Varietal art marks Woman’s Club exhibition
BARBARA DIAMOND
The Laguna Beach Woman’s Club annual art show and auction fills a
special niche in Laguna Beach.
New and emerging women artists gain experience and confidence
exhibiting and mingling with well-known local artists in a welcoming
atmosphere where the only judges are the buyers.
“This year, we had a very enthusiastic response from the artists
who wished to exhibit, and had to create a waiting list,” said show
chair Mary Murray, also an exhibitor.
The event showcased the works of more than 40 artists and raised
money for the club’s many projects through the auction of show
participants’ donations. Almost $1,700 was raised by the sale of the
donations, made in lieu of entry fees.
Potter Nadine Nordstrom chaired the auction. Murray met Nordstrom
last year on a hike in Laguna Canyon when Nordstrom, a Laguna Coast
Wilderness Park docent, was Murray’s guide. And it was Nordstrom who
encouraged Murray to exhibit her work for the first time in the
club’s 2004 show.
Since then Murray was accepted into the Sawdust Festival Winter
Fantasy, participated in the recent Art Studio Tour and, of course,
the 4th Annual Women Artists Show, held Sunday and April 17 at the
clubhouse on St. Ann’s Drive.
Murray, who has only been working in ceramics and fused glass
since she retired in 2002 after 30 years in the computer industry,
volunteered to coordinate this year’s show, assisted by Peggie
Thomas. “Works spanned a very broad range,” Murray said.
The range stretched from oil paintings to hand-painted silk, from
shell-decorated hatbands and collages to underwater photography, from
jewelry to petroglyphs.
“Our show has such a different flavor,” club board member Veronica
Nice said. “The artists are so diverse.”
Suzanne Short exhibited her textured pen and ink drawings for the
second time at the show. Short, a quadriplegic since a car accident
in 1982, started drawing in rehab, using her mouth to hold the pen.
She does commissioned architectural renderings and portraits, but
focuses mainly on pets, drawing from photographs.
Sandy Morgan paints rocks.
“This is only the second time I’ve been in a show,” Morgan said.
“The first time was this show, last year. I was so scared.”
Some participants -- like attorney Barbara Cornelius -- put their
art on hold until they quit their daytime jobs. Some, like dentist
Barbara Hawthorne and clinical psychologist Linda Grossman -- are
still juggling careers and art.
South Laguna resident Juliana Essen, who exhibited her photographs
of women in Thailand at the show, has a degree in international
development and a doctorate in anthropology.
“My hope is that proceeds will support my social science
research,” said Essen, a part-time instructor at Soka University.
Essen will begin her next project in December, a comparison of
women’s experiences in poverty in Thailand and Laos on opposite sides
of the Mekong River.
Grace Bryan, who donated the artwork for the show brochure, fliers
and banners, attended what is now the Laguna College of Art & Design
when it started in the late 1950s.
Bryan has a bachelor’s degree in fine arts and for the past 12
years has taught drawing and painting at her home.
“Art is my life,” she said. “I pass on what I have learned only in
hopes for others to better enjoy the beauty of art and have a better
understanding.”
Other veteran Laguna Beach artists in the show included
watercolorist Iris Adam -- known for her flower power, who is now
concentrating on landscapes; glass artist Leslie Davis; Pratt
Institute graduate Linda Hall; Sawdust Festival exhibitor and Holiday
Pallette Contest winner Diann Ocean, and yes that is her legal name;
Laguna Canyon Artists member Skip Roma; and fabric painter Olivia
Batchelder.
Batchelder also exhibited the butterfly she created for the KOCE
Butterfly Initiative project.
“Thirty-five artists participated,” the longtime Sawdust
participant said. “They were shown and auctioned at Rogers Gardens,
the proceeds for Orange County schools.”
Batchelder wore one of her hand-painted silk outfits, set off with
a gorgeous pendant created by Lisa McMillan.
McMillan, who traded the pendant for a hand-painted sarong, sells
her work mostly at shows.
“I recently closed my shop and I am selling more,” McMillan said.
“This is my first time at the Woman’s Club.”
The show was a homecoming for painter Carol Lloyd. Her great
grandmother, Jennie Johnson, and great aunt Ora Warling, helped start
the club. Lloyd and her mother, Beryl Viebeck, are members. Ora and
Oscar Warling’s home still stands in Laguna, the seventh oldest house
in town.
“I’m looking forward to being involved in this and future events,”
Lloyd said.
A group of community-minded women organized the club in 1922 to
benefit the residents through philanthropy.
They met originally in a building where City Hall is now. When
city officials asked the club members to exchange the property for
the corner parcel at St. Ann’s Drive and Glenneyre Street, a promise
was made to preserve the pepper tree that still shades City Hall.
That tree, incidentally, was planted by George Rogers, Viebeck’s
great uncle, who at one time owned a good portion of downtown Laguna
Beach.
The club continues to serve the community, with a special emphasis
on women’s causes. Projects include programs on feminist issues,
recognition of a woman of the year, support for the needy and a venue
for women artists.
Among the browsers, buyers and club members at the show: Anne
Wood, recently presented with the Exchange Club’s Book of Golden
Deeds; Marsha Bode, recognized by the club for community activities;
Bette Anderson, local author and past president of Village Laguna;
Anne Johnson, planning commissioner; Ann Quilter, co-chair of the
Senior Center fundraising campaign, club President Peggy Ford and her
daughter, Nikki.
New members are welcome. For more information, call (949)
497-1200.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcome. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652; hand deliver to Suite 222 in the
Lumberyard, 384 Forest Ave.; call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949)
494-8979.
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