Crafty folk
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Jennifer K Mahal
Corona del Mar’s Linda Bergman and Costa Mesa’s Caleb Siemon work in
very different mediums. One designs jewelry dripping in pearls. The other
shapes molten glass into stunning artwork. One sells to Nieman Marcus.
The other sells to small galleries across the country. But both will have
work on display -- and for sale -- at the Orange County Museum of Art’s
Pacific Craft Show next week.
The show, which features 53 artists who work in everything from wood
to metal, opens to the general public from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sept. 15 and
16, although there are events associated with it as early as Tuesday.
“I think a lot of people come in for this from out of the area,”
Bergman said, sitting in her cozy Dover Drive office. “It gives them a
reason to come in and see the crafts and see this is a museum and it’s
interesting. It’s not just art to hang on walls.”
The artwork Bergman creates hangs around people’s necks, shoulders and
wrists. This is the fourth year the jewelry designer and museum
Visionaries member has set up a table at the show. This year, she said,
they’ve placed her in a back area, away from her usual spot near the
front door.
“People stopped in the space to look,” Bergman said with a grin,
adding that it was disrupting the traffic flow into the show.
She started designing pearl jewelry on a whim. The self-taught artist
with an interior decorating degree began her own business four years ago
after receiving numerous compliments on her jewelry. Now Bergman, the
former creative director for Nieman Marcus, sees her jewelry sell in her
old workplace.
“These are definitely not your mother’s pearls anymore,” said Bergman,
who creates pearl-encrusted handbags and mixes the oyster’s gift with
precious and semiprecious metals and jewelry.
Siemon’s work is worlds away from Bergman’s, even if his background is
not. His father makes jewelry and his mother is a painter. This is the
Newport Beach native’s second year in the craft show, and on Tuesday he
will join with show artists Randall Au and Sandra Jones Campbell for a
free discussion of the creative process.
Siemon’s love of glassblowing goes back to the first time he tried it
at summer camp in high school. He graduated with a degree in the art from
Rhode Island School of Design and spent two years in Venice, Italy,
studying from a master.
It was not an easy apprenticeship, Siemon said. Without knowing anyone
in Venice, he knocked on the door of glass sculptor Pino Signoretto and
asked if he could observe his work for a month. Signoretto said yes, and
then proceeded to ignore the artist who came in every day.
“It was tough being there, eight hours a day, every day, sitting
behind him and watching all he did,” said Siemon, sitting at the table in
his United Glassblowing studio.
One day toward the end of the month, Signoretto called Siemon and
asked him if he wanted to have lunch on his boat. After that, Siemon was
asked to do little things at the studio. As the time wore on, he became
more and more involved in helping and learning. But he never got paid.
“I learned a ton of stuff,” he said.
He opened his own shop 2 1/2 years ago and has hosted several Italian
master glassblowers there. The latest one left a few days ago.
With the old ways of apprenticeship dying out in Italy, many
techniques are starting to get lost.
“There’s no one to pass it to,” said Siemon. “Some are really uptight
about [teaching] foreigners, but some just want it passed on.”
Siemon’s work, which ranges from small paperweights to heavy clear
screw-like vases and bowls infused with layers of color, can be found at
the museum’s gift shop and at small galleries and shops across the
nation.
“I like simple forms, but I kind of like just natural stuff,” Siemon
said. “I don’t like things to be so forced.”
“If you try to control it too much, it ends up being contrived.”
FYI
WHAT: Tuesday Talks at Noon with Caleb Siemon and others
WHEN: Noon Tuesday
WHERE: Orange County Museum of Art, 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach
COST: Free
CALL: (949) 759-1122, Ext. 570
WHAT: Pacific Craft Show
WHEN: Opens to the general public 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sept. 15-16.
WHERE: Orange County Museum of Art, 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach
COST: Free
CALL: (949) 759-1122, Ext. 570
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