B.W. COOK -- The Crowd
An overflow crowd of more than 600 guests arrived at the Orange County
Museum of Art last Thursday to celebrate the opening night of the Pacific
Craft Show.
“This is the second most important fund-raiser of the year,” said
museum spokesman Brian Langston, who was on hand to welcome the arriving
crush. “Next to our incredible Art of Dining, this show and sale is very
important to the museum.”
Langston helped organizers of the craft show raise more than $160,000
at the weekend-long event, which closed Sunday afternoon.
“More than 1,000 people attended the exhibition on both Saturday and
Sunday,” added Langston, who expressed confidence in the undertaking’s
success.
The event, sponsored by Wells Fargo, honored artist Howard Ben Tre and
attracted a showing of some 50 artisans from all over the western United
States.
Displays ranged from handmade jewelry to coffee tables. One in
particular, a brushed metal sculpted base table with a glass top made by
Laddie John Dill, sold for $7,000. It was among the larger ticket items
in the show.
Many pieces of art sold in the hundreds of dollars, not thousands. The
net effect, however, was a win for the museum and for the exhibiting
craft artists, who made new friends and customers in Orange County.
That evening, at the first of the donor receptions, the cocktail
gathering was catered by Mark’s of Laguna with a special vodka martini
bar presented by Ketel One. Sampling the grav lax (marinated salmon) and
tasting the grilled New Zealand mini-lamb chops in the sunset crowd were
such art lovers as Molly and Leon Lyon, Pat and Carl Neisser, Madeline
and Len Zuckerman, Pat and Alan Rypinski, Niki and Jim Wood, Janice and
Roger Johnson, Elizabeth and Walter Hansen, Gael Lauritzen, Carole and
Randy Johnson, Lois and Stanley Isenberg, Linda Irvine Smith, Twyla and
Charles Martin, Elyse and Bruce Miller, Walter and Jean Lachman, Donna
Phelps, and Ygal and Shiela Sonenshine.
Patrons roaming the exhibition halls of the museum, sampling the
cuisine and deciding on their purchases, were also tempted by a display
of limited edition plates.
Plates by two artists in particular, Anna Silver and Ed Moses, were
created to commemorate the show. Each year, the museum solicits artists
to create plates, which have become collectible and desirable.
And they really are plates, or rather platters to serve your next
artistic meal on. Priced at less than $200, the two plates went fast.
* THE CROWD appears Thursdays and Saturdays.
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