Art finds a new outlet at Coastline
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Young Chang
The dizzying smell of fresh paint at Coastline Community College’s new
classroom foreshadows what’s to come.
Though still empty this week, with ladders, paint buckets and cement
chunks everywhere, dean of instruction Edward Decker hopes the art
classroom will be ready for a grand opening by next week.
A friendly woman named Olga, owner of the Village Farmer restaurant
next door, apparently can’t wait for a new entourage of student
clientele. But the appreciation will likely be mutual, Decker said.
Located in the heart of South Coast Plaza Village, among businesses
like Antonello’s, Gustaf Anders, the Bluewater Grill and the Village
Farmer, Coastline’s new art facility and gallery is, in a way, the most
unexpected tenant to join the neighborhood.
And in a way, it isn’t.
“This place has an arts ambience, in my opinion,” Decker said.
A joint venture between the community college and Orange County Fine
Arts, Inc., the 5000-square-foot space is expected to house at least 300
students a week, with classes including watercolor, Chinese brush
painting and life drawing.
Coastline, headquartered in Fountain Valley, has classrooms in Costa
Mesa, Newport Beach, Huntington Beach, Seal Beach, Westminster and a
portion of Garden Grove. Decker says the school will never have just a
single campus, mostly because the need for multiple locations is obvious
in the community.
“Our average age is 40,” Decker said. “Many of them don’t like to go
on the traditional college campus. A regional center becomes much more
comfortable for them.”
Jane Bauman, professor and chair of the college’s fine arts
department, says the new Village classroom falls in line with the spirit
of how the administration runs business.
“Rather than having the students come to us, we go out to into the
community. It’s truly being a community college,” she said.
The new Costa Mesa space was formerly a similar incarnation -- the H.
G. Daniels building, which was an arts supply store. It’s been vacant for
about six to eight years, and Coastline officials decided to occupy the
rooms after several faculty were at art shows held there in recent years.
“We’re always looking for attractive space to hold classes, including
art classes,” Decker said. “We thought this would be a very appropriate
place to have art classes and be connected with a gallery.”
Orange County Fine Arts, Inc. is leasing part of the space as a
gallery from Coastline, which is the primary tenant. But both entities
will share the classroom and exhibit hall.
“This is our biggest classroom at Coastline, outside of a lecture
hall,” Bauman said.
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