Art aid
Barbara Diamond
An Artist starving in a garret is a cliche.
But cliches become cliches because they are truisms.
“Artists don’t usually have health or business insurance, so in
times of need, it is important that there is someplace we can turn,”
artist Maggie Spencer said.
The 18th annual auction to raise funds for needy Laguna Beach
artists will be held at noon, Sunday on the main entertainment deck
of the Sawdust Festival grounds, 935 Laguna Canyon Road. Al l
proceeds from the live auction will go to the festival’s Artist
Benevolence Fund
Artists were particularly hard hit in 1993 and 1998, the years
that fire, flood and landslides devastated Laguna Beach, but the fund
assists those in need every year.
Spencer has been an exhibitor at the festival for 12 years and has been donating to the fund from the beginning.
“Many of the Sawdust’s exhibitors donate works of art to the
auction and many exhibitors volunteer on the day of the event, doing
everything from signing in bidders to modeling fashions,” fund
trustee Sherry Bullard said.
Bullard, John Eagle and Mike Heintz administer the fund.
“The auction runs from noon to 4 p.m. and anyone on the grounds
can bid,” Heintz said. “They can sign in at the greeter’s table and
get a bid card and an explanation of how to bid, if they haven’t done
it before.
“It is a well orchestrated event.”
There will be plenty of items from which to choose.
“Last year, we ran nonstop for four straight hours without taking
a breath and we still had stuff left over,” Heintz said. “We raised
somewhere in the area of $15,000.”
Donations to the auction range from original paintings to
one-of-a-kind jewelry, ceramics and clothing.
“I always enjoy participating in the auction,” professional
auctioneer Tony DeZago said. “There is a great variety of art up for
bid. And the cause is near and dear to everyone who participates, so
there is a great vibe at the event.”
Artists helping artists is not a new notion in Laguna.
Embers from the 1993 fire were practically still glowing when
former Festival of Arts board member Roark Gourley began to organize
an auction of donated art to raise funds for artists whose studios,
homes and inventories went up in flames.
Art-A-Fair holds a silent auction every year, with donations from
participating artists. The proceeds benefit Art-A-Fair Foundation and
the board decides on the distribution, according to Floyd O’Neil,
fair vice president of marketing.
“Last year, the foundation assisted an artist who lost her home in
a fire in Lake Arrowhead,” O’Neil said.
The Festival of Arts holds two events a year to raise money for
its Artists in Need Fund. To be eligible for assistance, the artist
must live in Laguna Beach or have exhibited in the festival.
“At the beginning of the season, each exhibitor selects a work to
be donated, identified by a gold sticker” festival marketing and
public relations director Sharbie Higuchi said. “If the work is sold
during the festival season, the sales price goes to the fund.”
The festival also has hosted Tie One On since 2002 to raise funds
for its artists who have suffered economic or health setbacks.
Each year, artists are given blank white ties on which to create
an original work of art. The ties are auctioned -- this year on July
17. The auction raised $13,445.
Festival exhibitor Anne England proposed a fund for needy artists
more than 10 years ago. The festival board approved it four years ago
on the recommendation of Exhibit Committee Chair Dianne Reardon.
“The first time out it was grumble, grumble, grumble,” England
said. “We had 11 entries, but when the other artists saw it, they
said ‘Huh, I can do that.’
“I knew that would happen -- that’s how artists are -- and since
then the participation has been great. This year was wonderful.”
Buyers not only get a piece of original art, they can deduct the
price from their income tax, England said. Donating artists get
nothing out of the program but the satisfaction of helping fellow
artists.
England was inspired to promote the need for a special fund when
an artist friend in Laguna Beach was diagnosed with cancer and given
a year to live. Money was raised to make it possible for the artist
to live out her life at home.
“It is horrible enough to go through the [chemotherapy], the
operations and experimental procedures, which I did, without having
the stress of money worries,” said England, a cancer survivor.
“Fortunately, I was covered by insurance and the love and support of
the artists’ community and my church. Not every one is.”
Tie One On was originally a Laguna School of Art and Design
project.
“I took it from them and refined it,” England said.
She chairs and administers the fund.
The notion of giving artists in a variety of media the same
concept with which to make their statement rocked the cradle of the
Laguna Art Museum’s annual art auction.
For the first auction, unsolicited artists were sent plain brown
paper bags on which to create a work that was to be donated to the
museum for a fund-raiser. Local artists, including the late Andy
Wing, responded to an unexpected degree. The auction raised $10,000,
less than a single piece of Wing’s work would bring today, but
thrilling to museum officials of that time. And every penny went to
the museum.
In subsequent years, mailing tubes and a yard of canvas were
distributed. Works for the latter ranged from garden scenes to the
ocean -- “Laguna’s Back Yard.”
The festival’s blank ties may level the playing field, but it
elevates the artists’ ingenuity.
“It makes people stretch out of their own medium,” England said.
“Artists are a very competitive bunch.”
For more information about the Sawdust Festival auction, or to
make a donation to the Artists Benevolence Fund, call (949) 494-3030.
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