by Lonnie Burstein Hewitt. Photos by Maurice Hewitt.
Ellen Arcadi with one of her mosaic pieces, a round table at what she calls The Meeting Place at Madrigal. |
For over two decades Ellen Arcadi has been the creative force behind Madrigal, a view-full hilltop retreat meant to give artistic people a place to do what they love.
“If you love what you’re doing, work becomes love made visible,” Ellen says, and it certainly has been true for her.
She was originally an R.N. with a master’s degree in Public Health but always had an eye for good possibilities and enjoyed wandering through secondhand stores to find great deals on falling-apart pieces she knew she could turn into beautiful things.
In 1999, when she first saw the two adjoining hilltop half-acres in La Mesa, the property was pretty much in ruins, but its spirit called out to her and she bought it. She named it Madrigal after Anna Madrigal, a central character in Tales of the City, a popular series of novels by Armistad Maupin. Over the years she turned it into a magical place featuring her own mosaic art and many pieces by other artists.
Maurice and I were lucky
enough to get a private tour on a sunny day last month when the Madrigal
Gardens were looking lovely and so was the 180-degree view. Each of the studios
and cottages was a delight, inside and out, and there were mosaics everywhere.
Stairway to a Studio. |
Ellen and her mosaic sculpture S/he. |
Ellen told us her son has warned people who come to visit her at Madrigal: “If you stand still too long, my mother will mosaic you!”
We didn’t stand still for long; there was too much to see.
A partial view of the Poolside Mosaic, a collaboration with artist Linda Zaiser. |
“Minds mingle and create magic,” Ellen wrote…as you can see on the poolside plaque. |
A 4-foot-tall Praying Mantis created by a local welder. |
Celeste: The Head Typist in Her Typing Pool by Linda Zaiser. (Her hair is a typewriter keyboard.) |
Ellen at her Bathroom Mirror |
Inside Ellen’s Studio. |
A Tree Grows in Ellen’s Garage. |
“This place has been my biggest canvas,” Ellen said. “I don’t know what will happen next but I’ve done as much as I can for Madrigal and it’s time for me to leave.”
If you’ve never had a chance to experience Madrigal, we’re sharing these little glimpses of it here, along with best wishes to Madrigal’s founding-and-ever-nurturing mother, Ellen Arcadi, wherever she may go once this special place finds its new owner.
To learn more about Ellen Arcadi go to Petals of Madrigal.
Lonnie Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net.