Adding ‘scenic’ to the CdM 5K
Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT BEACH -- It’s clear from the thoughtful watercolor Polly Stenler
painted to advertise the Corona del Mar Scenic 5K that art is more than
just a hobby.
The painting, which features a runner against the backdrop of the lush
Five Crowns restaurant, is being used to promote the June 3 run all
around town. Money raised from the run goes toward youth recreation
programs and the beautification of Corona del Mar.
“The people from Five Crowns had called me and asked if I’d be interested
in doing a painting on it,” she said, adding that she started at the
beginning of the year.
Best of all for Stenler, it’s already grabbed the attention of other
businesses interested in commissioning her work.
“I admire impressionists, but I’m a realist myself,” she said from her
home in Big Canyon.
The local resident and mother of three has a lengthy art background --
generations, in fact. She grew up back East, influenced by American
painter Homer Winslow, tomes of art history and most of all her parents.
Her pioneering mother, whom Stenler says got her started, opened the
first female-owned goldsmith store in New York. The metallurgist did
extraordinary work for a number of stores, Stenler remembered fondly,
including “beautifully enameled sterling silver salt and pepper shakers.”
Stenler herself started out in watercolors. Her appreciation for form and
light eventually led her into jewelry making and a job with Tiffany’s.
“It’s very hard,” Stenler said about the competitive art world, one that
first gave her the cold shoulder.
She had tremendous difficulty obtaining the recognition necessary for
consistent work, she said.
“I finally wrote a letter to Tiffany’s,” she said, recalling her
exasperation.
They phoned her, offered her a position in manufacturing and she
accepted. There, on the top floor of the building, she sat with all of
the company’s fine jewelers. She was in charge of Paloma Picasso’s work
that had just exploded onto the scene in the late 1970s with its smooth
geometric shapes.
It was there, at Tiffany’s, that she met her soon-to-be husband. After
marrying, the two moved to California to be closer to his family. It’s
been more than a decade now, and despite the demands of full-time
motherhood, Stenler still pursues her artwork.
“I still like to design jewelry,” he said. “I have a studio and try and
keep my hand in everything.”
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