Building visions
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Young Chang
Just look at his redwood tree, Julius Shulman insists.
The splashes of light from a shyly rising sun make it flush a warm
deep red. Every morning since it was planted in 1964, the tree and the
sunlight have entwined. And every morning, Shulman has relaxed on the bed
in his Los Angeles home and loved it.
“You have never seen such a beautiful sight in your life,” said the
architectural photographer, who will present a slide lecture at the
Newport Beach Central Library on Oct. 11. “ “It’s my haven. My church is
nature.”
Shulman, who turns 91 on Oct. 10, claims that the camera is the least
important character in a photographer’s life. The appreciation of sights
-- taking in the world and its trees and the sun -- is essential.
“I shock many people,” the award-winning shutterbugsaid. “Young
photographers especially. Whenever I have seminars to go on field trips
in nature or architecture, the first thing they do is take out their
cameras.”
But Shulman promptly instructs his students to put those things away.
You observe with your eyes and mind, said the man whose talk will be
titled “How to Create an Icon,” not with the camera lens.
Because metaphorically the problem is so many artists have painted,
drawn and published Jesus Christ’s ascension into heaven. Shulman wonders
how many ascensions one can adore.
“At the same time, you’re bypassing the real ascension of humanity,”
he said. “People don’t talk about accelerating human qualities of being a
great person, and you raise your own image by becoming more observant of
the world about us.”
Shulman, whose selected works are on display at the library through
the end of the month, said he will ask his Newport Beach audience next
week to “look around the world when you travel and even in your own
hometown.”
His slide lecture, presented by the Newport Beach Public Library and
The Museum of Architecture in Orange County, will discuss his
architectural icon picks of the 20th century, which include landmarks in
Orange County. Shulman said he will use his lecture to encourage a
healthy, physical environment.
“To stress the responsibility people have to preserve the cherished
and very delicate environment in Orange County,” he said. “We can’t allow
indiscriminate development of land. Once the land is used, it’s gone
forever.”
LaDonna Kienitz, the city librarian and community services director,
said Shulman’s photography helps people reconnect with a “confidence in
the future.”
“Julius Shulman is renowned for capturing the optimism of postwar
Southern California,” she said.
In 1969, the American Institute of Architecture awarded Shulman the
Gold Medal for Architectural Photography. In 1980, he was awarded an
honorary membership.
But while celebrated for documenting buildings designed by Frank Lloyd
Wright, Pierre Koenig, Richard Neutra and other noted artists and
architects, the photographer has also been lauded for his portrayal of
the suburban California life. Patrick Bartolic, the Board of Library
Trustees chair, credits Shulman with capturing the “California dream.”
“As a child, I was not exposed to anything but nature,” Shulman said.
“Many people who know me describe my feeling about my life and work and
adherence to nature.”
The Brooklyn native grew up on a farm in eastern Connecticut, where
his parents milked cows, raised vegetables and took care of chicken while
the young Shulman meandered through trees and hung out at ponds.
“And I’ve never changed. See my jungle, see my forest, see the way I
live,” he said of his home today.
That redwood tree visible from his bedroom window is neighbored by a
grove of more redwood trees and a stream. He lives alone because his wife
died a year and a half ago, and his daughter has taken over the
correspondence part of his business, leaving Shulman to work on his
upcoming three books.
“But I’m never alone,” he said. “If I’m not with nature, I’m with my
friends. I live a great life. Slated, quiet, peaceful.”
The nature enthusiast added that in next week’s lecture, he might even
share something new: his photos of people, fashion, the environment -- in
other words, more than just architecture.
“There are so many beautiful things to observe that we fail to detect
because we’re so busy doing something else,” Shulman said.
FYI
WHAT: Julius Shulman lectures on “How to Create an Icon”
WHEN: 7 p.m. Oct. 11
WHERE: Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach
COST: Free
CALL: (949) 717-3801
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