ON THE WATER -- Finding the art on Balboa
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June Casagrande
One look at Balboa Island changed everything for Steve Simon. It
changed his address, it helped change his career -- it even changed his
image of Santa Claus. Now when Simon thinks about Kris Kringle, images
like the Balboa ferry come more quickly to mind than those of sooty
chimneys or even snow.
Simon, a 36-year-old artist, has created a nautical St. Nick for his
annual Christmas card.
“The ferry is such a central icon to Newport Beach, I thought I should
really do something with Santa on the ferry,” Simon said.
Such water themes have inspired many works in his Simon Fine Art
Gallery & Studio on Balboa Island. A specialist in local art, he has come
to capture Newport Beach in a way that made the city’s Arts Commission
stand up and take notice. Commissioners asked Simon to represent the city
in a county fair competition in July.
In a five-hour paint off against other Orange County artists, Simon
created “Beachcombers.” The painting, done from a photograph Simon took,
shows two girls on the beach with the Balboa Pavilion and a winter sunset
in the background.
“I wanted to capture the real mood of the spirit of Newport Beach,” he
said.
The judges endorsed his approach by bestowing two awards: Best City
Reflection and Best in Show. The city bought the painting for $800 as
part of its permanent collection. Officials have yet to decide where it
will be exhibited.
Simon wasn’t always the seaside type. A Chicago native, he got his
first glimpse of Balboa Island 10 years ago when he came to visit a
friend. A management consultant at the time, he remembers driving over
the bridge and wondering why anyone would choose to live anywhere but
here -- especially having lived in a place like Chicago.
“I thought: What’s everyone else thinking? I want to live here.”
Working on a master’s of business administration in Paris, he
developed new feelings about the art world and his career.
“I’d thought I’d rather be doing art than just working around it,” he
said. “But the Parisian art world was intimidating. Newport Beach seemed
like a place I could really take a chance in the art world.”
He opened his gallery three and a half years ago and has been painting
ever since -- a change of lifestyle he attributes in part to the elusive
lure of the ocean.
“I was inspired by the coast and the beach life,” said Simon, who in
December will publish a book of 35 of his paintings. “I moved 2,000 miles
from the middle of the country because I felt the tug of the tide. I’m
still trying to figure out what’s so captivating about the water -- it’s
something serene that just makes me want to be around it.”
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