The whaling wall
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Elia Powers
Scott Lambert has a feel for the ocean and an eye for what’s
underneath.
A lifelong surfer and recent recipient of Newport Beach’s
lifeguard of the year award, Lambert turned his artistic attention
toward the sea for his latest project.
On Thursday, he delivered a 5-by-7-foot mural of Pacific Ocean
marine mammals as a gift to Crystal Cove State Park.
The park has a special meaning to Lambert. It stretches across
Newport Beach and Laguna Beach, where he spends countless hours
riding the waves.
Lambert, a 17-year-old senior at University High in Irvine, needed
to complete a final project that affected his community in order to
earn the title of Eagle Scout, which fewer than 5% of Boy Scouts
become, Lambert said.
So he turned to Winter Bonnin, a naturalist and volunteer
coordinator at Crystal Cove, for advice. She had taken on several
Eagle Scout hopefuls over the past decade.
Bonnin showed Lambert past student projects, but he wasn’t
inspired.
Then he walked into the park’s Sector Office and saw a wall-length
mural, created in 2000 by a future Eagle Scout, that depicted a scene
of fish swimming underwater.
Lambert immediately found his answer.
“I knew that this would be an involved project,” Lambert said.
“I wanted to mix surf and art. I thought if I cared about the
subjects, it would be a more effective painting.”
Lambert wanted to be realistic with his project, so he studied the
mammals and visited Laguna Beach art galleries to see how other
artists depicted marine life.
He enlisted younger members of Boy Scout Troop 695 to help
complete the painting.
And after more than six weeks of work, he pulled his U-Haul truck
into the park just before sunset on Thursday and handed the painting
to Bonnin.
“This is by far the biggest project I’ve ever completed,” he said.
Lambert said he developed a passion for art during his first year
of high school.
He began taking a camera with him on surfing outings, getting
action and still shots while near the water.
He said he hopes to continue this hobby by studying graphic design
and art in college.
For now, he is happy to join his father, Bob, as an Eagle Scout.
After Bonnin signs off on the project, that will become a reality.
She plans to hang Lambert’s mural in the Sector Office for the
time being, though she admits its future location hasn’t been
determined.
Bonnin is planning to use the mural -- with its renderings that
include whales, seals, sea lions -- in her educational seminars,
which mostly target children ages 5 to 12.
“Having a picture of mammals is a great educational tool,” Bonnin
said.
“I can teach the kids all the different types of life and point to
them in the picture.
“It’s a wonderful gift, and it came from such a pleasant and
mature person.”
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