Nature Connects: Spring Lego Art at South Coast Botanical Garden

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Lego artist Sean Kenney’s Nature connects sculptures are made from Lego building bricks – and a vivid imagination. His brilliant birds, bison, flowers, bees, and butterflies dot the grounds of the South Coast Botanic Garden on the Palos Verdes Peninsula.

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Add in that this is the perfect time of year to view a bevy of blossoming flowers and trees, this is really an exhibition that’s not to be missed.

The Lego art appeals on a variety of different levels. For kids, and young-at-heart adults, it’s just plain fun. It’s also quite wonderful sculpture made with a fascinating medium. Haven’t you always wondered if you could make ART from LEGO bricks? And settled instead for a tottering tower, or reading the instructions to assemble a specific by the numbers figure? But always you’ve wondered…or at least I have, whether those bricks couldn’t be made into art. And here it is.

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There’s a true sense of innocence and awe surrounding the pieces. The glorious butterfly and large scale hummingbird that greet visitors at the start of the exhibit are charming, but walk further for the truly inspiring pieces.

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The bison and calf located in Sakura Meadow are exquisitely rendered: you can see the shadows of light shifting over their Lego “fur.”

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I loved the straight-from-Beatrix-Potter storybooks feel of the rabbit & fox in mid-chase in the Discovery Garden promenade, and the goldfinches with bird feeder in the Zoo garden. There’s a surprising amount of nuance in the pieces, and their installation at specific spots in the gardens feel carefully curated, too. The Victoria waterplatters, one with a frog, and which I would refer to as lily pads, are well served in a more remote area of the park; coming upon them they feel organic to the setting.

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A map provided by the garden indicates where the seventeen sculptures are to be found, or visitors can take a fifty-minute walking tour of the exhibit led by docents.

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As much as I love the art behind these clever pieces, let’s not forget that this exhibit is simply a whole lot of fun, and is sure to draw more visitors to the garden than would come to simply sniff the flowers or see coral trees, cherry blossoms, and jade trees in bloom.

The garden itself is an experience to be savored: small enough to attract local families with small kids, and with enough quiet corners to provide a meditative respite for weary adults.

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Nature Connects will be on display through May 8th; with hours daily from 9-5. The garden is located at 26300 Crenshaw Blvd. in Palos Verdes, just a short jaunt up the hill from the city of Torrance and the 405 freeway off-ramp. 12804814_10207717353879044_1243658362081424712_n

  • Genie Davis; photos Genie Davis and Cheryl Henderson

EcoLuxe Lounge Benefiting Shriners Hospital

Oscars 2016 week marked the annual arrival of producer Debbie Durkin’s EcoLuxe lounge. Held in the penthouse at the Beverly Hilton, the event helped to promote the new Shriners Hospital for Children medical center that will launch in Pasadena in 2017.

One of the fun things about living in Los Angeles are the award seasons, and with them the bevy of gifting suites, parties, and benefits. The EcoLuxe Lounge event is always packed with interesting products, tasty eats, and of course there were plenty of celebrity guests on hand from True Blood‘s Adina Porter to Lou “The Hulk” Ferrigno, Frank Stallone, and Claudia Wells, the Back to the Future actress who now owns a unique menswear boutique which was a part of the gifting suite.

Tasty hors d’oeuvres? Check. Fun eco-friendly finds? Check again. Terrific cause – yes, that, too.

Attendees enjoyed LaCroix Sparking Water as well as the beautiful Fete Today wine, whose Sirah is worthy of a fete in and of itself.

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My Fete reason was among the notes depicted above – guess which one and you’ll get a…mention in this blog.

Other gifters included IT Cosmetics, whose under-eye collagen enhancing cover-up really works.

eco luxe ITChariot Travelware luggage, Burnetie Shoes, and the beautiful unique and eco-friendly jewelry of Amy Radzik were also gifted. Radzik’s jewelry incorporates many recycled elements in unique pieces that help define the wearer’s personality. Radzik is a true craftswoman and jewelry artist.

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One of my favorite items was the Solar Puff, an inflatable solar light designed to benefit the Ten Million Rays of Light campaign while also providing a super cool white square that accents any room – and lights it in an eco-friendly way. Yes, I have one and I love the super bright very white light. High recommends.

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Celebrity sweet teeth were not forgotten: Candy Vixen dished out tasty treats like chocolate covered pretzels and chocolate covered organic apples.   candy vixen

Fun, fun, fun – celebrity sightings, tasty treats, cool products to check out, and – recognition for quality care for children at Shriner’s Hospital. Now that’s award-worthy.

  • Genie Davis, Photos provided by Debbie Durkin and product retailers

 

Think Tank Gallery: Break Bread

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At “Break Bread” a not-quite-edible art installation located in the 7,000-square-foot Think Tank Gallery on the edge of the garment district, “let them eat cake” is a misnomer. Rather, taking in the vast cake maze and candied light fixtures, the finely wrought food paintings, and life-size cardboard truck – the work of artists Scott Hove and Baker’s Son – the proper phrase would be “let them SEE cake.”

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There’s a mirrored fun house of a maze with elaborate pink “cake” walls, crafted from paint and spackle and actual candy, which is the work of Hove,which also includes projected fire and rain in one portion of the maze.

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And at the opposite end of the maze, a creepy bone cave – that utilizes real bones.

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In another gallery space, there’s an urban street scene by Baker’s Son, a.k.a. Keith Magruder, who found inspiration in the treats of his youth and the loss of life on urban streets.

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Opening night also included Lagunitas brews, a vast array of delicious breads from chocolate mint to raspberry from Challah Hub, gourmet gummies from Sugarfina, and Brigs, short for brigadeiro, the rich Brazilian candy designed to represent a variety of celebrations.

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Don’t forget to look up!

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With machine guns, teeth, and high heels that look as lethal as any weapon, the exhibition expresses the dark underbelly of sugar coated American life.

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Break Bread runs through March 14th, and tickets are free on Eventbrite. Specific additional events from dinners to comedy nights are also available on Eventbrite for purchase. The exhibit itself is a must-see for both its kitschy appeal and dark underbelly, as well as its drool worthy art, and its sensual heft. When you walk into the installation, the first thing you’ll see is a glowing bed.

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Perhaps you can have your cake, and eat it too. (puns intended)

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  • Genie Davis, all photos by Jack Burke

 

 

Robolights: The Magical World of Artist Kenny Irwin

Kenny Irwin and one of his awesome creations
Kenny Irwin and one of his awesome creations

Kenny Irwin has created a kingdom far more magical than Walt Disney’s. In the middle of Palm Springs’ Movie Colony district, Irwin has crafted giant sculptures of robots, animals, and all sorts of other-worldly creatures – a thousand tons of art work, according to the artist – and placed them at his and his father’s four-acre property. It’s a mix of The Nightmare Before Christmas, Iron Giant, science fiction, and yes, Disneyland style, with the fusion of these elements an artistic wonder that will blow viewers’ minds.

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“I started making art as a baby,” the 41-year-old Irwin relates. “I always knew I was an artist. It’s kind of like when a cat is a kitten, it knows it’s a cat.”

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Some 29,000 visitors so far have passed through Irwin’s sculptural works, primarily during the holiday season when the installations are lit up like a million jewels with sparkling, multi-colored, marvelous webs of lights. It takes several months to set up the light display, but Irwin works on his art constantly throughout the year.

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He displays it year ’round, too, and visitors are welcome for a small donation. What will they see? Marvelous works created using scraps and discards from neighbors and pieces bought on eBay. Irwin often makes some of his large pieces right on the spot. Highlights include a “bird bot” with “feathers” made of pallet boards, and 500-feet of rail track made from lawn chairs.

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“I visualize my works in my head, completely. Nothing is planned or stored, in my memory indefinitely,” the artist relates.

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One enormous, fifty-ton piece was made when he was only eighteen years old, and took him two months to create.

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Irwin was kind enough to take us up onto platforms above his mammoth sculptures for a view 30-feet off the ground of his spectacular installations.

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He works in 43 different mediums today, and built his first robot at age 9, a 10-foot tall wooden figure with an antique phone imbedded in its chest. Irwin often uses old appliances and fixtures – from microwaves, which he holds in high disdain, to toilets.

 

 

 

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Irwin offers an array of smaller pieces for sale. Above and below, beautifully wrought, hand-fired skulls are filled with common substances from Cheerios to marbles, costume jewelry to sports souvenirs.

 

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His edgy but whimsical work was a part of a major exhibition in Baltimore, Md. in 2013, held at the American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore. To fit his enormous sculptures inside, the museum’s front doors and a wall needed to be removed.

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It goes without saying, then, that Irwin needs a large space – and one larger than he has now – for his works. In fact, he envisions creating his own amusement park one day.

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Can art, writ large, be this much fun, this original, this life-consuming, this much of a legacy? Yes. And it’s a must-see for any art lover, anywhere. If you live in SoCal, don’t wait until next holiday season, get a tour of this impressive installation now, and then be sure to mark your calendars for a light-strung glowing visit post-Thanksgiving.

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  • Genie Davis, All Photos by Jack Burke