JENNIFER MAHAL -- In the Wings
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When I was a little kid, one of my favorite things to do was to take a
piece of colored chalk and draw on the sidewalk. Now, admittedly, my
chalk masterpieces were mostly hopscotch squares with smiley faces next
to the numbers -- giving myself a place to aim the rock -- but they
brightened up the cement.
The art that will be offered by Via Colori in Corona del Mar next year
will certainly outclass anything I ever drew. What’s that? You have no
idea what I’m talking about? Well, let me be the first to tell you that
the Corona del Mar Business Improvement District is planning its very own
chalk art festival to debut, say organizers, sometime next spring.
The event will raise money for an as-yet-undetermined group or groups
focusing on arts education, said Peggy Fort, marketing director for the
district. The hope is that it will also encourage people to walk around
the district, watching the artists create and enjoying the local shops.
Though chalk art festivals have been around Southern California for a
while -- witness the Fun With Chalk festival in Mission Viejo or the Il
Madonnari Italian Street Festival in Santa Barbara -- Fort said the
district will do the festival under the “Via Colori” name. Via Colori is
a chalk-art fund-raiser designed by Rick Compton of Naples, Fla.
Compton has put together festivals nationwide in order to help raise
funds for various organizations. Money is raised through corporate
sponsorship, individual businesses buying squares for artists to work on
and other sponsorships.
The event is noncompetitive and volunteer driven. In fact, Fort said
the district is now looking for volunteers to work on different
committees, from sponsorship to the artistic.
“The success of this event is going to come in finding the artists,
the sponsorship chair and the committee members,” Fort said.
Compton began the Via Colori concept after going to a friend’s party
and seeing a beautiful piece of classical art.
“I saw that there was a speck on its nose, and when I looked closer, I
saw that the speck was an artist, drawing,” Compton said.
After learning more about Italian street art, he decided that it would
make a nice fund-raiser. And Via Colori was born. The name, Compton
admits, is a made-up word meant to represent “streets of color.”
In the 16th century, said Compton, Italian soldiers came back from war
and found themselves unemployed. Many of them could draw, and so they
would sit in the courtyards of the great cathedrals and create icons on
the pavement.
“They’d open up their paint boxes beside them, and people would drop
money in,” Compton said. “The neat thing about it was the creativity.”
Fort said the district is hoping to raise between $12,000 and $25,000
for arts education with the Corona del Mar event.
Anyone interested in volunteering for the committee or suggesting a
possible arts education program that could use assistance can call Fort
at (949) 675-0501.
* * *
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.
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