True to life
Young Chang and Jennifer K Mahal
Pamela Bethke and her husband Rick sometimes take drinks and hors
d’oeuvres into their luxurious master bathroom and pretend they’re
picnicking in a European courtyard.
The arched entrance painted with two-dimensional cobblestones, the
images of trees blowing westward on the ceiling, the statue of Nocturne
with her arms swaying, the Venus in a shell painted on the wall near the
tub -- these touches leave little to the Bethkes’ imagination.
“It’s a fantasy world,” Pamela Bethke said of the murals in her
Newport Beach home. “Wallpaper -- it just puts a color on a wall. This is
fun -- your house starts coming alive.”
Murals and tromp l’oeil effects, like the ones artist Dana Ridenour
created for the Bethkes, are becoming more and more popular as a way for
people to add a personal touch to theirmass-produced houses and
apartments.
With prices of projects ranging anywhere from $400 to $10,000,
Ridenour said she has noticed more people getting creative with their
wall space.
Indeed, creating murals and tromp l’oeil has kept local artist Mary
Ann Ford on her toes. The Newport Beach resident is constantly busy,
going from site to site with her phone almost always ringing. It gives
her very little time for her own personal painting.
“My work gets done last,” said the artist who likes the works of
Winslow Homer, Edward Hopper and Pierre-Auguste Renoir. “All of my
business is the work on the walls.”
Ford said her work brings a little whimsy into the lives of both
children and adults, making what could be a generic living space into a
personal haven. But it is not for everyone.
“It’s for the child within, the adult who wants to be different and
really personalize their home,” Ford said.
Beyond the personal, rising property values may play into why the
trend is catching on, said Ridenour, who owns Off The Palette in Costa
Mesa. Decorative touches often raise the value of a home when tenants
move out. And paint is much easier than wallpaper to deal with when
redecorating.
“I think the prices of homes are such an investment nowadays that
homes are like [residents’] personal haven,” Ridenour explained. “With
wallpaper, you have problems -- to change it you have to rip it all off.
For a bathroom it gets moldy and wallpapers fade.”
Also, Ridenour said the cost of painting a mural on a wall can be
comparable to the cost for wallpapering the same amount of space.
“This is our fourth home. The other three houses all had wallpaper and
it was all matching,” Bethke said. “It looked so ‘decorator.’ But for
this one, I wanted my personality.”
And personality is what she got.
Bethke had always wanted a cozy little Paris apartment, and the
downstairs powder room was transformed to reflect that.
With walls painted in thick stripes of pink and red, fluffy flowers
with green leaves and a trompe l’oeil cabinet colored an old-world French
country blue, the little bathroom gives off a Parisian feel.
“I think it’s a more mature person nowadays that has the confidence to
do something like this,” the client said. “With this, you have to be
adventurous.”
If you’re the painter, you also need to get to know the client to
figure out what they’ll be happy looking at day after day.
Some of Ridenour’s clients know exactly what they want. Others leave
it up to her, she said, in which case she tries to gage their tastes.
Both painters said that many of their clients have become their
friends.
Trish Steele, who had Ford do quite a bit of work on her former Port
Street house in Newport Beach, said that the time spent getting to know
one another is important. A nautical theme matching a cherished bath
stool was painted above the doorway in one bathroom. The dining room got
a touch of tromp l’oeil
“She tries hard to capture what her clients are looking for,” Steele
said.
Ford likes to add very personal touches to her work -- from painting
the family dog or the family parrot into murals to recreating the rocky
shores of Cuba in trompe l’oeil for a lawyer who wanted to remember his
heritage.
“I listen for their interests, sometimes their stories,” said the
artist whose work can be seen on the walls of At Ease in Fashion Island
and Baby Unique in Corona del Mar.
One little boy told her about a frog his uncle used to keep in his
pocket. The family’s mural now includes the unlikely pair.
In Bethke’s bathroom, if you look closely at the painted cobblestones
on an arch near the bathtub, you’ll see “Pamela & Rick” written in as if
someone had etched the names in stone.
“It’s not like [Ridenour’s] houses are done in cookie cutters,” Bethke
said. “With trompe l’oeil especially, you can create a world.”
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