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Suzie Harrison
To stand out in the arts in an esteemed artist colony such as Laguna
Beach is quite an accomplishment. These chosen few will be recognized
at the Orange County Arts annual awards on April 22. Fifty-five
candidates, including arts organizations, have been nominated for
contributions to the arts during 2003.
Festival of Arts board member David Young will be recognized for
his lifelong commitment to the arts with the Orange County Arts
Cultural Legacy Award for Community Visionary.
He received a separate honor by the Volunteer Center of Orange
County -- the Spirit of Volunteerism Award -- on Wednesday.
Others don’t know the outcome yet. Laguna Beach nominees for
outstanding service to the arts are Peter Tiner, in the Outstanding
Arts Educator category; two Lagunans have been nominated for the
Outstanding Volunteer Award, Sharbie Higuchi and Janice Johnson.
First Thursdays Art Walk is up for Outstanding Arts Organization.
Mike and Ellie Gordon for an individual or couple, Outstanding Arts
Patron and Matt Greville of Wells Fargo Bank, in the Outstanding Arts
Patron Business category.
Young, a resident of Laguna Beach since 1945, is a fixture in
Laguna and has served on the Festival of Arts board since 1954. He is
humble despite all his significant accomplishments in town and
prefers not to talk about himself. Instead, he prefers to give kudos
to others.
He said he has had two passionate love affairs in his life, the
first with his wife and the second with the festival and pageant.
When he found out about the cultural legacy award he said he was
elated.
“It’s a nice honor especially due to the fact of the other
honorees,” Young said.
Young, 91, is a walking history book and a wealth of knowledge. He
recounted his days volunteering on the school board in 1932. There
was a big controversy about a principal who had belonged to a
communist cell during her college days. He stood by her, steadfast in
his beliefs and not folding under pressure.
He left the school board because it was too political. In 1954, a
board member of the festival said to Young, “we need a board member
like you.”
He became a board member immediately and it has been his passion,
though he recognizes it has not always been smooth.
“There have been some real rough spots, and at times some of the
board members have forgotten what the festival is here for,” Young
said.
He remembers his first year on the board when the budget for the
pageant was $40,000 and tickets were $3.
“People sat in the bowl, there was no concrete, it was cinders and
mud, just basic,” Young said.
He said one year Bette Davis helped out by painting the names on
the [festival’s seating]. Her boyfriend at the time Hap Graham was on
the board.
Young further spread his love of the arts when he founded the Art
Institute of Southern California, now called Laguna College of Art
and Design.
“I started the art school because I thought we needed a place for
the local artists,” Young said.
“Little old ladies did the work in their garage [creating the
pageant pieces],” Young said. “They were enthusiastic, but needed to
learn the basic principles in art ... so we started a school for
them.”
He said the school used to be at the Laguna Playhouse’s location.
They built two studios that became the college.
“I got the Festival of Arts to give me $5,000 in seed money to
start with, and went to 20 of my best friends in town and talked them
out of $1,000 a piece,” Young said.
In 1957, he established the first scholarships in art, the
Festival of Arts Laguna Beach High School Scholarship program. He
reminisced about the first $1,000 cash price, which was a lot in
those days he pointed out. Over the years, $2.7 million in
scholarships funding has been awarded.
Each year he saw the festival grow and improve, and with that the
number of volunteers increased.
“The volunteers are the life blood, I never worried about them
taking it anywhere [the proposed move to San Clemente], we have the
most loyal volunteers that have more pride in what they do,” Young
said.
He resigned for two months during the controversy, but the
volunteers and staff’s dedication changed his mind; and he returned.
“That’s what made me stick, I had never seen so many loyal people
in my life,” Young said. “It’s pay enough to watch their work and see
their pride.”
He also gives credit to pageant director Diane Challis Davy for
his longtime commitment.
“Dee has made my time here worth while,” Young said. “She is a gem
of a gal, and without question the best director we’ve ever had.”
In 1989, he helped establish the Festival of Arts Foundation, an
organization that underwrites art associations in Laguna Beach.
“The Festival of Arts and the foundation average about $100,000 a
year [[in scholarships] to Laguna Beach High School grads,” Young
said.
He talked about the significant revenue and contribution the
festival and pageant has given over the years, not only in money, but
how it has changed lives in Laguna -- and has helped put Laguna on
the map as a premier artist colony.
Tiner, chair of the Laguna Beach High School art department,
expressed his enthusiasm for the nomination for outstanding educator.
“All this recognition is kind of overwhelming,” Tiner said. “I’ve
been teaching for 22 years and teaching in Laguna Beach for 14
years.”
Tiner is a class of 1968 graduate of the high school.
“I think the main reason I am being recognized is that I am so
much a part of the community, bringing all the resources to my
classes -- artists, photographers, website designer,” Tiner said.
He said another reason for his nomination is his dedication to his
students.
“For me giving back to this new generation of future artists is
the most important thing,” Tiner said.
Higuchi, marketing and public relations director for the festival,
has been nominated for her volunteerism and generous service to the
arts.
“In my opinion, Laguna Beach is synonymous for arts community,”
Higuchi said, “It is what this community is all about and what it is
built on. There are many beautiful beach cities on the California
Coast, but not many of them are recognized for its art on an
international level.”
She talked about Laguna’s dedication to the arts and youth
education.
“I work for one (the Festival of Arts) and volunteer my time to
the others through the Laguna Beach Alliance for the Arts, simply
because I believe the arts are important to society.”
She said that it is her privilege to support these organizations
and to work cooperatively with many of the art leaders and
visionaries, naming the city’s cultural arts manager Sian Poeschl, as
one.
“To be nominated by peers for an Arts Orange County award means
more to me than winning the award,” Higuchi said.
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