, an actor, a doorman, a model,
a cab driver, a lumber broker, a salesman for Panasonic, and
he served in the U.S. Navy. He also received a bachelor's degree
from the University of California, Santa
Barbara, in dramatic directing. Recently, he taught special
education children at Shorecliffs.
"Several months ago," recalled Dan, " I saw an
article in the paper about WestEdge. I met Kirk and as soon
as I walked in the front door, I felt energy and a comforting
vibe from the group of
artists. Kirk's art is something I wanted to be a part of. I'd
been painting in my garage and never got a drop on me; I'd been
holding things in... I met Steve Adam and saw his work. I said
to myself, this guy is good. This is great. I'm glad the guy
is here ... I had felt stuffed down by my painting. I was cheap
on paint and frugal in other ways. I felt constrained, and it
was frustrating for me. One day, I stopped using a brush, grabbed
a tube of paint and started sloshing it on the
canvas. There was paint all over me. There was this huge release
- a real transition."
Christina Beaman, who first located the building and helped
Kirk build the studio cubicles, is a partner who jumped right
in with elbow grease. She was primarily a photographer but has
been influenced by Kirk and others to begin painting. Being
around the artists moved her from acrylics to oil painting and
from representational to abstract work in an extremely short
time. "I'm very inspired and excited," she says.
Marie Pierre Philippe-Lohezic, who prefers "Marie Pierre"
with her charming French accent, grew up and attended school
in a town near Paris. She worked in computer industrial design
- "what they put into a computer" – and traveled
with her husband, a designer of microelectronics, and three
children, to several Asian countries, most recently, to Laguna
Hills. She studied painting in France, Singapore and at Saddleback
College, beginning painting seriously five years ago.
"I paint in different styles, but most people place me
in the cubist style, with a tendency to become more abstract,"
she related.
Marie Pierre works in various media, including watercolor, pastel,
oil, acrylic, stone, clay, and bronze; her work expresses considerable
movement. "I think that my best expression will be in sculpture,”
she remarked.
Most of her works to date are with a collector in France, and
with friends and family. An acquaintance that knew someone in
San Clemente's newest art colony, told Marie about WestEdge.
"I talked to Kirk and decided to join. I was not spending
enough time painting. This gave me the opportunity to share
different techniques, to work in different mediums and to learn
from everyone else," she added.
Working in oils with occasional watercolors is Vickie Magger
DeSilva who believes her work "...captures the gentleness
of life and perhaps the fun side of living... painting people
to catch their emotions and moods."
An artist through experience rather than academics, Vickie has
been teaching oil painting classes in the Adult Education Division
of the Capistrano Unified School District for 14 years. She
has won awards at the Orange County Fair, and from the San Clemente
and Laguna Hills Art Associations. She also paints patrons of
the Café Tutu Tango in Orange as they dine. Recently,
she has become a certified professional counselor for families
whose offspring may be at risk for drug or alcohol abuse. Her
favorite painting is called Orangatini - an orangutan in a martini
glass, of which she has sold thirty prints.
Sue Wilcox specializes in oils, watercolors, acrylic, jewelry,
and beach objects. She began as an artist during college in
Minnesota where she won several national awards with her oil
paintings. After marriage, her family, adding three children
in the process, moved across the United States several times.
By the time they moved to San Clemente in 1987, she and her
husband had built a successful cable TV business. Unfortunately,
her husband was unexpectedly taken from her, and she maintained
the family as a single mother. In 1990, she returned to art,
taking every art class offered by Saddleback College and, again,
winning art show awards. She has traveled widely to such locations
as Egypt, India, France, Greece and Norway; she enjoys painting
children, places, and faces. Her favorites are a "911-Fire
Hydrant" and one of her granddaughters at a drinking fountain
in a park. She has even put together a work using twigs gathered
from the beach. Learning about the start of an artist' colony
at WestEdge, she signed up right away. Her work has been shown
at Hosum Bistro in Newport Beach and at the Tustin Senior Center
Art Gallery, as well as WestEdge.
"I enjoy this; I feel like I'm really part of an art colony.
This is the best thing for me at this time," she admits.
Ruth Yuhas' work has hung at WestEdge since its opening. A member
of the San Clemente Art Association, she won six awards from
first place to honorable mention. She also exhibits in Laguna
Beach's Quaron Gallery. She works primarily in acrylics with
colorful abstracts. Her background in art includes numerous
workshops and study with artist Robert Burridge. Early on,
she followed her art interests seriously; later, she neglected
her art for ten years to devote her time to an occupation in
architectural drafting. She re-established her art interests
and has been an avid painter for the past three years.
"I'm a fast painter," she admits. I sell about six
of my paintings a month. I wish I had more time to both paint
and to interrelate with the other artists."
Her commercial art jobs, constructing commercial swimming pools
and working part time as a floral assistant, leaves Sarah Schoenkopf
little time for her first loves - watercolors and illustrations.
"Painting is my sole means of accurately expressing my
emotions," she states. She sees her art as "...free,
personal, and overtly feminine."
Besides WestEdge, she exhibits her works at the Black Cat Gallery
in San Juan Capistrano. I've always wanted to paint," she
admits," but have had no time for classes."
She considers her art style as simple, creating emotion with
a minimum of brush strokes. She was greatly influenced by a
gift of a book on Mandela, which is a sand script definition
for circles often seen in Asian and Native American art. "I'm
not a modern art freak, but I love to paint circles and swirls,"
she admits.
In her small studio, she displays lots of sketches of children,
animals and flowers. She confesses she doesn't like to think
things out artistically but instinctively. She picks out a dominant
feature, darkens and lightens areas and, in no time at all,
has a finished piece.
"I do very open 'how I feel' sorts of things," she
admits.
Carlsbad-based Nadine Baurin works primarily in oils, leaning
toward an expressionistic style, characterized by a dynamic
undertone and marked textures - all conveying a "highly
tactile surface." Spending her mornings as an interface
designer on web-based products for a software company, she also
has her own graphic and web design studio. She studied art in
Argentina
and France, earning her bachelor's degree in studio art from
Illinois' Prinicipia College in Chicago.
Admitting her use of quick, energetic brushstrokes, she admits.
" I tend to work with imagery and themes that incorporate
vivid cultural connections to my Latin American heritage (Buenos
Aires, Tango, Boats, the City)...after applying paint to my
canvas I wait and let the images emerge. Like the child who
carves images from clouds, I step away from the literal and
attempt to paint what I perceive and feel."
Her works have been exhibited at galleries in Illinois, San
Diego, Encinitas, and, now WestEdge. An art colleague of Kirk
Saber in Encinitas, she wanted to support him in his WestEdge
adventure.
A successful tile contractor, floor sealer and coater, Steve
Adam is also an experienced artist. Self-taught, he loves to
work with acrylics; he paints contemporary abstracts. He also
creates with a wide variety of architectural materials such
as mosaic, ceramics, natural stone, and
concrete. Working with builders, contracting companies, and
homeowners throughout Southern California, Steve has sold over
100 pieces of his artwork informally.
"I'd been thinking of owning my own gallery. When I drove
by WestEdge, came in and met Kirk, that was it. At the first
Art Walk I sold a piece to a major San Clemente art collector,
one I just produced that week."
Steve "hangs out" with WestEdge artists and watches
the gallery on occasion. "I just exhibit here. I paint
at night in my garage. It gives me more time to relax and explore
art...I'm not sure how to describe my painting. It's whatever
I feel, no particular subject. I just put a couple
of dabs of paint on the canvas, and then I start going with
it. I do big paintings, sometimes reverse painting on glass...two
pieces a night depending on how I feel."
He credits much of the inspiration for his work to his Louisiana
upbringing, particularly appreciating nature and wildlife. He
likes working with his hands with mosaics, waterfalls and sculpture
pieces, including woods.
The newest member of the contingent is Trevor Mezak who works
with oils and palette knives. His favorite subjects include
places he's traveled, mission scenes and people working or playing
in their own environments. "There's so much in a face,"
he says.
Largely self-taught, Trevor has taken courses in graphic design,
animation and fine arts. His works have been shown in Los Angeles'
Back Street Gallery, in Boulder, Colorado, and other locations.
"I'm a trial and error, 'hands-on' painter," he claims.
Employed in painting murals and texturing walls, Trevor is also
part owner of Free Ryde Clothing Company providing designs for
T-shirts and other items of wear. Besides his 14-month-old twins,
he loves doing oils - "one piece at a time."
Regina Hurley is a widely exhibited painter, sculptor and educator,
whose works are included in many exclusive private collections.
One of her bronze sculptures will soon be displayed at the Huntington
Library and Museum. With academic credentials from CalState,
Long Beach, including an MFA, Regina teaches fine arts for Saddleback
and Coastline Community Colleges and Concordia University. Her
eclectic sculptures include fantasy oceanic figures reflecting
great beauty and physical power, one of which she recently donated
to Casa Romantica. The representational sculptures she exhibits
at Westedge are from her "Links in a Chain" series.
Writes Regina, "Personal experience taught me that putting
experiences in perspective softens extremes. Simplifying the
human form universalizes the figures, absorbing them into the
cycle. Lessening the effect of extremes presents an overview
of existence."
The guru himself? Kirk Saber is the Pied Piper who took on all
artistic comers, spanning in experience from beginner to very
experienced, with different talents working in different media.
"...to have a place to bring artists together so they have
one place they not only can show but
can actually create their work and share ideas with other artists,”
he says. “Most artists like to paint in an ivory tower.
I'm trying to give them an ivory tower that's right in the middle
of the village so that they're brave enough to attempt new things.
We've already had that happen here. Irene just started painting
abstracts and sold one at the first Art Walk, as did Steve.
Irene primarily painted horses and equestrian subjects. Now
she's full on with abstract stuff and selling those. Dan's beginning
to find his voice in painting. I couldn't be happier than seeing
our artists
reaching out. We don't just do commercial art here; we try to
emphasize the creative side. It's extremely encouraging for
arts to be in a commercial setting but to have artists feel
comfortable enough to worry about the creating aspect as opposed
to the commercial aspect of art - and to venture out there.
“We also have a great landlord, Yank Sefton. He's a huge
supporter of the arts and a painter himself. He made it all
possible." Kirk continued, " I want our artists to
feel safe to explore, to share ideas, and they do. They share
recipes that you can't find in art books. 'What did he do?'
' How did she do this?' ' I mixed three parts this and one part
that.' 'I used Vermeer.' 'I used tamar resin.' 'I used this
medium or that medium.' That's exactly what I wanted, sharing
styles, techniques, everything, even their connections to framers,
how to save money, where they
get their supplies, how to work on new surfaces."
The gallery also contains Kirk's collection of art books for
reference purposes. He bought a beginner's art kit and started
painting in Denver, Colorado, moving to Los Angeles in 1988.
"I thought L.A. would be bigger, a metropolitan place where
I could sell my works," he explained.
His first major sale was to David Hockney. "That told me
I was in the right place doing the right thing," he reminisced.
He exhibited in different galleries in different places, and
within a short time such celebrities as Arnold Schwartzenegger,
Ted Danson, Woody Harrelson, Glenn Close, Willie Nelson, and
Brooke Shields were among his clients. "L.A. isolated me
in my own ivory tower. I wanted to meet and paint with other
artists."
Kirk moved to Encinitas to join an art colony, which put on
several art shows. It wasn't quite what he was looking for,
so he continued to search for gallery space on his own. He found
San Clemente. "I love being here. It's an ideal place for
artists. I live here. We can move things around the gallery
without waiting for board meetings and several months before
a decision is made. I've learned, if you put artists together,
they will make it work. They have to have a say and some freedom,
be able to participate, and have a voice. Here, they do,"
he said proudly.
In the future, Kirk and his colleagues look forward to regularized
meetings; offering art classes for children, adults, art lovers
and refresher courses for painters; extending the front of the
building to enable outside painting; getting into other media
such as film and digital artistry; using wireless remote so
artists can bring in their computers; and serving as a hub or
reference point for people looking for local artists with specific
skills. They also want to continue Art Walks every fourth Thursday
of the month all year round, planning to be open from 6 to 9
p.m. with music, refreshments, wine, and artist camaraderie.
The WestEdge Gallery can be contacted at 429-1633.