Pedro Aispuro, veteran head chef at Jacopo’s, which closed on Sunday. The restaurant was a 25-year fixture in the building next to the Shell station, just west of Via de la Paz. Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Jacopo’s, a pizzeria located at 15415 Sunset Blvd. since 1985, closed without warning Sunday night after the Super Bowl.   ’We’ve turned off the oven, but I wish we could have stayed,’ owner Barry Fogel told the Palisadian-Post. ‘The main thing is I want people to know that we’re sorry that we’re gone and that we’re going to miss them.’   The popular family eatery, which featured, pizza, pasta and salads, was a place people gathered for birthday parties and end-of-season baseball and AYSO celebrations. Many Pacific Palisades residents who had been customers as children were now introducing their own kids to the restaurant.   Jacopo’s was also a popular location for take-out, with about 50 percent of the orders made to go. Customers actually ate more pasta and salads than pizza, said Fogel, who estimated that pizza accounted for about 35 percent of the revenue.   As he spoke to the Post on Tuesday, Fogel was at the Sunset restaurant disassembling equipment, which he says he’ll probably store in his garage. ‘It’s awful,’ he said. ‘It was one of the hardest decisions of my life.’   Like many Pacific Palisades establishments, Jacopo’s has not been profitable since the economy took a downturn.   ’People are definitely cutting back on spending,’ Fogel said, noting that expenses have increased because of the hike in minimum wage and the cost of ingredients. He said he refused to cut corners with cheaper ingredients to save money.   In addition to the economy, Fogel noted that he had reached an impasse in lease negotiations with his landlord, the Topa Management Company.   ’They wouldn’t work with us anymore,’ Fogel said. ‘I had no option. I tried until a week ago. I was working on a past-due balance. I even went to court, but basically they just wanted a new tenant.’   ’There were irreconcilable differences between the landlord and the owner,’ said Larry Hait, attorney for Topa. ‘The owner has agreed to give up possession of the premises to the landlord.’   Jacopo’s employees were unaware the restaurant was closing until Fogel made the announcement Sunday night. Most of his staff, including head chef Pedro Aispuro, who has been with Jacopo’s for 35 years, will transfer to Fogel’s sole remaining restaurant in Beverly Hills.   Fogel, who has a 14-year-old son Max, and a 10-year-old daughter Lily, said, ‘It was an honor to serve the people in Pacific Palisades. We’re going to miss them very much.’
In collaboration with the community, Palisades Charter High School leaders are developing a new sign policy for banners displayed on perimeter fences around campus.   School administrators have received complaints from community members about the quantity and look of the banners, which display everything from fundraisers to summer camp registrations.   For that reason, PaliHi’s Operations Manager Maisha-Cole Perri asked Pacific Palisades Community Council member Harry Sondheim to help her write a policy. She also wanted to include the input of community groups that hang their banners around campus, so she asked Matt Davidson of Kehillat Israel to join them.   ’PaliHi is a part of the community, and we want to work together to solve issues as they come up,’ Perri told the Palisadian-Post.   As a result of their meeting, the Community Council approved the sign policy at its January 28 meeting and PaliHi’s Operations, Facilities and Technology Committee followed suit on February 1. However, the PaliHi committee made one change to the policy, so Perri needs to talk to Sondheim before the motion is presented to the school’s Policy Committee for official adoption.   Sondheim requested that PaliHi not place any banners on Sunset Boulevard because it is designated as a scenic highway under the Brentwood-Pacific Palisades Community Plan. He asked that signs on Temescal Canyon Road be at least five feet from Sunset.   PaliHi’s committee agreed to forgo signs on Sunset, but wants to hang them on Temescal one foot from Sunset.   '[The committee] wanted to utilize that corner at Temescal and Sunset since there is a lot of traffic there,’ Perri said.   Other than that change, the school committee and the Council agreed that only four school-related banners would be placed on Temescal Canyon Road and El Medio Avenue.   The banners from community groups will be limited to four on Temescal and two on El Medio. School personnel will hang the banners and allow them to remain up for two to three weeks. Groups will not be allowed to put up banners more than four times during the year.   ’We wanted to limit the number and time, so one group doesn’t dominate,’ Perri said. Right now, there is no set time limit for how long a banner can be displayed.   Nonprofit organizations that pay to use the school’s facilities are allowed to put up signs to promote their events, Perri said. The administration also allows organizations that have made generous donations to the school to display their signs. For-profit companies are prohibited.   The school cannot charge any group a fee to hang a banner on campus because the Los Angeles Unified School District owns the fence, Perri said. PaliHi is an independent charter school, which rents its facilities from LAUSD.
Pacific Palisades resident Bruce Cummings, D.O., FACEP recently returned from nine days in Port au Prince, Haiti, where he was a medical team manager on the Los Angeles County Fire Department’s Urban Search and Rescue team.   A total of 53 USAR Heavy Rescue teams from around the world were deployed to Port au Prince immediately after the catastrophic 7.0 earthquake. The government of Haiti requested international aide through the United Nations, which sent requests to participating nations with Heavy Rescue team capabilities. The U.S. State Department responded with several USAR teams.   After two weeks, these 75-person heavy rescue teams (and their search dogs) returned to their home countries and the 12-man, L.A. County Fire Department USAR team with Cummings was deployed at the request of the United Nations, to respond to any further collapsed structure rescue needs and provide humanitarian aid to local orphanages.   Port au Prince has 300 orphanages in the city. Through referrals from UNICEF, the L.A. County USAR team was able to build and provide large tents, sleeping cots and electrical generators for five orphanages, all provided from the American people.   Cummings has assisted or deployed with the County’s USAR program for the past 18 years, including Hurricane Iniki, the Oklahoma City bombing tragedy, the Northridge earthquake apartment collapse, the Indonesian earthquake and tsunami, and the 2008 earthquake near Chengdu, China.   Cummings credits his parents for instilling in him a desire to give back to the community and those in need. He is a fulltime emergency medicine physician at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in the San Fernando Valley. He and his wife, Gracia Goade, M.D., have daughters at Calvary Christian School in Pacific Palisades and a daughter teaching elementary school English in Nanjing, China.
The Via de las Olas bluffs, between Friends Street and Mt. Holyoke, offer sweeping views of the ocean and coastline from Palos Verdes to Point Dume.   Yet these bluffs have also been prone to landslide activity over the years, the latest incident coming on January 19 when dirt, rocks, uprooted trees and shrubs came crashing down the hillside from near the Mt. Holyoke lookout, stopping just short of Pacific Coast Highway. (Palisadian-Post, January 28).   The most infamous landslide off Via de las Olas was ‘the killer slide’ on March 31, 1958 that buried one person under 100 feet of dirt and rock at the foot of Via de la Paz. PCH was subsequently moved around the toe of the slide, closer to the ocean.   According to a June 2004 Bureau of Street Services document prepared for former City Councilwoman Cindy Miscikowski, Via de las Olas was ‘withdrawn from public use’ in the late 1950s owing to public safety concerns following the landslide.   Palisadian-Post files reveal that Miscikowski also received a May 2004 geotechnical report stating that Occidental Petroleum did extensive geotechnical studies in the 1960s and ’70s directed toward stabilizing the landslide so that they could drill for oil in an area along PCH, just south of Temescal Canyon Road. As part of the project, 22 hydraugers were installed into the landslide debris and beneath Via de las Olas. Concrete terrace drains were also installed on the surface of the landslide in order to minimize erosion.   Failing to receive approval to drill, Occidental Petroleum turned the property over to the city.   The 2004 geotechnical report also noted that reactivation of a large portion of the existing landslide could remove lateral support for Via de la Olas and affect PCH, and for this reason, the area should be periodically monitored. The report recommended that the city maintain and replace hydraugers to continue to stabilize the landslide, clean and repair the drains and install inclinometers along the scarp above the landslide and just below to the street in order to monitor future movement.   The Post recently queried Richard Lee, spokesperson for the Department of Public Works, whether something should be done to shore up Via de las Olas. He reported that ‘The washouts on January 19 are part of the natural headward migration of the bluff area that has been ongoing in the Pacific Palisades area. The area is periodically monitored prior to and during periods of heavy rainfall by city geologists. At this time, there does not appear to be an increased danger to the road or residences due to these washouts.’   Lee added that since 2004, bulkhead construction along the southeast portion of Via de las Olas and the realignment of the sewer and storm drains away from the large landslide have repaired and protected a critical portion of the roadway.
Award-winning journalist Susan Zeidler reads and signs her debut novel, ‘The Practice Room,’ a young-adult science fiction tale, 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12
Jo Maeder discusses ‘When I Married My Mother: A Daughter’s Search for What Really Matters’and How She Found It Caring for Mama Jo,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. Theatre Palisades presents Neil Simon’s ‘Chapter Two,’ 8 p.m. at the Pierson Playhouse, 941 Temescal Canyon Rd., through February 14. For tickets, call (310) 454-1970. The comedy, directed by Sherman Wayne and produced by Martha Hunter, plays Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13
Free screening of the 1976 film ‘Robin and Marian,’ 1 p.m. at the Palisades Branch Library, 861 Alma Real. The film is a romantic tale of the later years of Robin Hood and Maid Marian, starring Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn. Opening reception for ‘Ice,’ Tatiana Botton’s photographs of icebergs in Antarctica, 5 to 8 p.m. at g169, on West Channel Road in Santa Monica Canyon. (See Lifestyle feature, page 9.)
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14
Pacific Palisades resident Julie Van Herwerden and her students read ‘Kids Love Love!’ 4 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore. A portion of the proceeds will be donated to Haitian earthquake relief.
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15
Jay and Maggie Jessup discuss and sign ‘Fame 101,’ a playbook for professional success, 7:30 p.m. at Village Books on Swarthmore.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16
Storytime for children ages 3 and up, 4 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. Culture in the Canyon at the Chautauqua Series features ‘Native Cultures from Mountains to Sea,’ 7:30 p.m. in Woodland Hall in Temescal Gateway Park. Free admission. (See story, page 10.) The Malibu Orchid Society hosts Peter T. Lin, who will speak on the three A’s of the orchid world”angraecum, aerangis and aeranthes, 7:30 p.m. at the Woman’s Club, 901 Haverford. (See story, page 14.)
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17
Dorothy Lamb Crawford signs ‘Windfall of the Musicians: Hitler’s ‘migr’s and Exiles in Southern California,’ 7:30 p.m. at Village Books, 1049 Swarthmore. Her book examines the brilliant gathering of composers, conductors, and other musicians who fled Nazi Germany and arrived in Los Angeles. (See story, page 10.)
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18
Pacific Palisades Community Council meeting, 7 p.m. in the Palisades Branch Library community room, 861 Alma Real. The public is invited.
Tatiana Botton captures the mystery of the icebergs in Antarctica in her 4 x 6-ft. photographs on display at g169 Gallery in Santa Monica Canyon from February 13 through March.
Photographer Tatiana Botton brings her abstract eye to the strange and mutable iceberg at her first solo exhibition ‘Ice’ from February 13 through March at g169 on West Channel Road in Santa Monica Canyon. The opening reception will be on Saturday, February 13 from 5 to 8 p.m. Floating, sailing, twisting and melting in the vast world of Antarctica, icebergs are the fascination for Botton, surprisingly, because she had originally thought that she would prefer the land-based phenomena, such as the penguins, on her trip to Antarctica. During her 14-day excursion aboard the National Geographic Explorer ship in October, Botton and her partner, Lauren McCollum, managed to survive the notoriously choppy, turbulent waters of Drake’s Passage’a two-day endurance test from the tip of Argentina to the Antarctic peninsula. ’It was 48 hours of straight crossing’or for some, two days of lying in bed,’ Botton says. The benefit, though, was that the passengers were well informed by the time they emerged from the trial. The Explorer is equipped with a team of scientists, who offer videos and presentations on the strange, empty continent. Although Botton was able to get close to the many varieties of penguin (minus the majestic emperors), she was transfixed by the icebergs. ’I think the best pictures I took were of the tabular icebergs,’ she says. These particular icebergs have a flat, table-like top and steep sides. She credits a middle-of-the night view from the deck for her splendid shots. ‘The captain had promised the passengers that if the light was good at 3:30 a.m.’by the time we had cleared Drake’s Passage’he would wake us up via intercom. At 3:30, I woke spontaneously, put on all my gear and went out in the 10-below night air. There was a white cloud cover, no sunlight (at this time of year, spring in South America is daylight most of the time). The flat light made it easier to photograph the icebergs.’ Botton remained on deck shooting the gigantic shapes until about 8 in the morning, at which time a few more brave souls joined her. Botton, 38, specializes in advertising and editorial portraits but fits her Antarctic expedition into the category of personal work. ‘Right now it’s all about panoramic landscapes,’ she says. Future projects may include a trip to Hawaii to study and photograph the lava flows, and perhaps a study of the desert. Botton, whose father is French, grew up in Cannes and Barcelona, where she studied American literature and filmmaking. She moved to Los Angeles in 1994 to study journalism at UCLA, and has remained ever since. She and Lauren and their cat make their home in Santa Monica. ’While writing for publications in the U.S. and Spain, I discovered photography,’ she says. ‘Making people look beautiful was initially easy for me and drew me in, but capturing the ‘essence,’ as one art director said to me, was the real challenge. I found that I had to approach each subject intuitively.’ Botton was attracted to icebergs for their abstract shapes, and was further intrigued by the names of their locations that speak to the fabled lore and silent starkness of the continent. Names like Deception Island and Paradise Bay encourage the visitor to create their own narrative, she says. Botton’s association with Frank Langen’s g169 came about through Langen’s girlfriend Diana Brown, a good friend. His gallery in Santa Monica offered an agreeable fit with her interest in marrying art with philanthropy. Twenty percent of the proceeds of this exhibition will be given to Heal The Bay, whose mission is to protect and preserve the health of Santa Monica Bay. She and Lauren have just closed on a commercial building in Santa Monica’an old printing press at Tenth and Broadway’that they intend to open as an art studio/gallery. ‘I would like to combine art with charity, particularly with local organizations,’ Botton says. ‘We’ve already talked with L.A.’s Best, an after-school education and enrichment program for elementary school kids.’ Botton will be on hand at Saturday’s reception to talk further about her Antarctica adventure. ‘It’s an amazing location; from one season to the next, it will always be different. No matter how many photographers come, they will never be able to find the same picture again.’
“Untitled,” 2009, oil on linen, is a good example of Wood
The Armand Hammer Museum has been on a roll in recent months, with shows by Charles Burchfield and Robert Crumb. Add to this eclectic, electric list the young abstract artist Jonas Wood, whose whimsical series of paintings based on plants are a must-see. ‘I’m only relying on structure: plant and base,’ Wood tells the Palisadian-Post on a recent visit to his Culver City home base. And that’s about it. The minimalist painter jettisons three-dimensional planes and perspective from his latest group of canvases. Alive with simple shapes and basic colors which all at once evoke Joan Mir’, Alexander Calder and perhaps some wonderfully dated-looking art from a Little Golden children’s book or the cover of a funky 1960s jazz album, Wood’s paintings are now on display through May 9 at the Hammer, located at Wilshire and Westwood Boulevards. In addition to various group shows, Wood’s work has been the subject of solo exhibitions in New York, Chicago and Tokyo. Wood’s Culver City studio is located at the end of a busy alley in an industrial area lined with hangars of auto parts and furniture imports. A small black dog named Robot greets the Post reporter on a recent visit. In one corner of the room, Wood’s assistant will spend the entire time focused on his laptop, as if posing for a still life. As solid as the work is, Wood’s Hammer exhibit may be a disservice to him as an artist, as it represents only one facet of what he does. Here at his studio, there’s a much wider breadth on display, and the artist, casual in a royal blue track suit jacket, is surrounded by oversized works in various stages of completion: abstracted portraits based on family photos and baseball cards, interiors, a Spalding basketball. But at the Hammer, viewers will see his series of potted plants, distilled to their very essence: leaves, stem, base. All of these oil-on-linen works are untitled. Wood is not particularly excited about titling his individual paintings. But he does have a label for the group of nine abstracts already there hanging at the Hammer. ‘The name of the show is ‘New Plants,” Woods says. ‘I want you to know that these are plants.’ Or ‘very simplified plant forms,’ as he dubs them. Wood did not consciously set out to emulate or evoke Calder, an artist he enjoys, but he relates to and connects with Calder’s ‘primal struggle’ between dimensions. On one table sits a miniature model of the gallery space at the Hammer which Wood created to see how the paintings would be organized. Next to this cardboard construction, which features thumbnail versions of the paintings on display, are under-drawings for paintings of the model itself. Instead of painting existing interiors, as he has often done, ‘I’m doing the reverse,’ he says, ‘creating hypothetical interiors.’ Wood, who turns 33 this year, was born in Boston and raised in the suburb Weston. He received a B.A. in psychology from Hobart and William Smith Colleges in upstate New York, and his M.F.A. from the University of Washington in 2002. Upon graduation, he knew he didn’t want to return to the East Coast, so he moved to Los Angeles in 2003 at the urging of a buddy, sculptor Matt Johnson. Unlike, say, San Francisco, L.A. has an important art scene, Wood says. Unlike New York, L.A. has good weather going for it. The artist does see some California influence in some work, ‘particularly the cactus and succulents out here.’ To him, the palm trees are exotic, ‘prehistoric.’ One painting features a bird of paradise atop a Sony stereo speaker, which is broken down into geometric shapes and cool, muted colors. Interiors of his parents’ and grandparents’ homes are a kind of ground zero from which many of his abstract images emerged, to be re-contextualized. One of the paintings in the Hammer show, a predominantly yellow canvas with wan doodles earmarked by a red triangle wedge, is based on his painting of a children’s drawing made by his older sister, pinned to the wall of his childhood home and appeared in the background of another painting. From a portrait of his mother with a cat seated in front of a group of plants, Wood created a series reinterpreting those plants as seen in the painting, not the source photos. ‘I’ve been painting the art in the back of my paintings,’ Wood says. ‘There are all sorts of abstractions, all these little moments’ which he likes to re-contextualize as new works of art. ‘But it’s still from me. I don’t feel as detached.’ He points to the vague reds and yellows behind Oil Can Boyd on a baseball card pinned to the wall. ‘I could say everything about those things,’ he says, regarding those blurry shapes. On one wall, his portrait of Pablo Picasso hangs among his interpretations of baseball heroes. ‘All of the Boston sports teams are my teams,’ he says, showing his rendition of former Celtic Larry Bird. Wood walks the Post through some of his process. Take a particularly lively portrait of Wood’s wife, ceramist Shio Kusaka (who is now about seven months pregnant with their first child), and Robot, amid striped furniture and a gaudy chandelier. In the painting”in which Wood exploits patterns in Kusaka’s dress, the furniture, and in the repetition created by the chandelier’s candleholders”art imitates life as Robot is depicted doing exactly what he does during the Post’s visit: slumbering in a black, long-haired lump. Wood suggests that a common technique cuts across all of his paintings, regardless of subject matter. ‘There’s a flatness in my work,’ he says. That is Wood’s legerdemain, making such minimalism look effortless and fresh. Wood believes that ‘only in the last three or four years have I been making work that’s important [in terms of his artistic evolution].’ So does Wood worry that ‘New Plants’ might erroneously suggest an artist with a narrow type of output? ‘I have a fear of being pigeonholed,’ he says, quickly adding that he does not fret about these images representing his first major West Coast show. ‘History compresses an artist’s work to make people think they’re doing only a certain kind of work,’ Wood says. ‘I’m not going to be concerned if people are [upset] if I never do anything like this again.’
“Kayaks” by U.S. sculptor Nancy Rubins at the new 67-acre City Center in Las Vegas.
In 1946, when my Uncle Louis’s wife died, he moved from the Midwest to the nation’s new frontier: Las Vegas, Nevada. A year or two later, our family drove out to visit him. It was a desolate place, mostly desert, with one hotel called the El Rancho. In 1953, we saw my sister Corky and Liberace appear in the opening show for the new Riviera Hotel. This year, when my wife and I returned, out of nostalgia, we decided to visit the new 67-acre City Center, one of the largest commercial developments in the world, anchored by four hotels: the Mandarin Oriental, the Aria and Casino, the Vdara Hotel, and the as-yet-unopened Harmon. For a long time, Las Vegas appealed to big gamblers. For a short time, the appeal shifted to families. The latest approach focuses on eating, drinking and, as always, fabulous entertainment. In the City Center alone, there are 17 restaurants. We stayed at the Vdara, in a beautiful, quiet room with a view of the mountains and a full kitchen, all for $129 per night. With several friends to visit, we only had time to see one show. At a cousin’s recommendation, we selected magician Lance Burton. To this day, I cannot figure out how Burton made people disappear, or how he levitated them. And I can’t imagine how he created a flock of ducks out of a handkerchief, and how he got said ducks to follow his verbal instructions. Spectacular! The Silk Road restaurant in the Vdara is not worth the trip to Las Vegas. My bacon was cold, and there are no fish dishes such as lox or herring available for breakfast. But it was no problem to walk to the Bellagio, where, for $15, I had a buffet that included a huge table laden with various types of fish, Chinese food and pastries. Elsewhere, we had tapas and gazpacho at Julian Serrano (good but not spectacular) and we snacked at the Petrossian caviar house in the Bellagio, where the caviar is too expensive to enjoy. However, the terrine of fois gras and selection of Polish vodkas are superb. And then we splurged. Pierre Gagniare, one of the most prominent Michelin three-star chefs in the world, currently owns eight restaurants worldwide, including locations in Paris, London and Hong Kong. Twist, located inside the exquisite Mandarin, with terrific 23rd-floor views of the Strip, is Gagniare’s first in the States. So we rolled the dice. For once, our bet paid off. The staff was amazingly friendly. Julie Lee, the wine steward, was very helpful in suggesting some excellent wines in our price range. The chef de cuisine, recently from the London restaurant, came over to the table to chat. The service was impeccable. I started with the ‘Lobster Five Ways.’ Surprisingly, I found the lobster sashimi most flavorful. There were a number of spectacular dishes, but the one that stands out centered around small, thick noisettes of veal sitting in a rich morel mushroom sauce and served with a small cup of veal stock on the side. Absolute perfection. With a delicious bottle of Spanish Priorat at $55 and a more full-bodied Cabernet from Honig winery at $95, the bill totaled $150 per person. (A much better deal than the $300 per person”food only”quoted to us at the famous Joel Rubishon restaurant.) With a comfortable, reasonably priced room, a spectacular show, and a dinner as good as one would expect in a three-star restaurant in Paris, a good time was had by all.
Earl and Carol Fisher’s house, located at 102 Ocean Way in Santa Monica Canyon, could soon be listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The home, completed in 1923, was designed by Santa Monica architect John W. Byers for Lewis Bradbury Jr., son of the mining and real estate tycoon. Photo: Courtesy of Matt Dillhoefer of MGD Environmental Design
In 1981, Palisades resident Earl Fisher and his daughter, Audrey, were out for a bike ride in Santa Monica Canyon when they came across their future home. They stopped to admire a two-story residence featuring Spanish Colonial Revival style architecture and situated on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean. After talking to the housekeeper (who was washing a car in the driveway), they discovered that the home was for sale. Audrey, who today designs costumes for HBO’s ‘True Blood,’ looked at her father and said, ‘Dad, buy it. Mother will love it,’ Earl recounted during a recent interview with the Palisadian-Post. The seller told him he was unwilling to negotiate the $1.2-million price tag. Earl and his wife, Carol, would have only one opportunity to tour the 1923 house, which was originally built for Lewis Bradbury Jr., son of the mining and real estate tycoon who owned the Bradbury Building in downtown Los Angeles. Bradbury commissioned the famous Santa Monica architect John W. Byers to design the 14-room house, located on a 0.38-acre parcel at 102 Ocean Way. When Earl and Carol went inside and saw the Moorish-styled patio decorated in colorful tiles and patterned after the El Greco House and Museum in Toledo, Spain, ‘it was so thrilling,’ Earl said, adding he knew they had to buy it. Earl, chairman and founder of Stern, Fisher, Edwards, Inc. (an independent investment advisory firm), had visited the El Greco House and Museum 15 years earlier. Now, 29 years later, the Fishers are enjoying their home, while staying busy restoring and preserving it. On January 29, the California State Historical Resources Commission approved the house for listing on the National Register of Historic Places, and the National Park Service must now ratify the status. In 1994, the house was awarded Los Angeles City Historic Cultural Monument Number 594 with the help of the Pacific Palisades Historical Society. Earl Fisher explained that the house, featuring a terra-cotta tiled roof and adobe brick walls covered in an outer layer of stucco, has historic significance because it was the first major commission for Byers, and it established his reputation as a Spanish Revivalist and expert in adobe construction. A native of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Byers (1875-1966) was entirely self-taught in architecture. Although he mostly designed in Spanish Colonial Revival style, he did branch out to Monterey Colonial, English, French Norman and American Colonial. He designed homes in Santa Monica, Pacific Palisades, Brentwood, La Ca’ada, Coachella Valley and Victor Valley. For the Bradbury house, ‘Byers created the adobe from soil onsite,’ Carol said, adding that the adobe brick walls contain rock and straw. It is believed that he also used lumber from the Long Wharf, a deepwater port with a 4,720-foot wooden pier that extended into the ocean from the mouth of Potrero Canyon. Southern Pacific Railroad Company head Collis P. Huntington built the wharf in 1893, precipitating a political debate over whether San Pedro or Santa Monica Bay should be the official harbor of Los Angeles. San Pedro won out in 1897, and the Long Wharf was dismantled around the time the Bradbury house was built. For the Moorish-styled patio, Byers used tiles in a multitude of colors to decorate the walls and floor. The majority of tiles likely came from the S & S Tile Company of San Jose, owned by A.L. Solon and F.P. Schemmel. Nestled between the two wings of the house, the patio is surrounded by three walls, which have a four-foot wainscot of glazed tiles. The first-floor doorframe and windowsills are also covered in tile. In hues of blue, gold, white, green and black, the tiles’ motifs range from geometric to floral. The patio floor is tiled with square pale-red pavers accented by diamond-shaped smaller tiles of blue, black and yellow. ’I still see things I didn’t see before,’ Carol said of the tile work, which she describes as a work of art. Tiles are a theme in other locations of the house. The main entrance features a darkly stained oak front door with brass hardware surrounded by blue tiles and an outer row of tiles with a sycamore design. When Bradbury owned the house, he apparently leased the property to Marion Davies in the mid-1920s, while her beach house (where the Annenberg Community Beach House now sits) was being constructed. He also leased to actor Richard Bennett and his second wife, Angela Raisch. ’A major scandal erupted in April 1934, when Angela sued for a separation, saying that Richard had humiliated her, beaten her, and stabbed her in the cheek with a nail file after she found him clad only in a bathrobe in a room with his female secretary,’ according to ‘Santa Monica Canyon: A Walk Through History’ by Palisadian Betty Lou Young and her son, Randy. ‘He pleaded for reconciliation in a letter with the memorable words, ‘Can’t you find some place in your heart to adjudicate this cul-de-sac? I love you. Dick.” The house has not undergone many changes since Bradbury owned it. However, in the 1970s, Southern California architect Wallace Neff altered the garage and guesthouse wing. A swimming pool was also constructed. The property ownership switched several times before Carol and Earl purchased it. At the time they bought the home, ‘it was in beautiful condition,’ Carol said, adding that all they did was general maintenance and upkeep until the 1994 earthquake, when some of the walls moved and cracked. Carol, who has degrees in fine art from Otis College of Art and Design and in architecture from UCLA, is working closely with an engineer to retrofit the house. The adobe walls are being seismically upgraded and strengthened with steel rods and plates anchoring them. The work is 90 percent complete. ’When we moved into the house, I had already decided I wanted to do architecture,’ Carol said. ‘Little did I know what Mother Nature had in store for me.’ Carol, who spends all her time working on the house, said it’s challenging work because she must be careful to preserve as much as possible when making any repairs. For instance, when some tiles on the roof need to be replaced, she must find a close match. ’It’s a wonderful opportunity for someone like me who studied art and architecture,’ Carol said. ‘It’s challenging and so complex.’
Palisades resident Margot Strong, manager of Ten Women Gallery, is wearing some of her hand-knitted art pieces. Photo by Rich Schmitt, Staff Photographer
Ten Women Gallery, located at 2651 Main St. in Santa Monica, is run by 10 local artists, one of whom is Margot Strong, a longtime resident of Pacific Palisades and manager of the gallery. All of the art is diverse and handmade, from one-of-a-kind jewelry, hand-sewn purses, fingerless gloves and hand-knitted delights to glass works, pottery and handmade cards. The ten women share gallery expenses, responsibilities and workload, maintaining one of the longest-standing retail outlets in Santa Monica. The gallery celebrates its ‘sweet 16’ this year. On the last Friday night of each month, Main Street galleries will stay open late, and Ten Women will remain open until 9:30 p.m. Contact: 310-314-9152. Rich Schmitt/Staff Photographer
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