A history celebration
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Young Chang
Artist Mike Tauber laments the fact that in his mere 40 years he’s
watched the orange groves throughout Orange County all but disappear.
He’s nostalgic and sad that the landscape has changed but hopeful that
the county’s citrus heritage won’t escape memories that have muddied for
those too young to remember.
“I think the loss of orange trees represents the passage of time,” the
Laguna Beach artist said. “What I’m doing is taking oranges for
sentimental reasons and bringing them back as art. It changed from
agriculture, and now it lives on as art.”
Tauber will hang nine pieces of citrus-related art at the 109th annual
Orange County Fair -- themed “Twist & Shout: Celebrating Citrus & Sun” --
which will run Friday through July 29. He will also display a life-size,
fiberglass Bastanchury sheep decorated with oranges and leaves on the
Centennial Farm grounds.
“The theme is really important to our exhibitors,” said Joan Hamill,
director of exhibitions at the fair. “They wait with bated breath until
the theme comes out.”
The results? “Eclectic,” organizers say.
Fruit growers also will display and sell such citrus variations as
lemons, Valencia oranges, navel oranges, oro blanco grapefruits, tangelos
and kumquats.
There will be a few non-citrus fruits, too, including subtropical
selections such as papayas, mangoes and avocados.
In the fair’s Home and Hobbies building, craft makers have made
everything from aprons spotted with limes to citrus-designed tableware
that is as edible-seeming as it is functional.
Vendors have organized contests ranging from lemon squeezing to lemon
pie-eating.
And exhibit organizers have replicated a scene from the citrus-packing
industry from around the turn of the century in the From Blossom to
Awesome exhibit building.
“It’s a lighthearted, whimsical look at history,” Hamill said. “I
think people have forgotten, maybe, the reason we’re called Orange
County.”
But a step inside will likely jog the memory. Sizing rings, orange
holding bags, vintage citrus labels, packing industry machinery and even
a sample invoice report accompany a citrus-history timeline ribboning
part of the building’s front room.
Two startling photos show Orange County as it once was and as it is
today.
The top picture shows acres and acres of citrus groves. Just sprawling
blankets of fruit and greenery and not a single thing else.
The bottom shot shows Cal State Fullerton in all its structural glory.
The groves are gone. The buildings have taken over.
“Every year, we try to salute one agricultural commodity,” said Ruby
Lau, director of public affairs for the fair.
Tauber has made the cause his lifelong identity. Known as a citrus
artist for his paintings about oranges, his “Mona Lisa in Orange” has
grabbed local attention.
It’s Leonardo da Vinci’s traditional lady, but with an orange tree
carved in the shape of Mona Lisa -- the leaves combed even -- and da
Vinci’s original background.
“My paintings have a lot of complex ideas behind them,” Tauber said.
“They’re philosophical thoughts to live by, and I picked oranges as a way
to express these thoughts because oranges are happy and simple and
everybody loves them.”
He squeezes his own fresh orange juice every morning and eats a whole
orange every day too. He’s even tried to grow his own trees but admits
failing in this department.
“I’m not a very good green thumb,” Tauber said of nurturing the
fruits. “But I’m better at painting them.”
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