Capturing the cove
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Mathis Winkler
In a way, Beatrice Anderson sees herself as a reporter. But instead of
working with pen and paper or a camera, the Corona del Mar resident
captures her stories in paintings.
And starting today, her work can be seen at Newport Beach’s central
library, where Anderson has put together an exhibition entitled “Once
Upon a Time, Crystal Cove.”
The fairy tale reference is intentional, Anderson said Monday. In
1985, when she first began painting the beach colony, which is made up of
cottages built in the 1920s and 1930s, the quietness and quaintness of
the place made her feel like she’d stepped back in time.
The exhibition is “my perception of a little enclave out of this world
in Southern California that I fell in love with,” she said.
Anderson, who left a career in the computer industry to make a living
as an artist, said Crystal Cove’s scenery is perfect for watercolor
paintings, her medium of choice.
“I love the glow,” she said. “You can always see all the layers of
paint.”
Unlike oil paint, the transparency of water colors forces her to work
precisely, Anderson said.
“The white of the paper is your white,” she said. “You really have to
know where you leave it white.”
Over time, Anderson has grown close to some of the people living in
the cottages and has stayed in Crystal Cove several times overnight.
“The only way to get a feeling really [is] to stay there and not just
visit there,” she said. In the beginning, “you cannot sleep for a couple
of days. The ocean is so noisy in the morning. You see the pelicans going
to San Diego in the morning and in the evening back to L.A.”
She’s adamant about not taking sides in the dispute over what’s to
happen to the state-owned cottages. While plans for a $35-million luxury
resort were recently dropped and the restoration of the cabins is the
only sure thing at the moment, Crystal Cove’s residents are scheduled to
leave their homes by July 8.
But the native Parisian said she worried about the cottage’s future
nevertheless.
“Coming from Europe, I have a little bit of a sense of history,” she
said, adding that she mourned the demolition of a Chinese-style house in
Corona del Mar to make room for apartments a few years ago.
Although she doesn’t paint human portraits and has found a niche in
the art market by portraying homes, she tries to capture the flair people
lend to their residences.
“When I paint people’s homes, I try to know them a little bit,” she
said. “Whether it’s a cottage in Crystal Cove or an estate somewhere in
Europe, it’s interesting to see a little bit who lives there.”
No matter what happens down the coast, Anderson hopes to spend many
more mornings and late afternoons reporting on nature and cottages at
Crystal Cove.
“Sometimes, I just go there to sketch or walk and feel the place,” she
said. “To see if there is something else that I haven’t seen before.
There’s so much to do. This is just the beginning.”
FYI
“Once Upon a Time, Crystal Cove” opens today at the Newport Beach
Central Library, 1000 Avocado Avenue. A reception that’s open to the
public will be held on Sunday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. The exhibition runs
through May 2. Information: (949) 759-0550
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