S.J. CAHN -- Editor’s Notebook
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I’m pretty sure that Costa Mesa’s 1999 slogan change from “Hub of the
Harbor Area” to “City of the Arts” seemed like a no-brainer at the time.
After all, it makes a lot more sense to play up the Orange County
Performing Arts Center and the South Coast Repertory than try to explain
that Costa Mesa doesn’t, actually, have a harbor.
But it’s turning out that being the “City of the Arts” isn’t all
attending award-winning plays and listening to rising arias. Being mixed
up with such a messy slogan -- one that sounds high-society but
unfortunately refers to that undefinable term “art” -- is having some
unforeseeable repercussions.
For one, the city certainly can’t sit idly while a piece of art is put
into peril.
And so plans to renovate Town Center are languishing, a victim to the
Isamu Noguchi California Scenario garden that sits smack in the middle of
the business area.
The quarrel between the city and the owner of the land where the
garden rests, Commonwealth Partners LLC, is over how long Commonwealth
will be required to maintain the sculptures. For a time, it looked like
the agreement would be 25 years. But now city leaders want the garden
kept up “in perpetuity.”
Commonwealth is crying foul, arguing that it plans to improve the
garden by opening it up artistically and to the public. The city has dug
in its heels, intent on ensuring the safety of this artistic treasure.
Now, the city has an almost-winning argument here. Just who is saying
the garden will be “improved” by removing a wall or building here, adding
a little touch there? Not Noguchi, who passed away at the end of 1988.
And, really, changing his work would be akin to softening up the Mona
Lisa’s nose. Yeah, it might make her look better, but.
The problem with the city’s stance is about as clear cut: City leaders
have not done much to tell residents why the garden is such a treasure
that it shouldn’t be touched.
They haven’t explained why we should care.
So, to get this discussion going -- and the city really needs to
follow through on it more expansively -- let’s take a quick look at the
garden and at least try to get a sense if there’s anything “artistic”
about it. Forget for a second that you hadn’t heard of it until a few
months ago, much less seen it.
Edmund Burke essentially described the sublime as bringing us a sense
of terror and even death. On that scale, the garden is definitely a
keeper, except it’s more the looming presence of DiTech and Connexant,
not to mention the Acapulco restaurant, that is terrifying.
Then there’s Horace, who wrote: “Ars longa vita breva” (Art is long,
life is short). Under this one, the garden doesn’t hold up quite so well
since it doesn’t take that long to wander through the sculptures.
An illuminating way to look at the garden comes courtesy of John
Keats, who wrote: “A thing of beauty is a joy forever.” Given that
“forever” seems to be the sticking point in this debate, I think Keats
may prove a winner for the city.
Of course, wandering through the garden, it’s impossible not to think
of one last quotation, this time from Oscar Wilde, who wrote: “All art is
quite useless.”
Which, I’d say, about sums it up.
* S.J. CAHN is city editor of the Pilot.
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