The painted garden
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Young Chang
For Tim Clarke, a Capistrano Beach painter, the beauty of Sherman
Library and Gardens in Corona del Mar has served as a muse.
It has inspired him to place different palettes of light and sights on
his canvas as early as 25 years ago, when he first started painting
there. Over time, it has become a physical benchmark to which he keeps
coming back to check his progress.
And when he’s away -- in Italy, France or Germany, for example --
Clarke compares foreign forms of beauty with his muse.
Today, he zooms in on Spain. His current exhibit marks the local
garden’s 35th anniversary and will hang in Cafe Jardin through April 18.
Titled “Paintings of Sherman Gardens and Andalusia Spain,” the show is an
innovative comparison of two not-often juxtaposed places.
Without looking at the titles, the 35 works done in watercolors and
oils don’t immediately give away whether the scene is of Spain or Corona
del Mar. Paintings depict Spanish architecture created under Moorish and
Persian rule, the mood of a Spanish bar, even chubby stone cherubs atop
doorways in little Spanish villages.
Local images include the “Sherman Gardens Passageway,” which will be
recognizable for most visitors, the garden’s flowers, cafe and even its
miniature Far East-style bridge over a micro-stream.
“The quality of light is similar,” Clarke, 49, said of the two worlds
set oceans apart. “When an artist talks about the quality of light,
they’re not just talking about the intensity or the color, but the angle
on which it slides in and hits the land.”
Andalusia and Sherman Gardens also share a cleanliness of air, he
added, a warm sun and a versatile sky that changes color depending on the
mood of the sun.
“It’s a comparison. It’s kinda fun isn’t it?” Clarke asked. “Sherman
Gardens was built from a Spanish model and inspired by Spanish
architecture and gardens, so to paint Sherman Gardens and then to paint
Spain makes sense. It’s kinda like a movie star paying homage to an actor
in a film.”
Wade Roberts, director of the garden since it first opened 35 years
ago, understands why painters, poets, writers and other artistic types
like to produce their work here.
“It’s really an oasis of beauty,” he said. “We’re very unique in that
it’s a very fine-tuned horticultural display garden and not just a
collection of plants.”
The location’s subtlety also adds to its intrigue.
“We’re known around the world and we’re listed and so forth, but we’re
kind of a secret place because it’s not as easy to get into as some of
the places in the middle of Anaheim, and maybe that’s good,” Roberts
added.
Founded in 1966 by Arnold D. Haskell, the garden was named after Moses
Hazeltine Sherman, a central figure in earlier Southern California times
who was integral in forming the Los Angeles Consolidated Electric
Company.
The library was built to house the history of Southern California
dating back between 100 and 120 years.
For Clarke, the library, the garden and the few, quiet visitors all
contribute to making Sherman Gardens his version of a local studio.
Traveling away, in turn, makes his arrival home that much more
significant.
“When you come back home, you see your home maybe for the first time,”
he said.
Today he small-talks with the garden’s caretakers -- Wade, John,
Gabriel and Curt -- who have worked there about 15 to 20 years. He said
he’s painted every square inch of the “magical” property from every
angle.
“I can go there and be in incredible peace, which is conducive to
painting,” he said. “And it is one of the most beautiful places in
Southern California, which is conducive to painting. And once I get
there, I feel I have no excuse except to paint, which is conducive to
painting.”
FYI
WHAT: “Paintings of Sherman Gardens and Andalusia Spain”
WHERE: Sherman Library and Gardens, 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del
Mar
WHEN: 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. every day
COST: Free to view exhibition, garden entrance admission is $3 for
adults, $1 for children between 12 and 16, free for children under 12.
CALL: (949) 673-2261
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