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New Times / ArtThe following articles were printed from New Times [newtimesslo.com] - Volume 23, Issue 41
Artists on paradePaso adds new color to its cultural paletteBY ASHLEY SCHWELLENBACH
The space the studios occupy, sidled up next to the Crooked Kilt and overlooking the gazebo in the park at 1130 Pine Street, was once called Pioneer Auto Parts (between 1960 and 2003). And before that, dating as far back as the ’30s, it was an automobile dealership. The effort to transform the aging space into a home for artists was begun by Anne Laddon, a painter with the fortitude to move mountains, if she took it into her head to do so. Having participated in the renovation of an abandoned torpedo factory in Alexandria, Virginia into an art center during the early ’70s, Laddon had been looking for a similar opportunity in Paso Robles ever since. For decades she had been pestering friends and acquaintances about available venues and buildings. Newlin Hastings, a commercial real estate owner and developer and board member of Studios on the Park, recalls that during his first meeting with Laddon 18 years ago, she expressed interest in a granary building that he owned on Railroad Street. Nearly two decades later, he found himself assisting Laddon with the initial lease agreements with the building’s owner, who would eventually lease the 9,600 square foot space to Laddon for a period of 55 years. Laddon’s original vision has undergone a beating along the way, but the space that opens on May 15 boasts 20 juried artists and two apprentices sharing nine studio spaces, with a kitchen in the back and a larger space for workshops with community members. That alone required more than $200,000 worth of construction work over a whirlwind two-month period. The original plan involved a three-story, 18,000 square foot space with a $3 million price tag, a vision that receded as the recession hit. There have also been a few dozen unexpected detours along the way, from the city’s rejection of architectural plans and declaration that the space was a historic site to the happy discovery that the building was not classified as unreinforced masonry. To help shape the center’s future, Laddon recruited a board of directors comprised of individuals with very specific, and beneficial, areas of expertise. Besides Hastings, Laddon welcomed a community activist, a winery owner, the president of the Paso Robles Art Association (which previously lacked a gallery space), a contractor, and a publicity agent, 10 people in all. She also sought the help of her daughter, Sasha Irving, fresh off an international studies degree at Georgetown, to work as strategic campaign manager and secretary. With completely disparate skill sets, Irving and Laddon work well together, the daughter focusing on specific details while her mother maintains a watch on the big picture. And when the space opens, Irving assumes the task of running the front desk and overseeing the facility’s day-to-day operations from behind the hood of a Hudson Hornet, transformed into a desk as a nod to the building’s past history. Not all of the board members were fully aware of the responsibilities they had undertaken, but if the lessons were trial by fire, they learned quickly.
Laddon hand-selected her resident artists as carefully as her board members. A five-person jury selected the 20 inaugural artists, photographers, jewelers, sculptors, ceramicists, and painters; she’s still looking for a fiber artist. Their key criterion for potential artists was professionalism. Laddon has emphasized that the center is not a mom and pop operation; artists must be friendly as artistic ambassadors, but there’s nothing down-home about the space with the possible exception of the fact that the studios do not have doors, a single bohemian concession. Artists sign a month-to-month lease and are expected to work in their studio during the 24 hours each week that the space is open. After all, the idea behind the center is that the public can view a piece at every phase of its formation. But, however many ideas Laddon may have for her space, she knows that she can’t predict every potential twist and turn her project will take. As New Mexico’s motto states, “crescit eundo,” it grows as it goes, and evolution will undeniably bring change. Some artists might not get along with their studio mate, and the studio board still has their sights set on the tri-level structure as a long-term goal.
“One thing you learn, you’ve got to be flexible,” said Irving. But for her mother, the lesson behind the studios and art festival is quite different. “Be careful what you dream up,” Laddon laughed. Arts Editor Ashley Schwellenbach can be reached at aschwellenbach@newtimesslo.com. |
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