Sawdust celebration complete with memories
OUR LAGUNA
Sawdust Festival officials celebrated the opening of the 37th annual
show with an intimate party on June 7th at Healy House on the
grounds.
“I am overwhelmed that I was invited,” said former Arts
Commissioner Iris Adam, an Art-a-Fair exhibitor. “I think they feel
that I am part of them. I feel that way. I am in the Studio Walk
every year.”
The guest list included board members, the press, local arts and
culture supporters and exhibitors.
“This is the V.I.P. party, hosted by the board,” said Dennis
Junka, who arranged the floral centerpieces on the laden buffet
tables.
Junka, Ket Youngstead and Lynne Powell served on the party
committee. La Sirena, Zinc Cafe, baker Viktor Benes, Laguna Culinary
Arts, Dr. Chocolat, Heidelburg Bakery and Pappous Mediterranean
Grill, one of the restaurants on the grounds during Festival Season,
provided a sumptuous buffet.
Greg Thorne drew a lot of eyes -- at least the ones with mascara
-- when he showed up at the laden tables in a traditional Scottish
kilt, complete with dirk.
“It’s the Seaforth plaid,” said Thorne, tall, with shoulder-length
blond hair, in the Fabio-style.
He did not volunteer what he wore beneath the kilt. Below the
kilt, he wore patterned, knee-high stockings that he called divided
hose, purchased in Edinburgh.
Thorne, a resident of Laguna Beach, has been a Sawdust exhibitor
of 11 years.
Guests at the party included City Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman and
son Josh; City Treasurer Laura Parisi; Pageant of the Masters
Director Diane Challis-Davy; Festival of Arts marketing and publicity
director Sharbie Higuchi; Laguna Art Museum spokesman Stuart Byer;
city Arts Coordinator Sian Poeschl; and newly re-appointed Arts
Commissioners Nancy Beverage, Pat Kollenda and Dora Wexall.
And: jeweler Tim Hayes, Judy Pettigrew, and former Arts
Commissioners Carole Reynolds and Carol Reynolds, mother of jeweler
Patti Jo Kiraly, an exhibitor for 11 years.
Also: newly appointed Planning Commissioner Linda Dietrich and her
husband Bob, a member of the Festival of Arts Board of Directors;
Friends of the Library Bookstore volunteer Janet Pressman; and Martha
Lydick, president of the Library Friends and the Laguna Beach
Taxpayers Assn.
The party was the second opening celebration for the 2003
festival, coinciding with the public opening. A couple of days
earlier, the grounds were packed with guests invited by the
exhibitors.
“This party is like hometown night,” said Steve McIntosh, known to
some as “Buck Naked,” leader of the Chapped Cheeks band. “You see
people you haven’t seen in 20 years.”
McIntosh headed straight for Scott Moore’s booth. Moore was a
member of the band, which has been on hiatus for a while, what with a
McIntosh toddler and Moore’s participation in the Festival of Arts
Great Rebellion of 2000.
Moore has been a Sawdust exhibitor for 22 years.
“I go back to 1979, but I missed a couple of shows so I can’t
count them as consecutive,” said Moore, who also exhibits at the
Festival of Arts.
The Sawdust, too, is a child of rebellion. It began in 1966 as a
protest by artists who objected to the jury method of acceptance into
the Festival of Arts, held on a vacant lot. The name comes from the
Sawdust scattered to keep dust off of the paintings.
This year 120,000 pounds of sawdust were purchased to spread on
the paths of the grounds at 935 Laguna Canyon, purchased in 1968 from
the Funk Family.
Early Laguna settler George Rogers planted the 21 eucalyptus trees
that shade the grounds. Fifteen other species of trees grow on the
grounds.
Photographer John Atkinson was one of the original Sawdust
exhibitors. He and his wife, Arlyth, both 76, watched a generation of
children grow up at the festival.
“My daughter, Allison, worked for Jim Fyhrie, who handcrafts
Dulcimers and he taught her how to play,” said Arlyth Atkinson, who
exhibits original crocheted designs. “Our sons Andy and Kelly
assisted their dad in the dark room.
“The children were exposed to such a creative community. It’s been
an experience I will treasure for the rest of my life.”
Beth Leeds first exhibited at the festival in 1972.
“I grew up here,” said her son, Clay, who started booth-sitting in
1968. “I have never paid to get in. Everybody knew me.”
Laguna Beach High School ceramics teacher Bill Darnall has been
exhibiting in the show for 30 years.
“He had barely reached puberty when he started,” said Ron
Rodecker, a former Laguna Beach Unified School District art teacher
who has been a Sawdust exhibitor since 1982.
Rodecker created the critically acclaimed children’s Public TV
show “Dragon Tales.” The show has been nominated for an Emmy for the
third time, maybe the charm needed to win.
“We are the Susan Lucci of children’s programming,” Rodecker said.
He has the 1996 original drawing for “Cassie” and her evolution
displayed in his booth. New this year: Rodecker’s tongue-in-cheek
takes on great art, which included a pig as “Odalisque,” “The Duchess
of Alba” a la dragon, and “Whistler’s Mother” with a friend.
The show has 195 exhibitors this year. Complementing the veteran
exhibitors are newcomers Keith Anderson, Stan Berney, Richard
Blanton, Joan Corman, Bruce Hampton, Kristin Harrell, David Kluver,
Linda Kreidler, Brenda Jane Nelson, Diann Ocean, Edward Olen, Mary
Oudeman, Stormy Panosian, Kenneth Rosenberg, Jan Satttler, Michael
Scott, Thomas Silcox, Nita Skaggs, Melba Slavin, Ron Slavin, Rachel
Uchizono, Sue Winner and Patricia Wylie.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22;
call 494-4321 or fax 494-8979.
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