By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt. Photos by Maurice Hewitt.
On March 29th, Carlsbad’s Front Porch Gallery celebrated its 20th anniversary with its fifth Save the Ocean exhibition, a collaboration with the Surfing Madonna Oceans Project. The juried show featured pieces by 83 So Cal artists and 20 poets, with surf-rock band Tower 7 providing live music out on the street.
“Being close to the ocean is a significant part of our gallery experience,” says Cathy Carey, Front Porch Gallery Director. “We want to amplify the voices of creative professionals who are dedicated to raising awareness of environmental issues and fostering positive action so that the ocean can provide a place of beauty, solace and rejuvenation in the 20 years to come.”
The exhibition will run through May 28th, so you have time to get up close and personal with the artworks and pay a visit to the ocean, just a few blocks away.
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Endangered by Laurie Mika took Second Place, but we were equally impressed by her Navigateur.#5. |
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Navigateur by Laurie Mika |
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Third Place in Art went to this Water Bear Egg by Brett Wallerstein but the 12” x 12” x 12” sculpture is a massive look at a microscopic creature. |
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Under the Sea: A large-scale piece by Tanis M. Galik. |
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Sea Nymph, a bubble-wrap ball-gown by Kathryn Peterson. |
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Golden Summer Shore, an eye-catching oil painting by Cathy Carey, Front Porch Gallery Director, whose artworks can be seen beyond our shores in Santa Fe, Scottsdale and Taos. |
2903 Carlsbad Blvd. Carlsbad, CA 92008
Gallery Hours: Wednesday-Friday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday: 12-4 p.m.
760-795-6120
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Surfing Madonna |
About the Surfing Madonna:
Mark Patterson, the Leucadia-based artist who created the 10’ x 10’ mosaic, spent years doing sketches of the Virgin of Guadalupe on a surfboard saying “Save the Ocean.” Finally inspired to create a mosaic, he completed the piece on Good Friday in 2011, when Good Friday and Earth Day happened to fall on the same day--a rare occurrence. Later that day, he and his friend Bob Nichols quietly installed it under a railroad bridge in Encinitas, where it could be easily seen. After some controversy, it was relocated to a spot across the street on the corner of Encinitas Boulevard and South Coast Highway, close to Moonlight Beach.
In 2013, he and Nichols created
the non-profit Surfing Madonna Oceans Project, which has since donated many
thousands of dollars to worthy causes. Patterson died in 2023, but his artwork
lives on. Check out the full story It’s seriously interesting!
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