Anti-Mall owner tries art experiment
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Lolita Harper
Carrie Strom is doing her part to uphold the city’s reputation as
a haven for creativity.
Strom is enthusiastically organizing an artists’ gallery to
showcase handcrafted works by residents.
She is calling for painters, sculptors, photographers and
sculptors, as well as musicians and deejays to perform at night
receptions at a 2,200-square-foot space at the Camp, across Bristol
Street from the LAB Anti-Mall.
“I am excited about it,” Strom said. “It is all kind of spur of
the moment.”
Strom said she got the idea for a gallery when she heard the
Trilogy Playhouse had mysteriously disappeared in December. She
contacted the management at the LAB and asked if she could use the
theater space for her display. The old Trilogy space was not
available, but the Anti-Mall officials, who have a history of
supporting local art, offered the space at the Camp.
Shaheen Sadeghi, owner of the LAB Anti-Mall, said his company
takes pride in using its available space as a venue for local
artists. His company promotes a campaign called Made in Costa Mesa to
encourage city artists to present their products.
“It creates a nice venue for [the artists] because they get to
present their product from a retail standpoint and it gives them an
opportunity for them to get in front of people,” he said.
Not to mention the opportunity it gives area residents to see what
kind of talent is alive and growing in their own community. Strom
said she has been in contact with a handful of hopeful local
participants.
The eclectic nature of Costa Mesa certainly attracts “a lot of
talented people,” she said.
“There are a lot of creative people here. There just aren’t that
many places to go to display your work,” Strom said.
Strom is an abstract artist who usually works with oil paints and
sticks. Her latest project is a series of red paintings designed to
create an atmosphere using the color. She mixes shades of red with
splashes of oranges and yellows to ad some texture and depth to her
pieces. Strom likened her conceptual art to scribbling and then
coloring over it.
“There is nothing in there that is supposed to be representative,”
the 30-year-old said. “Sometimes people say they see certain things,
but there is not supposed to be anything there.”
Sadeghi would not comment on who might lease the former Trilogy
Playhouse, but said he is negotiating with several parties.
“We are talking to different people about putting in another
entertainment venue,” he said.
Sadeghi has hoped to create an alternative “downtown” around that
portion of Bristol Street that would present innovative uses of
buildings and retail space.
Sadeghi is working with city planners for approval of a
“mixed-use” zoning for the area that would allow retail, commercial
and residential spaces in the same buildings. The concept is ideal
for artists who would work and live out of a loft on the upper floors
and sell or display their wares on ground level.
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays
and covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275
or by e-mail at [email protected].
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