Snapshots of a city
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Young Chang
A reader recently told Melanie Aves that the pictures in her new book,
“Newport Beach: A Photographic Portrait,” looked so beautiful she barely
recognized the city she was looking at.
“Funny,” Aves mused. “To me, that’s what I see.”
A Newport Beach resident for just three years (to the day almost --
she moved in on Halloween and remembers unpacking while giving out
candy), Aves notices how the waves at Crystal Cove attack rocks and then
teasingly retreat. How the setting sun brushes the sky a shade of citrus.
How the cartoon red Crab Cooker restaurant playfully accents Newport
Boulevard.
Eye candy, to say the least, for this former Michigan resident who has
published numerous volumes on using color to decorate one’s home. So Aves
assembled a group of photographers -- who supplied 128 pages of photos --
and then bound their images between the covers of a book so everyone else
can see what she sees.
Twin Lights Publishing of Rockport, Mass., and the Macatawa Bay
Associates, a local company, published the book this summer. Aves wrote
all the captions and short, historical summaries.
Area bookstores, including chains such as Barnes & Noble Booksellers,
plan to carry the title. On Nov. 17, Aves will sign copies at Borders
Books, Music & Cafe in Costa Mesa.
“Anybody who lives around here is so privileged,” said her husband,
John Aves, who also shot photos for the collection. “There’s so much to
view, places to go.”
It might have been Melanie Aves’ views as an outsider that brought
fresh attention to the sights most of us usually drive right past,
fixated on the river of brake lights ahead.
Or it might have been the time she spent looking at Newport Beach from
afar.
A sailor, Aves and her husband escape into the big blue whenever they
can. Their out-of-town guests each get a ride on the Balboa Ferry and the
Harbor Cruise. Noticing Newport Beach from a distance -- not to mention
the snowcapped San Gabriel Mountains that curtain the city from afar --
helped Aves zoom in on everything from the suede-like petal of a flower
at Sherman Library & Gardens to the retro-inspired look of Ruby’s Diner
that renders the tip of Balboa Pier a rather trendy place to be.
The city “looks prettier from the water,” agreed John Aves. “You don’t
see the crowds, the congestion.”
Melanie Aves held a photo contest last year to determine the content
of her book. Contestants from as far as the United Kingdom entered. Three
photographers from Southern California -- John Blom, co-owner of John
Blom Custom Photography Ltd. in Corona del Mar; William Valentine, a
Newport Beach photographer who has served on the Newport Beach City Arts
Commission; and Marc Martin, a photo assignment editor at the Orange
County edition of the Los Angeles Times -- juried the contest.
Three winners were chosen, and 26 photographers’ works -- including a
few that were solicited from the judges -- made it into Aves’ book.
There’s a pyrotechnician in the mix, an accountant, a truck driver, a
police captain, a detective and a children’s book writer.
“The life in the book -- the spark -- is much more visible,” Aves said
of her variety of picture-takers.
For the written portion of “Newport Beach,” Aves shared stories about
everything from the Dory fisherman to the Beek family, owners of the
Balboa Ferry.
The pictures capture Newport Beach from all angles. Newport Pier
stretching into fog. A Christmas tree at Fashion Island. Lifeguards in
red, the backs of Ferraris, sailboats, ferry boats, the Balboa Peninsula,
a Balboa garden, sea lions lazing around on a buoy and two harbor
royalties -- swans Rupert and Pearl.
“We needed to portray Newport accurately,” Aves said.
Valentine, who spent summers from his childhood on the peninsula
because his grandparents had a home there, said shooting photos for Aves’
book gave him a chance to look again at the sights he sees every day.
“Sometimes it’s harder to work closer to home than away from home,” he
said. “You see the same things every day.”
His shot of a sunset, Valentine explains, was taken after a winter
rain. It was February and he noticed clouds moving above the water from
his Dover Shores home.
“I took off to West Newport,” Valentine said. “I walked out, and it
was perfect.”
The Aves, both 59, are also always on the lookout for new backyard
pleasures. They walk along the Back Bay, on Newport’s beaches and on
hiking trails at Crystal Cove, where they always stop at the Shake Shack.
Melanie Aves orders a mango or peach shake. John goes for vanilla.
The shack appears on Page 121 in Aves’ book.
“It’s an artistic spark that makes people see what’s around them and
record them,” she said.
FYI
* WHAT: Melanie Aves signs “Newport Beach: A Photographic Portrait”
* WHEN: 1 to 3 p.m. Nov. 17
* WHERE: Borders Books, Music & Cafe, 1890 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa
* COST: Free
* CALL: (949) 631-8661
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