Minds and souls of Surf City
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Jenny Marder
A pencil sketch of a face with arched eyebrows and mocking eyes is
mounted above a photograph of a sultry woman in a pink sweater.
On the floor sits a black and white nature scene beside a
florescent, childlike drawing.
“It is the ultimate mix,” said Steve Schmidt, who placed the
pieces for the Huntington Beach Art Center’s community exhibit
“Centered on the Center.”
The act of arranging more than 300 pieces of varied and sundry
artwork, in a way that’s pleasing to the eye, is like herding cats
for Schmidt.
He tries to sort by type, keeping still-life paintings together,
portraits together and a sculpture garden in the backroom. He breaks
the pieces down into categories and then subcategories. He plays with
associations.
“If it makes people think, then it’s cool,” said Schmidt, an
artist himself.
But regardless of how everything’s organized, Schmidt said, one
thing is inevitable: “It’s going to get chaotic,” he said.
Thousands are expected to attend the exhibit opening Saturday at
the Huntington Beach Art Center, Schmidt said. The exhibition will
feature about 325 works including paintings, sketches, engravings,
two- and three-dimensional wall pieces and sculptures. This will mark
the event’s ninth year at the art center.
Artists, mostly Surf City residents, formed a line that snaked
around the building on the submission date. Nothing was turned away.
Each year, Darlene DeAngelo, the center’s curator of exhibitions,
selects one or two artists from the pool to be featured at a solo
exhibit the next November.
“It’s a real educational experience,” DeAngelo said. “Not just for
the general public, but also for the artists. They challenge
themselves by putting pieces in.”
In a city like Huntington Beach, the ocean tends to serve as a
muse for many artists.
“There are always a lot of works in this particular show that tend
to focus on the ocean,” DeAngelo said. “It’s what they see. Artists
in Southern California are affected by the ocean and by the light in
Southern California.”
Religious artwork arrived en masse this year and will cover almost
an entire wall. A painting that features a Starbucks cup is placed in
the center.
“That could be some people’s religion,” Schmidt said.
For Schmidt and DeAngelo, it’s the contemporary pieces that catch
and hold their attention -- the pieces that tend to be more abstract,
that push artistic boundaries.
“We look at a lot of work and start to develop a taste for pieces
with a little more meat in them,” Schmidt said.
One of their favorites is a fuzzy pink unicorn head mounted on
fake wooden contact paper over wood. The piece is encaged by a wooden
frame covered in chicken wire. When a small red button is pushed, the
unicorn sings a song. “I’m a magical unicorn,” it sings, in a
lilting, slightly chilling melody.
Schmidt and DeAngelo listen and laugh. They can’t wait to meet the
artist.
“We tend to like the weird stuff,” DeAngelo said.
The opening reception will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday at
the Huntington Beach Art Center, at 538 Main St., at the corner of
Acacia Avenue and Main Street. Admission is free. For more
information, call (714) 374-1650.
* JENNY MARDER covers City Hall. She can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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