IN THE WINGS
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Jennifer K Mahal
The moment I looked at the e-mailed photo of Newport Beach artist
Michael Crook’s work, I thought of my mother. Not that my mom looks like
an elephant, mind you. But she collects them, and Crook’s painted wood
sculpture of two elephants tenderly entwining their trunks, foreheads
pressed gently together, made me think of how my mom and I sometimes
press our heads together when we hug.
Wildlife is the main subject of Crook’s work -- from realistic looking
butterfly and bug pins to portraits of big cats like tigers. Though he
has never been to the wilds of Africa, the artist said he enjoys making
his works look as real as possible.
“I like the realism, I guess. To be able to look at it and say ‘that
really looks like the real thing. Especially people who’ve seen them in
the wild,” said Crook, who will display his art this weekend at the Long
Beach Convention Center as part of the Southern California Fall Arts
Festival.
Trips to the San Diego Zoo and Wild Animal Park are as close as Crook
has gotten to exotic wildlife.
Born in Lincoln, Neb., Crook said he started his forays into the art
world with paint by numbers.
“I’ve been doing one type or another all my life,” said Crook, who has
lived in Newport Beach for more than 20 years. “This combines sculpture
and painting.”
Raised in Sierra Madre, Calif., Crook attended art classes at Pasadena
City College, the now-defunct Chouinart Art Institute, UCLA and Cal State
Los Angeles. He participated in the Combat Artist program in Vietnam in
1967, and his drawings and paintings are a part of the U.S. Army Military
Art Collection at the U.S. Army Center of Military History in Washington
D.C.
Crook has created artwork in number of fields, including painting,
sculpting, welding and stained glass.
It wasn’t until his retirement six years ago from the family printing
business that Crook started to make his wildlife pieces on a regular
basis.
“I guess I’m really semi-retired,” he said. “I do spend a fair amount
of time at it.”
He sells his ware, with weekend help from wife Pamela, at arts and
craft shows across Southern California. However, there is one piece he
has decided not to sell -- the head of a tiger.
“It’s a piece I’m pretty proud of,” Crook said, “so, I decided to pull
it off the market and keep it.”
Sometimes the artwork surprises the artist.
“Seeing a finished piece look as good as it does.... It surprises me
often that they come out so well,” Crook said. “It’s almost like it’s not
me doing it, like it’s guided, or accidental.”
A portion of the proceeds from the Southern California Fall Arts
Festival will benefit the Long Beach Museum of Art’s children’s arts
education programs.
* * *
Do you know a local artist, writer, painter, singer, filmmaker, etc.,
who deserves to get noticed? Send your nominee to In The Wings, Daily
Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627, by fax to (949) 646-4170 or
by e-mail to o7 [email protected]
* JENNIFER MAHAL is features editor of the Daily Pilot.
FYI
WHAT: Southern California Fall Arts Festival
WHERE: Long Beach Convention Center, Shoreline Drive, Long Beach
WHEN: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. today, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday
COST: $6.50 adults, $3 children ages 6 to 12, free for children
younger than 6
CONTACT: https://www.americanartfestivals.com
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