Julia Wolinsky is Creating Pieces Featuring Palisades Past and Present After Losing Her Childhood Home in the Fire
By SARAH SHMERLING | Editor-in-Chief
After her childhood home was destroyed in the Palisades fire, Julia Wolinsky has turned to art to help her process the grief—while raising funds to support the community.
“It’s really emotional,” Wolinsky said of losing the home. “I think I took it for granted. I felt like this was a house that would always be and exist. I think the hardest part for me is to process and grapple with the fact that it’s truly gone. It’s not that it was sold to someone else or there’s another family living there … The hardest part is that it is truly to the ground—and there’s nothing left.”
The last time Wolinsky was in the neighborhood before the Palisades fire started was January 4—just three days before. She returned at the start of April to draw what the debris removal process looked like at the home.
“If I knew it was finite,” Wolinsky said, “I would have made more of an effort to be there and spend more time there.”
Wolinsky, now a freelance illustrator that specializes in food and botanical illustrations, grew up in the Via Bluffs on Beirut Avenue, which she described as “a really beautiful” and “lovely” place to grow up. She said that part of her hoped—“maybe like a fairy tale”—that she would move back to the home and raise kids there.
She said she thinks about “how hard” her parents worked to remodel the home to be “their dream home,” with the “little personalized touches they had in it.” It has also been hard to learn about her friends’ parents, many of which have also lost their homes, Wolinsky said.

“Some families have been in their homes more than 30 years,” Wolinsky said. “I would go on social media and learn about home after home that burned.”
These were the places Wolinsky said she went to birthday parties and playdates at.
“It still doesn’t really feel real,” Wolinsky said. “Even though I’ve gone and I’ve seen it—even though I was standing in front of it—you go to bed at night, you wake up, you almost forget that this really happened.”
Wolinsky attended Palisades Charter Elementary School—when she was old enough, she would walk to school—followed by Paul Revere Charter Middle School, eventually graduating from Palisades Charter High School. After graduating, she went to UCLA, which is when she moved out of the Palisades home.
“I’ve been living all over the place,” Wolinsky described. “I moved around a lot.”
Wolinsky lived in New Orleans, where she was a middle school teacher for reading and art. She moved to Boston to get a master’s degree in education before returning to New Orleans to teach. She moved to Chicago for an administrative role in the education realm.
“At that point, it was 2013 or 2014, I felt like I wanted to make a career change,” Wolinsky said, adding that she wanted to create art. “I’m a more creative person. I missed making art.”
She moved to San Francisco for six years to pursue a career in UX design.
“Then the pandemic hit,” Wolinsky said, “and I was, again, sort of like: ‘Well, where should I live?’”
Without needing to be in San Francisco for her work anymore, Wolinsky traveled to Los Angeles often to visit and work remotely. It was there where she met her then-future husband Gerald, who is from Altadena.
“We connected and I was like, ‘OK, I’m ready to move back down and prioritize my personal life,’” Wolinsky said.
She is currently living in the Mid-City area, which had afforded her the opportunity to visit the Palisades and her childhood neighborhood. Her parents—who still own the Palisades home and were renting it out to tenants who lost everything—relocated a few years ago to Dallas for work.
Following the fire, what has helped Wolinsky to process her grief and wrap her head around the devastation, has been creating Palisades-centric art.
“It’s been hard to believe it’s true,” Wolinsky said of the destruction caused by the fire. “I think when I put it on paper and make an image of it, it’s like saying, ‘Yes this is what happened.’”
For her, she said, it has helped her accept the reality and “mourn the loss.”

The pieces she has been creating include documenting what happened, as well as images that reflect “happier memories” of the Palisades, like the Business Building Block in the Village area when it was painted pink and Palisades Village Green, which is still standing.
“When the fires hit I immediately thought about all the small businesses and food restaurants I frequented that are now gone,” Wolinsky said.
She said another purpose is to commemorate the lost restaurants, including Cholada and Reel Inn, both of which she would eat at while attending Pali High.
“I found that it helps to do the sad reality, to acknowledge it, but then also think about the things that we loved about it and drawing those,” Wolinsky said. “It’s all, for me, a process of accepting what happened and grieving, because the only way I know how to express myself really very strongly is through art. For me, that’s been very helpful to come to terms with what has happened.”
As rebuilding efforts are underway in the community, Wolinsky shared hopes of continuing to create, including additional pieces of businesses that she used to frequent with her family that are no longer standing to help people “remember what the Palisades was like and what they loved about it,” describing the “unique charm” of the community with “a mom-and-pop feel.”
Further down the line, Wolinsky said she hopes to put a show together, but for now, she has reached out to her alma mater, Pali High. She will be selling prints of her drawing of a lifeguard tower with “100% of the proceeds” going toward the school’s rebuilding efforts.
“I see this as the beginning, I’m just starting these works,” Wolinsky said. “I hope to keep doing them and figure out a way to help connect with other folks from the Palisades to share those memories … for now, it’s just me processing as we go and trying to make sense of what happened.”
For more of Wolinsky’s work, visit instagram.com/juliawolinsky.art or juliawolinsky.com, which is where prints will be available for sale.