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ISBN: 2574-4658

Year: 2022

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A New Kind of Book Club FALL LINEUP OCTOBER 20 A Place at the Nayarit By NATALIA MOLINA In her third book, Molina explores issues of community, identity, and placemaking by focusing on the restaurant her grandmother opened in 1951 in Los Angeles. NOVEMBER 17 The Gold Coast By KIM STANLEY ROBINSON You The second volume in the Three Californias trilogy, Robinson’s 1988 novel imagines Orange County in 2027: overdeveloped, dystopic, and saturated with freeways and malls. DECEMBER 15 Maybe you grew up here. Maybe you visited and fell in love with the place. Maybe you just want to learn more about it. Introducing the California Book Club, brought to you by Alta Journal. Each month, we gather virtually to discuss a prominent work about the region—fiction, history, poetry, memoir—in conversation with the author. Sign up for free today at CaliforniaBookClub.com and you’ll receive four custom-designed bookplates. A new wave of writers deserves a new kind of book club. Please join us. Gordo By JAIME CORTEZ Cortez’s collection of linked short stories revolves around a young boy growing up during the 1970s in a Central Coast migrant workers camp. TO JOIN AND ORDER BOOKS, GO TO CALIFORNIABOOKCLUB.COM 2 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21
CONTENTS 5 PUBLISHER’S NOTE: CRAFTERS AND CREATORS OF THE AMERICAN WEST By WILL HEARST 6 CHOOSING THE RIGHT TIME TO BECOME A MOTHER By PIA HINCKLE 10 DODGER STADIUM IS THE BELLE OF THE BALL By MATT JAFFE 14 A COMMUNITY VINEYARD GROWS INTO A MOVEMENT By SYDNEY LOVE 18 THE HIDDEN HISTORY OF SAN FRANCISCO’S GRAVEYARDS By BETH WINEGARNER 24 BRINGING A GROUNDBREAKING PAINTER BACK INTO VIEW By EMILY WILSON 27 WHY THIS ART By COURT LURIE 28 A DANGEROUS RESCUE IN THE TRINITY ALPS By JULIAN SMITH MADE IN CALIFORNIA 50 INTRODUCTION 52 HEATH’S HEAVENLY CERAMICS 54 MOCHI ICE CREAM IS THE BIG CHILL 56 SENSATIONAL SEEDS 64 WET-YOUR-WHISTLE WHISKEYS 66 FANCY FURNISHINGS 68 FOUR INVENTIONS THAT STILL HIT THE MARK 70 THIS SKATEBOARD IS ALWAYS ON DECK 72 JAMS SPREAD THE LOVE 58 KEEPING GUITARS HIGH-STRUNG 74 GOLDEN STATE GRAINS 60 JOURNALS THAT WILL GET YOU WRITING 76 WATCHES THAT ARE WORTH THE WAIT 62 LADY GAGA’S FAVORITE HATMAKER 36 THE WOMAN WHO TURNED ORANGE COUNTY BLUE By GUSTAVO ARELLANO 39 POETRY: “QUALIFYING ANIMACY” AND “GRIEF LOGIC #6” By CRYSTAL AC SALAS 40 AN ALTA EXPEDITION: RETRACING A LANDMARK CROSSING OF THE SIERRA By ROBERT ROPER PHOTO BY MATTHEW SMITH; COVER ILLUSTRATION BY MICHAEL SCHWAB 78 SCULPTURES TO LIGHT UP YOUR LIFE 80 INTRODUCING THE CALIFORNIA BOOK CLUB’S FALL WRITERS By NATALIA MOLINA, KIM STANLEY ROBINSON, and JAIME CORTEZ 86 THE MAGNIFICENCE OF M.F.K. FISHER By JIM LEWIS ISSUE 21 94 THE CONTINUED RELEVANCY OF JOHN GREGORY DUNNE’S VEGAS MEMOIR By DAVID L. ULIN 100 CELEBRATING THE OEUVRE OF COLLAGE ARTIST ALEXIS SMITH By HUNTER DROHOJOWSKAPHILP 105 POETRY: “A BRIEF HISTORY OF POMONA HOUSE PARTIES” By MICHAEL TORRES 106 ALTA PICKS: OUR STREAMING GUIDE TO THE BEST OF THE WEST 108 WILL U.S. CITIES RISE TO THE VERTICAL CHALLENGE? By JOSEPH GIOVANNINI 114 FICTION: “MY CHICANO HEART” By DANIEL A. OLIVAS 120 TRAILBLAZER: NICOLE MARTIN By JESSICA KLEIN 90 A NEW BIOGRAPHY SHEDS LIGHT ON MY GRANDFATHER’S MISTRESS By WILL HEARST ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 1
CONTRIBUTORS GUSTAVO ARELLANO ROBERT ROPER TOD SEELIE “Sí Se Puede,” page 36 “Five Men, Six Days, and 34 Miles Across the Sierra Nevada,” page 40 “Five Men, Six Days, and 34 Miles Across the Sierra Nevada” photography, page 40 Alta usually doesn’t publish stories about politicians. What makes Ada Briceño different? I’ve covered Ada now for over a decade but never did a full profile until now. Her remarkable story is that of a changing California—the rise of unions and progressive politics and Latinos in Orange County, an area that was long a conservative bastion but is now as purple as an eggplant. If such a revolution is possible here, it can happen anywhere. Alta is always on the vanguard of what’s next—and Ada is it! How did you write and organize your notes while crossing the Sierra Nevada on foot? Usually when I write on an outdoor subject, there’s a motel at the end of the day. But this time it was a tent on snow, and I was exhausted and fell asleep before I could write anything. Then I’d wake up at dawn, scribble down the main stuff. We saw a red bear—red like an Irish setter—with three cubs. I was determined to get that into the story but couldn’t. On an assignment that lasted days and required moving constantly, how did you decide which moments were worth slowing down to photograph? Knowing what to photograph is an instinct you hone over time. On a trek like this, it’s more complicated due to the terrain. You need to envision the route and anticipate things with enough time to get ahead of the group, all while carrying your full pack and wearing snowshoes. It’s a bit exhausting to be “on” constantly for a week, but the results are worth it. LYNELL GEORGE HUNTER DROHOJOWSKA-PHILP VICTOR JUHASZ “Paper Pusher,” page 60 Do you keep a notebook or journal outside of work? I’m not a classic journaler, per se, though I really have tried during different periods in my life. Instead, I keep a sort of casual daybook/commonplace book where I jot down observations, story ideas, or quotes from texts I’m reading. I also clip segments from newspaper or magazine stories, photos or illustrations, and paste in and date them. Maybe write about them. Those notebook pages become a way to look back and view a period of time via different modes. “The Real Worlds of Alexis Smith,” page 100 When you’re creating a story from what an artist said in the past, where do you begin? Alexis Smith has been a close friend for 35 years. In a way, that made it harder to write about her, so I decided to let her tell the story herself by using many of the quotes I’d gathered from her in the past along with quotes given to others. The challenge was the intertwined simplicity and complexity of her art and finding a balance. “My Chicano Heart” illustrations, page 114 Has your approach to or process of illustrating fiction stories for Alta changed since you began doing so two years ago? Until Alta, I rarely if ever illustrated fiction, so every story I work on is a journey into uncharted territory, and the process is very improvisational. I have my technical skills and strengths but allow for intuition—the muse—to choose the medium and style most appropriate to the copy. Feeling the story comes first. THIS ISSUE’S OTHER WRITERS, PHOTOGRAPHERS, AND ARTISTS STEVE CARROLL • STANLEY CHOW • JAIME CORTEZ • ANDREA D’AGOSTO • ANDREW DICUS • ERIC DRAPER • THOMAS EHRETSMANN • CAROLYN FONG • KATHARINE GAMMON • CHRISTINA GANDOLFO • JOSEPH GIOVANNINI • PENNI GLADSTONE • SPENCER HARDING • CHRIS HARDY • MONICA CORCORAN HAREL • JASON HENRY • PIA HINCKLE • LARRY HIRSHOWITZ • ROBERT ITO • MATT JAFFE • LARS KENSETH • JESSICA KLEIN • CHRISTIE HEMM KLOK • JOY LANZENDORFER • LYDIA LEE • MARISSA LESHNOV • JIM LEWIS • SYDNEY LOVE • COURT LURIE • NAVIED MAHDAVIAN • NATALIA MOLINA • STEFFIE NELSON • DANIEL A. OLIVAS • KIM STANLEY ROBINSON • ELLIS ROSEN • CRYSTAL AC SALAS • CROWDEN SATZ • MICHAEL SCHWAB • JULIAN SMITH • MARK SMITH • MATTHEW SMITH • DUSTIN SNIPES • ALI SOLOMON • MICHAEL TORRES • MATT TWOMBLY • PETER WESTWICK • EMILY WILSON • BETH WINEGARNER • JESSICA ZACK 2 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 ILLUSTRATIONS BY STANLEY CHOW
EVERY ISSUE IS JUST A CLICK AWAY Enjoy unlimited access to everything Alta Journal has published with your membership. All of our award-winning reporting, criticism, fiction, poetry, and cartoons are available for you to discover at any time and on any device. GO TO ALTAONLINE.COM/ARCHIVES
Alta JOURNAL OF ALTA CALIFORNIA Editor & Publisher William R. Hearst III Join Alta and Show Your Love for California and the West Alta members share a passion for California and the West—and we’re committed to feeding that interest with award-winning journalism, fresh storytelling, and vibrant community. Join today and receive an exclusive California Book Club hat, so you too can wear your heart on your head! Managing Editor: Blaise Zerega Creative Director: John Goecke Editor at Large: Mary Melton Books Editor: David L. Ulin Digital Editor: Beth Spotswood California Book Club Editor: Anita Felicelli Newsletter Editor: Matt Haber Associate Editor: Ajay Orona Assistant Editors: Jessica Blough and Nasim Ghasemiyeh Editorial Assistant: Elizabeth Casillas Contributing Designer: Alice Cho Copy Chief: Lynn Rapoport Copy Editors: Leilah Bernstein, Kim Gooden, Stacy Hollister, and Hane C. Lee Editorial Operations & Research Director: Sarah Stodder Researchers: Aralyn Beaumont, Jessica Doherty, Graham Hacia, Lydia Horne, Andrew Otis, and James Reddick Marketing Operations: Matt McDonald Marketing & Public Relations: Amy Bonetti Chief of Staff: Cynthia Lund Production Team: PubWorX Editorial Board Terry McDonell (Chair) Phil Bronstein (Deputy Chair) Gustavo Arellano • Michael Bauer • Frank A. Bennack Jr. • Jeff Berg • Roger Black • Stewart Brand • Mary Lee Coffey • Shelby Coffey III • William Deverell • Adam Fisher • Bill Flemion • Karen Flemion • Stacey Hadash • Jerry Harrison • W.D. Hearst • Danny Hillis • Matt Jacobson • Barry Mazur • Grace Dane Mazur • Mark Miller • Ishmael Reed • Doug Robinson • Jennifer Saffo • Paul Saffo • Rob Schultheis • Gary Snyder • Mark Wallace • Alice Waters • Tom Zito SIGN UP TODAY AT ALTAONLINE.COM/HAT Our Inspiration Jim Harrison (Honorary Chair) Pablo Tac • Gaspar de Portolá • Fr. Juan Crespí • Juan Bautista de Anza • Jedediah Smith • Joseph R. Walker • Hubert Howe Bancroft • Richard Henry Dana Jr. • John Wesley Powell • Bret Harte • Mark Twain • Charlotta Bass • Ambrose Bierce • Phoebe Hearst • Clarence King • Frank Norris • Jack London • Maynard Dixon • Mary Hunter Austin • Lester Gertrude Ellen Rowntree • J. Smeaton Chase • Julia Morgan • Amelia Earhart • Mary Pickford • Alfred Kroeber • Norman Clyde • Cecil B. DeMille • Edward Weston • Frances Marion • Anita Loos • Edwin Hubble • Preston Sturges • Raymond Chandler • Bernard DeVoto • John Steinbeck • John Fante • Walter Van Tilburg Clark • Dorothea Lange • Howard Hughes • Harvey Milk • Ansel Adams • Nathanael West • Billy Wilder • John Huston • Wallace Stegner • Richard Feynman • Charles H. Townes • Orson Welles • Cole Weston • Ellen Browning Scripps • Jack Kerouac • Allen Ginsberg • Royal Robbins • Robinson Jeffers • Dugald Stermer • Carey McWilliams • Richard Diebenkorn • Galen Rowell • Hunter S. Thompson • Octavia E. Butler • Warren Hinckle • David Brower • Mike Moore • Nancy Hicks Maynard • Hal Riney • Kevin Starr • Steve Jobs • Frank McCulloch • Russell Chatham • Joan Didion ONLINE AT ALTAONLINE.COM AND FOLLOW US ON Alta Journal (ISSN 2574-4658), published four times a year. Editorial mailing address: Alta Journal, P.O. Box 14666, San Francisco, CA 94114-0666. Standard class postage paid at San Francisco, CA 94114 and additional offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to Alta Journal, P.O. Box 14666, San Francisco, CA 94114-0666. Membership services: email support@altaonline.com or call 415-320-8848. 4 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21
PUBLISHER’S NOTE By WILL HEARST Living Treasures of the American West I have been impressed with the urgency of doing. Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Being willing is not enough; we must do. —LEONARDO DA VINCI L eonardo is widely and deservedly regarded as one of the greatest artists of the Western world. But a huge volume of his artistry was devoted to practical inventions, from a machine gun concept for the reigning military authorities to designs for a parachute, a helicopter, and a glider that, if it had been built today with an engine, would surely have been capable of flight. He sketched the organs and muscles of the human body. Understood the possibility of optics and lenses for magnification. Played musical instruments and wrote treatises on a variety of subjects, from the formation of mountains to aging to philosophy. As a painter, he was responsible for the Mona Lisa and The Last Supper—two masterpieces of the Renaissance. If they were all he had done, his reputation would still be immortal. Leonardo was living proof that there is a fine line between high Art with a capital A—like that in museums—and the most beautiful and useful works of master crafters. In this issue, we intentionally blur that line. We’ve sought to discover and applaud the artisans whose skills and creations rise to the level of Art, even though they may not be formally categorized as artists. Their work is spectacularly beautiful. And it requires study, practice, devotion, and talent—prerequisites that we normally associate with artists. In Japan, there is a tradition of naming and venerating Living National Treasures. These are creators whose artisanal skills are so extraordinary that the whole country is encouraged to honor and celebrate them. The designation divides crafts into eight categories: pottery, textiles, lacquerware, metalworking, doll making, woodworking, papermaking, and other. We don’t have quite the same tradition here in the West. But perhaps we should. And in this issue, we spotlight those creators and crafters who might be nominees, whose skill and devotion create objects and experiences worthy of celebration and collecting. This issue is a voyage of discovery during which readers will encounter the amazing work of Claudio Mariani, who restores furniture using traditional European techniques. His handiwork is almost invisible in restoration, and the pieces he reproduces are almost more perfect than the originals. Our issue also features the amazing pottery of Tung Chiang and the ILLUSTRATION BY STANLEY CHOW exquisite mochi of Frances Hashimoto. We profile the best purveyors of heirloom seeds, the guitar-string wizardry of Gabriel Tenorio, a printer of artisanal stationery, and a designer of original millinery—as well as makers of rare jams, various distillers of fine spirits, and other craft specialists. Alta Journal was launched to discover and document arts and culture, invention and exploration, with an emphasis on the sensibility of the North American West—a geography that spans the coast, the mountains, and the high deserts, from Texas in the east to Hawaii in the west and from northern Mexico to southern Canada. More important than latitude and longitude are attitude and sensibility. We had a hunch that boundaries are more fluid out here. That PENNI GLADSTONE Artisan Claudio Mariani (left) and his colleague Jose Umansor restore a chair at C. Mariani Antiques in San Francisco. science and technology count as creative pursuits. That exploration and discovery are ongoing activities of our readers, writers, and editors. That surfing, poetry, and software all attract creative minds. The one thing we might have missed, at our founding, is the astounding number of makers who care deeply about craft, who build objects and experiences of beauty and functionality, and whose work inspires us and makes our lives better. This issue of Alta is our course correction. Leonardo also wrote that “there are three classes of people: those who see, those who see when they are shown, those who do not see.” While we may not always make Leonardo’s first class, we are determined to operate within the second class. And as is often the case, it’s our readers and writers who lead us to see more. Q ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 5
CHOICES By PIA HINCKLE • Photos by MARISSA LESHNOV ‘I’d Like a Catholic Diaphragm, Please’ Raised with all the freedom of a man, at 19 I faced my first decision as a woman. A fter the birth of her third child, my grandmother Angela, a devout Irish Catholic, went to her gynecologist and said she wanted to be fitted with a diaphragm. “But Mrs. Hinckle, you’re a Catholic,” he said sternly. “Yes,” she smiled. “I’d like a Catholic diaphragm, please.” Angela always told me she didn’t believe that God was a bean counter. And diaphragms—birth control—were beans. Millie, my other grandmother, was also Catholic. A first-generation Italian American who married a Frenchman who almost broke off their engagement to become a priest. She had soured on the church after the nuns at a Catholic nursing school in San Francisco in the 1930s had turned her away for being “too dark.” She happily attended the Episcopalian nursing school instead. She became a surgical nurse on one of Santa Rosa’s first open-heart-surgery teams but gave up that career after the first of her four children was born. When her daughter, my mother, was in college, she helped my mother’s friends in need find qualified doctors in Washington State to perform safe abortions before the procedure became widely accessible in California with the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973. Pia, my Italian great-grandmother, a faithful Catholic from the old country, told my mother that in regard to birth control, “God helps those who help themselves.” “The vagina has to breathe,” Millie, a lifelong and passionate Republican, would famously say to me and my girl cousins if she noticed anyone wearing underwear beneath their nightgown during sleepovers. When we got older, she educated us all about the importance of birth control and sexual health, ideally within marriage because “Why buy the cow when you get the milk for free?” My parents were Christmas and Easter Catholics who believed in birth control, or family planning, as it was also known. Abortion in my family was considered a sad last resort, medically, socially, and financially necessary at times. Something that should be legal and a matter left to a woman’s own conscience. I had been using a diaphragm since I was 14, when I first had sex. I had gone to the free city health clinic closest to our house on Castro Street to get one, intent on losing my virginity that summer of 1979 to keep up with my older BFFs, without getting pregnant. Four years later, I was a college sophomore in New York and having the best sex of my young life with my grad student boyfriend. I remember he complained he could sometimes feel my diaphragm, so, not wanting to displease him, I went on the pill. My mother had been en- couraging me to do so anyway, saying she’d never trusted diaphragms. I gained weight, developed PMS, and felt generally weird, so I stopped the pill after a few cycles and went back to my trusty diaphragm. With perfect use, the fail rate on diaphragms was considered to be around 2 percent. When my perfect 27-day cycle ran long in early December 1983, I wrote in my journal, “A week late. It’s stress. It’s hormones.… I think I’m knocked up, but I can’t believe it yet.… Help. I’m even saying my prayers.” Home pregnancy tests were new, hard to find, and expensive. I had to go to the college infirmary. When the nurse showed me the positive result a few days later, I froze while time stopped moving forward and then turned into a countdown. A countdown of the days I had left to choose an abortion. I walked back to my dorm room through the snow with a buzzing in my ears, feeling stunned. I was faced with the first real decision in my life. This was not choosing PBR or Bud, feathered hair or straight, Levi’s or Jordache. This was about life. My life. I was 18. An unplanned pregnancy was pretty much the worst thing that could happen to you as far as my mother and aunts were concerned. They had been in favor of legal abortion for decades. Of course I was going to have one. That’s what middle-class women did. I knew that abortion was considered a sin in the church. So was birth control. And sex before marriage. And living together without being married. No one in my Catholic family paid much attention to any of those beans. I wasn’t worried about going to hell—if I did, most of my family would be there. For all my airs of maturity, I was still a kid. I didn’t want to give up my body, college, and my freedom by becoming a teenage parent. I had never even babysat! My boyfriend told me he had been through an abortion with a previous girlfriend. He said it was my decision and he would support whatever I chose, but we both understood that I wouldn’t keep it. I was the first in my circle of girlfriends to get pregnant. Most of them would in the next few years, and all of them would have abortions. I didn’t know where to go for one, but I didn’t call my mom or my dad or my little sister. I did what every 1980s pregnant New York college student did—looked at the back page of the Village Voice. “Pregnant? We can help.” I did what every 1980s pregnant college student did—looked at the back of the Village Voice. “Pregnant? We can help.” 6 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 • Roe was barely a decade old, and abortion clinics were being picketed and bombed; doctors who performed abortions were being outed and attacked. But not in New York City. My boyfriend offered to pay most of the $300 fee, which was much more than I made in a month at my parttime campus job in the biology lab.
Author Pia Hinckle near her home in San Francisco.
I was going to classes, working, and trying to write papers before the winter break, but I was out of my body. Meanwhile, the clock was ticking. I decided I wanted to get this over with as soon as possible. I called a clinic from the slimline phone in my boyfriend’s apartment off 61st and Lexington. Crazy Eddie was going crazy on the TV in the other room. I felt sick to my stomach after I hung up. I was to show up early on Friday morning, having had nothing to eat or drink since the night before. I would skip classes that day. • The doors were heavily barred, and there was bulletproof glass separating the reception area from the dank, off-off-white waiting room. No one was smiling. I considered the forms that I and the other women of various ages and races were filling out. Date of last menstrual period. Age. Emergency contact. Religious preference. Any previous reaction to anesthesia? Hell, I had never had any anesthesia. I had never had any kind of medical procedure other than my wisdom teeth being pulled the summer before. I remember being cold, shivering naked under the thin cloth gown while I kept my socks on. The doctor explained the procedure in a tired voice. The nurse held my hand warmly after I got positioned in the stirrups, feeling exposed. “Look at me, Pia. It will be over soon.” I winced at the IV being placed and the sudden whoosh of cold rushing through my veins. I started to count backward from 10 as instructed and then came to in what seemed like just a few minutes as I was wheeled into recovery. Nurses carefully supported me and the other women as we dizzily limped to lounge chairs where we rested further. We each got a bag with extra pads and pain meds and were cautioned about excessive bleeding, cramping, and signs of infection. I almost threw up as my boyfriend walked me to catch a cab. I spent the weekend recovering at his apartment. The bleeding and cramps subsided, and then I only felt relief. Disaster averted. I picked up my college life where I had left off—partying, finishing finals—and then flew home for winter break. I had scheduled a follow-up exam with my San Francisco gynecologist as recommended. When I mentioned I had an appointment to my mother, she wanted to know why. She slammed on the brakes at the intersection of Masonic and Oak when I told her that I had had an abortion in New York. “What?” She looked at me wide-eyed, scared and shocked. It was a week after my 19th birthday. The physician’s assistant got a puzzled look on her face as she checked me and the size of my uterus. “Hmm. That’s weird. Let me get the doctor,” she said. “What?” My mind ran around in circles being chased by a bad feeling. My gynecologist came in and felt too. “Hmm. It does feel enlarged. There could be a complication of some kind. Let’s get you an ultrasound,” he said. “Sometimes if tissue is left behind, the uterus doesn’t fully close. No cramping? No bleeding?” No. I felt great. I had just gotten back from a skiing trip in Tahoe with my friends. The ultrasound tech at the Catholic hospital was cheerful. I was intrigued by this amazing technology. I lay there on the table with my flat belly covered in cold goo and watched, fascinated, as she started her survey and a ghost image appeared on the black screen. “OK. Oh, here we are. I see you’re about 11 weeks gestation. Look, you can see the little fingers here.” The sonar-blip heartbeat sound shattered me. I stopped looking and retreated deep inside myself. I didn’t hear anything else until “You can get dressed now.” I fell to the ground in the tiny dressing room, sobbing on the cold linoleum with my jeans around my ankles. All this time, I was still pregnant? How? I’d had an abortion! I was shaking with shock. A nurse handed me a box of Kleenex under the door. When I came out, she looked confused and sad that this wasn’t happy news. I don’t remember the ride home with my mom, but I do remember her face, grim. I lay on my single bed in the converted-closet bedroom I had in my mother’s apartment that she shared with her new boyfriend. I felt like a vessel, not like a person anymore. All this time, it had been feeding off me. My mind was in disbelief. I whiplashed between numbness and weeping. I considered what seemed impossible: having a baby. I asked my mom, “Was this meant to be? Is that why this fetus is still here? Still growing?” “I guess you could keep it if you wanted,” my mom said, fingering the baby carriage on her old silver charm bracelet that I was wearing. “Millie and I could raise it, and you could finish school.” The “it” said it all. I hadn’t given any thought until that moment about what kind of parent I wanted to be or how I wanted to raise a child. I felt that I was in this pregnancy alone, as if there had been a not-so-immaculate conception. I assumed I would be a single parent. I wanted to be with a partner— married. And then baby, if baby. I thought that if I went through with the pregnancy and gave birth, I would be too attached to give the baby up for adoption. • Having a child at 19 seemed an impossibility. Who did that? Not me, presumably destined for greatness, unsure of even wanting a family. I had been living like a man—I was aggressive in my views and desires, I went after the men I wanted to want me; I kept up with the boys, held my own or bested them at their own games of strength, chicken, drinking, pool, and one-upmanship. I was sharp of wit and tongue. I thought I was fearless. Now I found myself a woman. A pregnant woman. The most vulnerable state of all. All my short life I had said Yes to everything: Yes to cigarettes, plucked from the gutter at age 9; Yes to marijuana Holly stole from Mountain Girl’s stash at her dad’s house and rolled into joints that we sold on Castro Street for $1 at age 11; Yes to losing my virginity with the summer yard boy at my grandparents’ house—whose name I can’t even remember now—couldn’t wait to be rid of it and get in the Game; Yes to drinking, early and always; Yes to LSD for Rocky Horror at the Strand; Yes to cocaine whenever offered; Yes to mushrooms in Golden Gate Park—yes, I’d like to sell them for you, can you pay me in trade?; Yes to jumping off the cliff at Cherry Creek at Camp Mather to show how brave I was (I was really scared); Yes to working at the California Academy of Sciences and scuba cleaning the Fish Roundabout and feeding speared live shrimp to the chambered nautili, depressed in their tiny tanks; Yes to all this that had come my way, and much, much more. If becoming a mother changes your life forever, then surely the decision not to become one changes you as well. 8 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 • I decided to say no. No, I don’t want this fetus to keep growing inside me. No, I don’t want to become a mother now. This young. This way. No, I don’t want to make this choice. • It was much harder to find a place willing to do an abortion after 12 weeks, even if it was legal. I was right on the edge. If I was going to terminate this pregnancy, I had to do it immediately. I called my boyfriend and told him the unbelievable news. He was offering to fly out to be with me when my mother grabbed the phone out of my hand and screamed that this was all his fault. I’d never heard her yell like that at anyone— not even my dad. I told him not to come. Later I heard my mom call my dad and tell him what was going on. I slept. My gynecologist arranged for an abortion at the not-Catholic hospital where my three future children would be born. The procedure happened not at a depressing clinic but in a real operating room, just a floor below the maternity ward and nursery. The doctor was kind to me, smiled and put his hand on my forehead and told me not to worry as I counted back from 10. After recovery, he assured me that there was no question that my pregnancy was no more. He said that it may have been that because I’d had the abortion so early, around six weeks, they’d simply missed the fetus. I was relieved, but I wanted to see the report. The words “Fetal hind-
No matter what I did, I felt nothing. A couple of months later, I wrote in my journal: ABORTION. I got rid of something that would have been a baby if I had kept it. A baby that was made out of making love with someone I love who loves me. I got rid of the biological product of love (and lust). Lust Love Kill Baby Did I kill a baby? Did I kill my body? I killed part of myself that will never be again. An abortion is not a good time. I know there are women who say it meant less to them than getting their teeth cleaned, but that was not the case for me. Maybe it would have been different if the first abortion had been effective. Instead I was forced to make this terrible choice twice. It marks you, as I suppose it should. If becoming a mother changes your life and you forever, then surely the decision not to become one changes you as well. But back in the early ’80s, in my circle, abortion was looked upon mostly as a rite of passage. Once word about mine was out, friends, aunts, other female relatives, and acquaintances of all faiths, backgrounds, and finances fessed up. Millie talked about the women she had helped find a trusted doctor in Mexico before abortion became legal, even one of her son’s girlfriends. My mom revealed the abortion she’d had when I was about seven. Her pregnancy with my sister had been complicated and required surgery at five months to remove a massive tumor. Her postpartum depression had been so serious that she’d needed help from a cousin to take care of me and my sister for a time. She couldn’t bear the stress of another child with my unreliable and unfaithful dad. • Hinckle at her San Francisco home with Toby, the last surviving basset hound of her late father, Warren Hinckle. quarters” pierced me with the knowledge that a future baby had been growing and was no more. I was cocooned in still, black deadness. • Dad invited me to lunch. Alone. This had never happened before. He always had an entourage or someone to meet wherever we went. We met at Jack’s, an old-school San Francisco restaurant and bar on Sacramento Street that opened soon after the gold rush. He was on time. Also something that had never happened before. I ate frog legs for the first time. He had rabbit. We shared a bottle of red wine. He wanted to know how I was doing. Another first. “You gotta take care of yourself, Box.” He looked me in the eye, clearly worried. “Do you want to stay home longer? I’ll cover it if you want to change your ticket. You can be a little late going back to New York.” He spoke of women and their burden, of men and their helplessness in the face of pregnancy; free will; the church; and choice. The church had only come out against birth control a couple of decades ago. Abortion was as old as time. It was the first time I was alone with my father. He was supportive—he wanted me to keep on with my passions, the marine sciences, whatever I wanted. And he was sad—not a happy decision for anyone involved, he said. • Fetal hindquarters followed me everywhere. I tried to drown them in vodka, smother them in coke, smoke them up in a little taste of heroin, lose them in impulse sex with my girlfriends and my boyfriends’ friends. Postpartum depression was just being recognized at the time; postabortion depression wasn’t even mentioned. People were just beginning to talk openly about anxiety and depression. There was still a lot of shame and scorn involved in seeking treatment for mental health conditions. Psychotherapy was barely mainstream. After an abortion, you were expected to be relieved and maybe a little sad, and then to get over it. After my second abortion, I could barely get out of bed. I didn’t care about anything. I lay in my darkened room listening to the Psychedelic Furs. There were no tears. I felt nothing, no matter what I did. The anxiety and panic attacks came later and lasted for years. I didn’t know what was wrong with me, and it didn’t occur to me to ask anyone. It wasn’t until I gave birth to my first child 13 years later and experienced postpartum depression that I understood what had happened: how sensitive I was to pregnancy hormones and what they did to my mental state. When I became pregnant with my first child, the timing couldn’t have been worse. I had been married less than a year and had just started a job as the business editor at my city’s afternoon daily. My health insurance hadn’t even kicked in. My husband was working as a temp and wasn’t sure what he wanted to do with his life. I was the main wage earner. We lived in a one-bedroom apartment. We hadn’t even said out loud that we were trying to become pregnant, but we were not being very careful, and we were having the most delicious baby-possible sex. When we held the home pregnancy test in our hands, we both cried, joyful and terrified. I wanted this baby, and so did he. Nothing else mattered. We would figure out all the rest and somehow make it work. To be pregnant and have it be welcome and not a dreadful and terrible discovery was such a healing relief. This felt like the most creative thing I had ever done—growing a person. It didn’t even compare to writing. I often think of my sacrifice of that first unborn child spirit—I’ve always imagined a her—and all that she allowed me. I think of her in gratitude. Her spirit was not ready to come into this world. She forgave me. And ultimately I forgave me. I believe she shepherded my three children to me later, when I was ready enough to become a parent. I had said no because I was young and wanted to be free and didn’t think another road was possible. And I’m grateful that I could. Q Pia Hinckle is a San Francisco writer and editor. She is a coauthor of The Court That Tamed the West: From the Gold Rush to the Tech Boom. This essay is adapted from Pia & the Elephant, her memoir in progress about growing up in the limelight of her father, Warren Hinckle, a buccaneer editor and epic drinker. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 9
Built into the slopes of a mountain, with sweeping views of Los Angeles from Downtown to the Hollywood sign and beyond, Dodger Stadium offers a definitive perspective on the city. 10 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21
An ode to L.A.’s legendary Dodger Stadium on its 60th birthday. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 11
BELLE OF THE BALL By MATT JAFFE • Photos by MATTHEW SMITH D ay baseball, a midweek rarity. The marine layer lingers over Dodger Stadium an hour before the Arizona Diamondbacks’ leadoff batter steps to the plate on Mexican Heritage Day, my first game during the stadium’s 60th-anniversary season. Traffic is light, also a rarity on the almost-ceremonial route I follow down Sunset Boulevard and into Echo Park before reaching forested Elysian Park and driving through Gate B to enter the sprawling 16,000-vehicle parking lot. (If you wonder why Dodger fans arrive late and leave early, that’s why.) Once inside the ballpark, I climb, via a series of escalators and stairwells tucked underneath the stands behind home plate, from field level to the stadium’s top deck, to take in the panorama. From the time of William Mulholland and the Los Angeles Aqueduct, L.A. has been a city unafraid of engineering on a grand scale, no matter the environmental or social costs. When owner Walter O’Malley moved the Dodgers from Brooklyn following the 1957 season, he turned to architect-engineer Emil Praeger, an expert on concrete construction, to design a stadium at Chavez Ravine, a 350-acre site creased by arroyos in the Stone Quarry Hills, near Downtown. As late as the 1950s, around 1,800 families lived here in three secluded, predominantly Mexican American villages: La Loma, Bishop, and Palo Verde. The term Chavez Ravine is used interchangeably with Dodger Stadium and, largely thanks to the recently passed announcer Vin Scully, has become the most romantic placename in sports. Even if it’s a misnomer: some of the eight million cubic yards of rock and dirt gnawed from the ground during construction came out of the adjacent Cemetery, Reservoir, and Sulphur Ravines. Names that even Scully couldn’t transform into poetry. Dodger Stadium was built into the slopes of 726-foot-high Mount Lookout, and the venue’s terraced seating descends into the ravine like the rows of an ancient amphitheater. Construction also leveled the top of Mount Lookout. Now, the artificial summit of Dodger Stadium takes in the San Gabriel Mountains, rail yards and freeways, City Hall and Downtown skyscrapers, Griffith Observatory and the Hollywood sign. This is L.A.’s definitive perspective—the wild and gritty city from the most Los Angeles place in all of L.A. L os Angeles was a baseball town long before the Dodgers relocated from Brooklyn. The first baseball games here were played in 1860, a century prior to the team’s arrival and the same year the town of 4,385 banned bullfighting. Through the first half of the 20th century, the Hollywood Stars and the Los 12 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 Angeles Angels were two of the Pacific Coast League’s flagship teams, and by the 1950s, the region had produced such Dodger stars as Compton’s Duke Snider, Don Drysdale of Van Nuys, and Pasadena’s Jackie Robinson. If the Dodgers’ move to Chavez Ravine marked L.A.’s coming-of-age, the monumental stadium symbolized L.A.’s emergence as the United States’ city of the future. Dodger Stadium is unmistakably of its time, yet even as the ballpark has become the third oldest in the majors, it still feels new. “The trick is growing up without growing old,” said baseball legend Casey Stengel, who played outfield for and later managed the Dodgers, and several hundred million dollars in renovations and face-lifts have certainly helped. When the stadium opened, it joined the Rose Bowl and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum among the ranks of the world’s most venerable sports venues. The ballpark set a standard for innovative sports architecture, and with the debut in recent years of soccer’s acclaimed Banc of California Stadium and the National Football League’s lauded SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles has the finest collection of outdoor venues of any U.S. city. Constructed of 23,000 steel-and-reinforcedconcrete sections cast on-site, Dodger Stadium incorporated modern materials and architectural details instead of the iron and brick of more traditional ballparks. From the top deck, I look out at Googie-style hexagonal scoreboards, while the folded corrugated-steel canopy over the outfield pavilion wouldn’t be out of place in Palm Springs. The pastel seats evoke the hues of a beach sunset, changing section by section from ocean blue to sandy yellow and orange and finally to sky blue. And the parabolic concrete roofs that crown the stadium cantilever low over the upper-deck concourse, casting shadows that create a play of light and dark straight out of a Julius Shulman photo. In a hidden stairwell, I work my way down 21 flights so short they’re like switchbacks on a steep trail, reaching the field level in time to hear mariachi Julian Torres sing the U.S. and Mexican national anthems. The marine layer has burned off, leaving behind what ballplayers call a high sky, a glaring blue that closely matches the color of the outfield fence. What little remains visible of the fence, that is. Gazing toward left field, I’m confronted by a brand slam of logos: Golden Road Brewing, State Farm, Bank of America, California Pizza Kitchen, Yaamava’ Resort & Casino. Plus a scroll for Jinro (“Official Soju of the Dodgers”) and a Postmates ad wrapped around my cup holder. There are also five circular, orange Union 76 logos in my field of vision, although at least they qualify as traditional at Dodger Stadium. In early pictures, the only stadium advertising is the orange Union 76 ball atop the scoreboard. Union Oil helped bankroll O’Malley in exchange for exclusive sponsorship, and, befit- ting an autopian city that once led the world in oil production, a 76 gas station operated for four decades in Lot 37 and still stands today. The ballpark has an almost minimalist appearance in those photos, especially the classic shots by Sports Illustrated’s Neil Leifer. The pavilion canopy’s silhouette zigzags above the outfield wall, brightly lit by the California sun and unadorned, except for painted numbers denoting the field’s dimensions. T his is the ballpark I remember from my first Dodger game. In August 1964, we were staying with my grandparents on Hope Street, a few blocks from the Coliseum (where the Dodgers had played before their own stadium opened). We sat in the top deck, and I can still see the blues and reds and white of the uniforms against the green grass, palm trees and mountains in the distance, as the crowd yelled “Go, go, go!” when Maury Wills stole second base. A few days after that game, I’d board the Santa Fe Super Chief to return to Chicago for my first day of kindergarten. I came back to L.A. for good 25 years later and soon fell into a share of prime field-level season tickets that I’m still using. The fans’ chant that day could have served as a civic mantra for the booming Los Angeles of the 1960s. The Dodgers were the city’s glamour team, the original Showtime, and an early
An expert on concrete construction, architect-engineer Emil Praeger designed Dodger Stadium. Its 23,000 steel-and-reinforced-concrete sections were cast on-site—a big departure from the usual iron-and-brick ballparks that came before it. Above: Landscaped gardens, including succulents and mature palms, surround the stadium. Below: Stacked seating decks have an almost minimalist appearance. example of the nexus of entertainment and sports. Celebs like Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant, and Doris Day were regulars, and Mister Ed hoofed out an inside-the-park home run off Sandy Koufax. The transistor radio was the smartphone of its time. When I spoke with Scully a few years ago, he said, “As far as my career was concerned, the biggest break we got was the transistor radio. It helped us to actually talk to the people in the ballpark.” Dodger Stadium is often called baseball’s Disneyland, which isn’t a surprise considering that O’Malley found inspiration in the theme park and shared Walt Disney’s penchant for directing the visitor experience. Disney had even eyed Chavez Ravine for Disneyland. But from Mulholland to O’Malley, Los Angeles likes its origin stories with a frisson of morality play. And Dodger Stadium is where Tomorrowland met Chinatown. The stadium’s construction saga encompassed familiar L.A. themes: land deals, backroom intrigue, housing shortages, property rights, displacement (my grandparents’ apartment is now a Harbor Freeway off-ramp), court battles, and celebrity: stars were enlisted to rally support during a pro-Dodger telethon. The saga began in 1949, when the city approved 10,000 public housing units, including more than 3,000 in the modernist, Richard Neutra and Robert Alexander–designed Elysian Park Heights, which was slated to replace the supposedly blighted neighborhoods of Chavez Ravine. It wasn’t the Dodgers that bought out most ravine residents; it was Los Angeles’s housing authority. In 1953, however, the project was scrubbed, thanks largely to an ongoing campaign that branded public housing a socialist threat. So the popular legend that the Dodgers destroyed the ravine communities isn’t true, although the team won big when it acquired the land in a deal with the city. That deal happened despite the property’s designation for public, not private, use. After the Dodgers narrowly won approval in a voter referendum on the deal, the final ravine holdouts were forcefully evicted—complete with footage on the 10 o’clock news. The team found itself in a public relations nightmare as la gente and the Folks—the city’s conservative political class—briefly came together in defense of the little guy in the battle against big government and big business, though soon sentiment turned in the Dodgers’ favor. Six decades is a long, long time in Los Angeles, but not everyone has forgotten. Last season, three protesters ran across the outfield carrying banners bearing the names Palo Verde, Bishop, and La Loma to remind fans of los desterrados. The uprooted. With the Dodgers leading in the ninth, I walk from the field level to the outfield pavilion and take in the end of the game. An elderly Latina woman, wearing a Heritage Day jersey in the colors of the Mexican flag and with a faint Aztec-calendar background, is telling stories to a pair of young men drinking micheladas. Dodger Stadium has lots of stories. Baseball stories and ghost stories. Q Matt Jaffe last wrote about the nonprofit music program Lead Guitar for Alta Journal, Summer 2022. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 13
Christopher Renfro examines vines at Alemany Farm in San Francisco. In 2019, he revived the abandoned vineyard and started the 280 Project.
ALLYSHIP By SYDNEY LOVE • Photos by PENNI GLADSTONE A Vineyard in San Francisco’s Black Belt Christopher Renfro’s 280 Project gives a community reason to go back to the farm. I n 2015, Christopher Renfro landed a job waiting tables in downtown San Francisco at a newly opened eatery called Oro. The name, meaning “gold” in Spanish, was a tribute of sorts to the restaurant’s location in a plaza shared by the former San Francisco Mint. Renfro was 32 years old, and Oro was his first gig at a high-profile restaurant. An artisan with an environmental bent, he had done many things over the previous decade, from refurbishing storefronts for American Apparel to working the register at a co-op grocery store to gardening at the city’s Conservatory of Flowers. Before Oro, he had worked at a ceramics company, where his innovative thinking sparked the creation of a tile-recycling program. “The work was backbreaking,” says Renfro. He calculated that he was lifting the equivalent of two elephants, or about nine tons, in tile a day. Earning generous restaurant tips seemed a better way to provide for his young daughter at home. At Oro, he says, he wore a nice blue shirt that covered the tattoos on his espresso-brown skin, and he kept his black, woolly Afro cut short and combed out. The cuisine was served family-style and highlighted local California produce, fresh meats, and charcuterie cured in-house—reminiscent of the pâté, liverwurst, and other foods Renfro had eaten as a boy in Germany. (He’d spent 10 years of his childhood there while his mother worked on a U.S. Army base.) But what intrigued him most was the menu of 140-plus mainly Italian, French, and Californian vintages. The wine director, Kelly Evans, had been the head sommelier at Saison. Renfro’s early experiences with wine had been subpar. While he was growing up, his mother drank wine coolers and amaretto sours. As a teenager, he had a friend who worked for a gallery, and they would hang out at art openings for free booze. The first time Renfro drank red wine, it made him sick. It wasn’t until working at Oro that he came to understand how fine wine could elevate the dining experience. He asked Evans if he could assist him in the cellar (actually a dusty backroom office). Renfro started off taking inventory and would study the bottle labels to remember them, but what he learned about wine’s history was disheartening. “I saw all these bottles [with] châteaux The 280 Project’s first release: 2021 L’Amalgame San Francisco Bay Rosé. and domaines on them and was reading white people’s stories about their sons taking their land,” he says. “There’s not one story like this in Black history, at least that I know of.” While those châteaux and domaines established generational wealth, Black Americans were entrapped in 12 generations of slavery. President Thomas Jefferson cultivated grapevines at his plantation, Monticello, where enslaved Black people had a hand in nearly every aspect of food production, except winegrowing (Jefferson hired Italian workers for that). Renfro found himself having an internal dialogue with the wine world’s whitewashed history: You guys are selling juice that tells racist stories, and people buy it for tons of money. He saw the potential for a career in wine, though he felt it was time for another kind of winemaking story, told on different terroir, by Black and brown voices. O ro shuttered within nine months of opening. Renfro pivoted to a nearby restaurant, Liholiho Yacht Club, where he took his first strides as a sommelier. He grew more interested in learning about how wine was made, but his ambitions went beyond that. “Nobody was doing anything positive for Black people in wine,” he recalls. What he really wanted was to stake a claim in the hegemonic world of viticulture for people who’d been shut out of it for centuries. Wine country was just a stone’s throw outside the city, but “I didn’t think Napa was the best way to get there,” says Renfro, “and I didn’t know anyone in Napa.” He lived in South San Francisco, and it turned out that there was an alternative nearly in his backyard—Alemany Farm, on the south side of San Francisco’s Bernal Heights. Renfro discovered that a nonprofit, Neighborhood Vineyards, had planted pinot noir there in 2013. The community-run project taught its volunteers about viticulture, aiming to sustain its work through sales of its wine production. Renfro reached out to the nonprofit’s founder several times but says she never replied to him. In December 2019, he went to Alemany Farm to harvest a cutting, only to discover that Neighborhood Vineyards had abandoned the site, leaving behind about 65 vines that looked to be dying. Here was Renfro’s opportunity to pursue his vision of a new wine story. He introduced himself to the farm’s manager and offered to care for the vines. He didn’t have any grape-growing experience, but he was willing to learn. Within a week, Renfro had his vineyard. Alemany Farm was once just an empty hillside overlooking the 280 freeway. In the early 1990s, it was a local dump site for cars, refrigerators, and other junk. The land was converted into an organic urban farm by the San Francisco League of Urban Gardeners in 1995. Among other initiatives, SLUG offered paid internships to youth; the majority lived in the neighboring housing project, Alemany Apartments, and others came from the nearby Bayview area. Black and brown hands tended the land for almost 10 years, until the city accused SLUG of pressuring employees to do campaign work for local elections and slashed its funding. The farm’s ensuing shutdown took a toll on the surrounding Black community, and the land lay nearly abandoned until Friends of Alemany Farm arrived in 2005. Today, Alemany’s 3.5-acre farm is the largest agricultural site in San Francisco, yielding about 12 tons ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 15
Renfro walks through the 280 Project vineyard with 19-year-old Marvin Rivas, one of his mentees in the Alemany community. of produce a year, most of which is donated to local food pantries, including one at Alemany Apartments. Anyone in the city can come to the farm and harvest fresh produce for free. In Renfro’s mind, the local community had “a free, organically farmed mecca of food and peace where you can walk around, pray, do whatever you want.” As with the invisible lines drawn elsewhere in San Francisco, though, he didn’t see any Black residents from the housing project coming to reap those benefits. Before the pandemic and the reignition of the Black Lives Matter movement, the wine industry at large wasn’t yet talking about its race issue. Renfro envisioned creating a safe space “for the community right here that’s been impacted by agricultural injustice, food injustice, and land injustice.” He wanted to teach marginalized youth about a sector of agriculture they otherwise might not know about and, in the process, give them new skills they could monetize. The 280 Project, as Renfro named it, would give the Black community a reason to return to the farm. G ermany has a lot to do with who I am,” says Renfro. His fourthgrade teacher, Frau Naser, inspired his love for nature. She was an older German woman with fashion sense, wearing her blond hair in a pixie cut, a white 16 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 suit with aviator sunglasses and jewelry, “but then, she was all about the earth.” Naser took her class to the countryside to learn about animals, fossils, and ecosystems. Renfro had a curious, sharp, and rebellious spirit that sometimes got him in trouble. “I remember that lady gave me the permission to be able to be who I already was. She saw it and nurtured it,” he says. “I could speak the language, and I played with the kids, and I was able to run through forests, and I never had anyone aiming guns at me.” His mother made sure he read books on Black history and culture. Renfro was drawn to George Washington Carver’s story. Though Carver was born enslaved, his pioneering discoveries in agricultural science at what is now Tuskegee University played a crucial role in saving impoverished southern farmers during the Dust Bowl. “I would think about that,” Renfro says, “and I’d be like, Damn, this guy is like a superhero.” Visits to relatives in Louisiana could cause culture shock. Instead of pâté and liverwurst, there were family crab boils. Renfro gazed at the giant oak trees in New Orleans’s Ninth Ward and the region’s beautiful Victorian houses, but he also began to comprehend the pangs of being a Black man in America. When his family moved back to the States—bouncing around Kentucky, Texas, and Colorado—he witnessed racial inequities across the Black, Indigenous, and immigrant communities he lived among. Renfro made his way to San Francisco in 2006, but, he says, “when I moved to the city, it was a real problem to be Black.” Poverty, police brutality, and gang violence waited in the streets. Renfro lived in the Western Addition, a historically Black neighborhood at the heart of the city that had been nearly decimated by a roughly 55-year-long municipal campaign to clear the “blight.” The San Francisco Redevelopment Agency had shuttered 883 businesses, torn down roughly 2,500 Victorian homes, and displaced 4,729 households in the area, SFGate reported in 2008. Like many other Black San Franciscans, Renfro eventually migrated to South San Francisco. His own path was proving just as rocky, as that job at American Apparel had ended in a racial discrimination lawsuit. He won the case but says he lost the majority of his compensation to lawyer fees. “I lost my mind for a bit after that,” says Renfro, which compelled him to get back to what had always been constant joys in his life—plants and the outdoors. He took courses in environmental horticulture at City College of San Francisco. Still, Renfro sensed microaggressions in almost every workplace. While at Oro, he quickly learned that restaurants had their own set of issues.
W hen he landed at Alemany, Renfro needed to learn how to prune the vines, and fast, as the growing season was about to begin. He had recently attended a trade event spotlighting U.S. viticulturists Steve Matthiasson and Mimi Casteel, and he contacted them. Matthiasson, based in Napa Valley, was widely respected for his decades of work in organic farming; Casteel, for her work popularizing regenerative farming in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. They both agreed to give Renfro pruning lessons over video chat. “I’ll talk to anyone about pruning,” says Matthiasson. He was blown away when he learned what Renfro was up to. “I had no idea there were grapevines in San Francisco. I would have thought it’d be way too foggy.” Matthiasson Winery is based in Napa’s Oak Knoll District, where winegrowers once thought it was too foggy to ripen cabernet sauvignon. Matthiasson proved them wrong. Like Renfro’s, his path to winegrowing had started in San Francisco, though almost 30 years ago and at a community garden on Potrero Avenue. It was through urban gardening that Matthiasson became a farmer. Now he is one of Napa’s most trusted sources on organic winegrowing. “I was really mentored along the way, and viticulture—there’s no way you can learn this on your own or from books,” he says. Passing along that information was a part of the tradition. After the virtual pruning lesson, Matthiasson and his wife, Jill Klein Matthiasson, visited Renfro in San Francisco to see the vines up close. Just as Renfro began restoring the vineyard, the pandemic hit, and he was furloughed from Liholiho Yacht Club. “Everything changed in life, but for me, it was for the better,” he says. During quarantine, the farm was a place for Renfro to reconnect with nature. He worked the vineyard almost every day, and his partner, Jannea Tschirch, and their daughters came along. Ahmarie was a toddler and grew up as the vines did, and Sula, who was 10 years old, learned how to plant, prune, and graft vines alongside her dad. In the summer of 2020, Renfro and chef Haley Garabato launched Feed the People Collective, preparing a free monthly lunch at the farm. The Renfro-Tschirch family even had a winemaking operation in their kitchen that harvest. However, winemaking is only a fragment of Renfro’s end goal. “Wine is just the vehicle to talk about all of these other things,” he says. I n 2021, Renfro read about a Japanesenative grape variety called koshu in a British lifestyle magazine and wanted some of his own. Matthiasson connected him to plant biologist Elisabeth Forrestel at UC Davis. “People often come to me to ask where they can find certain grape cultivars or varieties or species now,” she says. Forrestel spent a postdoctoral at Harvard and UC Davis studying climate change and its impacts on living collections of grapes across the globe. She has worked with cultivars in France, which has the largest collection, and with all of North America’s wild vitis species. Sure enough, she knew where to find koshu: Wolfskill Experimental Orchard in Winters, California, run in partnership by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and UC Davis. The 280 Project was invited to visit and propagate some of the vines. Wine as a luxury product was inherently exclusionary, but Renfro felt that winegrowing was especially inaccessible. During that initial interaction with Forrestel, he shared an idea for a new initiative: a paid apprenticeship that taught BIPOC and LGBTQ youth about viticulture. His new allies joined in the effort. “He just has this vision, and somehow it is infectious,” says Matthiasson. He offered direct access to Napa’s biggest, most successful winemakers and winegrowers, and Forrestel opened the doors to academia. It was still the peak of COVID-19, and without the infrastructure to transport youth to wine country, the project’s focus shifted to working adults. Renfro promoted the apprenticeship on Instagram, and many people expressed interest. “I guess you’re a part of it,” Renfro told them. “Whoever wants to come.” For the first meeting, the apprentices gathered at Matthiasson’s estate in Napa, where they were joined by his vineyard crew, and everyone shared their backgrounds and career goals. altercation with a winegrower on the subject of paying vineyard workers fair wages. The winegrower’s opinion was outnumbered by the opposing BIPOC perspectives in the room. “It was just interesting seeing the depth of privilege in the wine industry,” says Renfro. “It felt special to be in that space and community together.” Multiple apprentices noted that the confrontation was an integral moment of the program. The apprenticeship is now in its second year. For the 2022 growing season, the Gérard Basset Foundation provided funding for five apprentices of color. This year’s selected participants include an army veteran and mechanic, a former real estate agent, and a cheesemonger, all wanting to break into the wine industry. Financing continues to be a major obstacle, however. There is a team behind the scenes volunteering its time and skills to keep the 280 Project afloat. Renfro is now working full-time as the wine buyer at Canyon Market in San Francisco’s Glen Park neighborhood but remains hopeful that one day he’ll be able to fully focus on the 280 Project—and Alemany Farm, of course. In between the pinot noir vines, he has interplanted Beehives in the garden at Alemany Farm. Looking around the room, Renfro couldn’t believe they had made it to this point, that “we all [wanted] to be in wine, and this is what it took for us all to be here.” Almost every Friday, Renfro; his 280 Project manager, Rita Manzana; and the apprentices went to a different winery or vineyard, including Andy Beckstoffer’s famed To Kalon Vineyard, one of the most sought-after sites for cabernet sauvignon in the world. They did hands-on learning in vineyards and attended organic seminars taught by Matthiasson. “There’s nothing like that even in formal education,” says Forrestel. At UC Davis, grape geneticist Andrew Walker gave the apprentices a lesson in grapevine identification, and Forrestel taught them how to propagate vines. They also produced a collaborative wine made entirely from wild vitis species native to North America. These excursions were often a clashing of worlds. Program participants faced microaggressions, like when one apprentice got into an other varieties he has collected along the way: a U.S. hybrid called marquette from Vermont, sémillon from Sonoma’s Monte Rosso Vineyard (the second-oldest such planting in the world), and the koshu from Wolfskill Experimental Orchard. There are four additional terraces of vines planted up the hillside, thanks to the apprentices. After two years of care, the vines are ready to produce grapes—and likely wine. He has everything mapped out: the apprenticeship program growing to be bicoastal or maybe international; the land he’ll own in Oakland, Half Moon Bay, or Daly City; the cooperative winery; the farm and seed bank that will grow and preserve the Black community’s foodways. “It’s all coming, man. I know it,” says Renfro. “I feel closer to this power than I’ve ever felt in my life.” Q Sydney Love last wrote about the women who spurred Los Angeles’s thriving natural wine scene for Alta Journal, Fall 2021. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 17
One of the graves uncovered by a backhoe during the renovation of the Legion of Honor museum in the early 1990s.
LAST RITES By BETH WINEGARNER BURIED HISTORIES San Francisco’s Legion of Honor museum and Lincoln Park Golf Course sit atop the grave sites of thousands of immigrants and indigent people. Their stories— and some of their remains— are coming to the surface. PHOTO BY RICHARD BARNES I n the summer of 2019, construction crews working near the northeastern corner of San Francisco’s Lincoln Park dug up something they weren’t expecting: a coffin. The workers were creating new bioswales along El Camino Del Mar, designed to divert stormwater during heavy rains and keep the tony Sea Cliff neighborhood from flooding. In the process, and under the watchful eye of an archaeologist hired by the city, they would end up uncovering the graves of at least 20 people, dating back to the end of the 19th century. A secret lies beneath the manicured lawns of Lincoln Park Golf Course. These gentle slopes were once the home of one of San Francisco’s largest graveyards. Between 1870 and about 1900, 29,000 people were buried in Golden Gate Cemetery, named for its proximity to the entrance to San Francisco Bay, though most people called it City Cemetery. The majority were new burials, although a few hundred had been relocated from the city’s earlier cemeteries. And many of City Cemetery’s graves stayed where they were when other cemeteries in San Francisco eventually were moved out of town. Somewhere between 10,000 and 22,000 are still there, including the ones the bioswale workers found. Those thousands of graves hold the stories of San Francisco’s builders, of immigrants and low-income laborers, many of whom died destitute and alone. They tell a tale of how San Francisco has, again and again, favored its wealthy and privileged residents over its poor and marginalized ones. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 19
At first, there was no way of knowing whom the graves on El Camino Del Mar belonged to. City Cemetery’s grave markers were removed more than a century ago, when the burial ground closed. The city didn’t have a detailed map of the 200-acre cemetery, which contained over two dozen plots that belonged to different community organizations—often nonprofits that helped take financial care of members and their families. Many of them were Chinese and were overseen by the Chinese Six Companies, a group of benevolent associations formed in the 19th century. As archaeologists studied the remains, they reached out to historians Alex Ryder and John Martini, who were working on reconstructing a City Cemetery map—partly for situations just like this. As it turned out, the area where workers found the bones had once belonged to the French Mutual Benevolent Society of San Francisco. A number of the skeletons showed signs of autopsies and other postmortem medical studies, which were illegal in the 19th century. And one of the skulls had apparently been pierced by a gunshot. A .44-caliber bullet from a Winchester pistol was rattling around inside it. Ryder says the research team is close to identifying whose skull it was. But local newspaper archives may hold important clues: On January 15, 1896, the San Francisco Call told the story of a French doctor, E.L. Molass, who had sailed to New York on a steamer called S.S. La Bretagne, then traveled overland to San Francisco, where he arrived in late December. Molass was suffering from tuberculosis and hoped the California climate would cure him; apparently he didn’t know about the city’s brutal fog and wind. He wound up in the French Hospital, but “sickness and despondency” overtook him, the newspaper reported. On January 14, 1896, he “sent a bullet into his right ear.” The ground beneath Lincoln Park Golf Course contains thousands of such stories, often involving San Franciscans who died penniless, buried at the city’s expense. Just two massive cemetery markers still stand among the golf course tees. One, erected by the Ladies’ Seamen’s Friend Society of the Port of San Francisco, is a large obelisk visible from the parking lot of the Legion of Honor museum. The other, the gateway-like Kong Chow funerary monument, was once a central part of a Chinese plot in City Cemetery. Woody LaBounty, a longtime San Francisco historian, knew that City Cemetery had a singular story to tell about San Francisco’s complex past. When Connie Chan was elected supervisor of District 1, which includes Lincoln Park, in 2020, LaBounty told her about the presence of the historic cemetery and encouraged her to start the process of making it a city landmark. Before that conversation, “I have to be honest: I never knew that’s what it was,” Chan says. She agreed it was worth commemorating and got to work. LaBounty says that City Cemetery’s silent residents are the people “who built San Francisco, who represent the diversity—socially and ethnically—of San Francisco in the 19th century. They’re the forebears of the place we all call home, and they’ve mostly been forgotten.” 20 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 How and why they were forgotten says a lot about San Francisco’s history too. THE FORSAKEN DEAD Thomas W. Wood, born in Fairfax, Virginia, was 22 when he enlisted in the U.S. military on June 3, 1847, to fight in the Mexican-American War. He reenlisted numerous times, until he couldn’t anymore. He received his final honorable discharge on November 27, 1881, when a medical board deemed him too worn-out to continue serving. Wood decided to head to San Francisco, even though he didn’t have a home, a job, or any friends lined up. When his $25 ran out, he poisoned himself, the San Francisco Call reported on February 18, 1882. He was 57. When Wood’s body was found, his pockets contained a “bundle of honorable discharges, nicely tied with red tape, and a number of affectionate letters from a married daughter living near the old home, back in old Virginia.” Wood’s body remained at the city morgue as folks with the San Francisco coroner’s office attempted to arrange an honorable burial, but many cemeteries would not take him, likely because he had died by suicide. Ultimately, he MORE THAN 10,000 CHINESE RESIDENTS WERE BURIED IN CITY CEMETERY OVER ITS YEARS OF OPERATION. was interred in City Cemetery “with no one by to say even the poor words ‘dust to dust, ashes to ashes!’ ” Wood’s grave, just off the shores of the Golden Gate, was marked with a white plank bearing only a number—1,116—partially covered in drifting sand. City Cemetery was the last public burial ground established in San Francisco, which famously shut down and evicted many of its graveyards in the early 20th century. Not counting Indigenous burial grounds, San Francisco saw roughly 30 cemeteries, large and small, official and unofficial, come and go between Spanish colonizers’ arrival in the 1760s and the cemeteries’ ouster to Colma, a dozen miles away, throughout the first half of the 20th century. At first, the city’s burial grounds were compact, spanning a single block at most, but then the gold rush happened. In 1846, two years before San Francisco officially came under U.S. control, about 200 people lived in the small town. But by 1852, its population had exploded to 36,000. More residents meant more death, including from waves of disease like smallpox and typhoid fever, and the city’s existing cemeteries quickly filled up. But with each new cemetery, poor planning prevailed. Over and over again, city officials found new places to bury the dead, thinking they’d identified a spot so far out in the sticks that nobody would ever want to live next door. Over and over again, they were wrong. It happened with Yerba Buena Cemetery, a 13-acre public burial ground located where San Francisco’s United Nations Plaza, Asian Art Museum, and Main Library stand today. It happened with the massive Masonic, Odd Fellows, and Calvary cemeteries on and around Lone Mountain, which were surrounded by Richmond district NIMBYs within decades. And it happened with City Cemetery. City Cemetery was meant to be San Francisco’s solution to the problem of Yerba Buena. That old municipal burial ground, which opened in 1850, was full by the mid1850s, with 7,000 to 9,000 graves, mostly of working-class and Chinese residents. By 1870, the graveyard was falling apart—and located right in the heart of the city, where leaders wanted to build a new city hall. In theory, most of Yerba Buena’s burials would be disinterred and moved to City Cemetery. But in practice, only 267 unidentified graves were documented as being relocated to City Cemetery. Untold thousands likely rest in the old Yerba Buena Cemetery soil, and workers continued to find them anytime they excavated, whether they were building City Hall at Larkin and McAllister Streets in the 1880s or renovating the old Main Library to become the new Asian Art Museum in 2003. For the new City Cemetery, San Francisco leaders looked for a far-flung spot to bury the dead. When they began considering a plot in the desolate northwestern corner of the city, near Lands End, the property was barren, treeless, and buffeted by strong winds off the Pacific Ocean. Still, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors’ Outside Lands Committee acknowledged that “a public burial place is a necessity, and…the tract designated was the best for the purpose, and least objectionable of any at our disposal. It is sheltered from the wind to some extent; has a beautiful view; is susceptible of cultivation, and has a firm clayey soil, which is much better in a sanitary point of view than a light or sandy soil.” As a public burial ground, City Cemetery included significant space to bury San Francisco’s indigent dead. The large Potter’s Field, now beneath and surrounding the Legion of Honor building, took in an estimated 11,000 burials, which the city paid for. These graves were distinguished with no more than a plank painted white, like Thomas W. Wood’s, each marked with a number that indicated the deceased’s place in the burial register. But those records weren’t perfect. When a San Francisco Call reporter visited the cemetery in February 1882, he asked a gravedigger how many graves there were. The gravedigger replied, “I numbered up to three thousand, and then began with ‘one’ again.” By that time, 4,118 burials had been recorded, but it could have been more; cemetery workers said they sometimes buried two people in one hole. Not long after City Cemetery opened, local benevolent associations began claiming plots. Among them were the Knights of Pythias, the Grand Army of the Republic, and the Ladies’ Seamen’s Friend Society, a female-run chari-
JASON HENRY The Kong Chow funerary monument, once a central part of a Chinese plot where perhaps 3,700 graves remain in the earth, is one of two former Golden Gate Cemetery markers on the Lincoln Park Golf Course. table organization that looked after destitute sailors. By 1887, there were 45 sub-cemeteries linked to local societies and associations, including 26 connected to Chinese community groups. More than 10,000 Chinese residents were buried in City Cemetery over its years of operation, making it the largest and most significant burial ground for San Francisco’s Chinese communities, say historians LaBounty and Ryder. During the mid- to late 1800s, many Chinese residents in San Francisco didn’t regard local cemeteries as permanent resting places. Most who came to the city planned to stay only long enough to make some money before returning home. Chinese community associations took on the responsibility of burying their brethren in San Francisco if they died there and also handled the task of returning their bones to China. If a body was “buried in a strange land, untended by his family, [the] soul would never stop wandering in the darkness of the other world,” Shih-shan Henry Tsai wrote in The Chinese Experience in America. Shantang (benevolent society) representatives kept track of graves and arranged for permits to disinter the bodies four years or more after burial. They paid the city $10 per disinterment, $2.50 of which went to the cemetery. Bones were cleaned, if necessary, and sealed in a tin box marked with the name of the deceased. They were stored in Chinatown before sailing to the deceased’s hometown in China. About 6,300 Chinese burials were disinterred and sent home; the ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 21
RICHARD BARNES Graves were found nestled amid the plumbing at the Legion of Honor in 1994. The museum turned over about 900 remains to the San Francisco medical examiner. rest remain in the earth near the Kong Chow monument, Ryder says. San Francisco’s Chinese immigrants began arriving in much higher numbers during the gold rush and immediately faced horrific racism. They were wrongly blamed for many disease epidemics, and their cemeteries became targets too. White San Franciscans complained to the city about Chinese burial and exhumation practices and often used the euphemism “abatement of nuisance” as an argument for closing San Francisco’s cemeteries or limiting the activities of Chinese residents. Other times, they didn’t bother with euphemisms; their bigotry was stated openly. The Richmond District Improvement Club was thrilled when the city agreed to close City Cemetery in the late 1890s. In a resolution, the club celebrated “getting rid of this pest-breeding spot and forever remov[ing] from the sight of visitors to the district the pagan rites of scraping the flesh from the bones of deceased Chinese who had been buried there, which to our people was a sickening and dreaded sight, once seen not soon to be forgotten.” 22 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 Racism wasn’t the only reason many San Franciscans wanted the cemeteries gone. At the time, it was commonly believed that graveyards spread disease through the air and groundwater, and many of the city’s older burial grounds, which lacked the money for upkeep, had become derelict. More than anything, though, prospectors wanted to cash in on surging property values. A DUTY TO THE LIVING The fight to end San Francisco’s cemeteries was as long as it was messy—and it started before the first graves in City Cemetery were dug. Richmond district residents had begun agitating for the removal of their sepulchral neighbors on Lone Mountain by the end of the 1860s, and by 1901 they’d persuaded municipal leaders to ban further burials anywhere in the city. “No feeling is more honorable or creditable than respect for the dead,” James “Sunny Jim” Rolph Jr., San Francisco’s mayor from 1911 to 1932, proclaimed in 1914. However, “the duty of government is more to the living than to the dead. We must provide for the expansion of our city.” Eventually, a majority of voters agreed with him. In 1937, they overwhelmingly approved a measure forcing the Lone Mountain cemeteries to relocate their dead elsewhere. An estimated 150,000 graves were moved south, transforming the tiny town of Colma into San Francisco’s personal necropolis. City Cemetery was different. While Richmond residents were eager to remove the graves and turn the property into a public park, few burials were ultimately moved. Long before voters went to the polls, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors sent notices to every organization with members buried in City Cemetery and set a removal deadline of July 1, 1909. But almost none of these associations had the necessary funds. Likewise, San Francisco didn’t want to pay to dig up the massive Potter’s Field. Aside from the earlier Chinese disinterments, only about 2,300 graves went elsewhere, Ryder estimates. On top of that, brush fires in 1891 and 1903 destroyed a number of the wooden grave markers, making it easier to forget who was buried
there. As soon as the deadline passed, the city ordered that the remaining graves be “leveled over and the tombs destroyed.” Almost immediately, local golfers began agitating for the city to open a public course, so players didn’t have to belong to a stuffy country club, says Richard Harris, cofounder and president of the San Francisco Public Golf Alliance. In August 1909, just a month after the deadline to remove the graves from City Cemetery, the S.F. Board of Park Commissioners voted to install a golf course atop the graveyard. Golfers had already built a 3-hole course on the site in 1902, which had expanded to 9 holes by 1909 and 18 holes by 1918. The site was renamed Lincoln Park, to denote the fact that it was at the western end of the cross-country Lincoln Highway. The golf course was the first public one in San Francisco and one of the first in the western United States, Harris says. Harris began playing golf at Lincoln Park decades ago, at the age of 12. Even then, he was well aware that he was golfing in a graveyard. “When you’re playing golf there, you can’t not know that. At the first hole, you walk past the Chinese burial site. You know a cemetery marker when you see it.” Lincoln Park visitors may have always recognized these graveyard monuments, but it’s not clear they knew how many thousands of graves remained in the ground. The dead started to make themselves known again in February 1921, as crews broke ground on the California Palace of the Legion of Honor, as it was originally called. The museum, funded by Alma de Bretteville Spreckels and her husband, Adolph, who made his money through sugar plantations and breeding racehorses, was built as a memorial to California soldiers killed in World War I. As workers dug into the earth, they tore open 1,500 graves. “The site of the $250,000 memorial to the dead was once a cemetery. It still is, but the bones are now scattered. In the excavation work for the memorial workmen have uncovered about 1500 skeleton-filled coffins,” reporter Vid Larsen wrote for the Daily News in 1921. Larsen and a colleague visited the site during construction and reported “piles of bones not completely covered by the dirt,” many coffins cut in half by the teeth of excavating machines, and more coffins poking out from the soil. Local college students bought some of the skulls. The foreman told the reporters that his crews refused to touch the bones. “The only thing we can do,” he said, “is to scrape them over and cover them up again.” The Legion of Honor opened on Armistice Day, November 11, 1924, atop thousands of graves. The burials remained relatively undisturbed until 1993, when a new round of excavations at the museum uncovered what archaeologist Miley Holman described as a “charnel heap,” a mass grave likely left over from the 1921 construction. The remains, archaeologists found, belonged mostly to elderly white people buried in redwood coffins. Their bones showed signs of age and heavy labor: fractures, skeletal trauma, arthritis. Museum officials and builders didn’t want to deal with the work of processing the remains; Harry Parker, the director of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, complained to the San Francisco Chronicle that the delays associated with the discovery would cost $50,000 a month. Ultimately, the Legion of Honor turned the remains of about 900 early San Franciscans over to the medical examiner’s office, and they were reinterred in Skylawn Memorial Park in Colma. The rest, however, are still there. Of the remaining graves, a spokesperson for the Legion of Honor says, “We are monitoring the city process and will determine how the designation of Lincoln Park will impact the museum operations as we learn more.” City Cemetery’s history speaks to San Francisco’s profound disrespect for the dead, LaBounty says, adding, “It points toward how we treat different socioeconomic levels. That’s the reason it was so easily transformed into a park, and there wasn’t more outcry about not disinterring the dead. It mostly consisted of groups outside the power structure.” Now that S.F. leaders may make City Cemetery a local landmark, some of those groups are beginning to reclaim it. UNDERGROUND TALES In October 2021, dozens of Chinese American San Franciscans gathered at City Cemetery’s Kong Chow monument for Chung Yeung, an autumn festival that often includes paying homage to the dead. Golfers’ games were paused as locals brought in alcohol and food, including a whole roast pig, as well as paper money and incense to burn as offerings, says Supervisor Chan. “Many of our Chinese elders were there, and some got teary-eyed. It was a moment to think about their parents, and grandparents, and great-grandparents.” It was the first such ceremony in decades, possibly since the 1907 memorial for Hew Kong, president of the Yung Wo Association, who died suddenly on November 27, 1901, after a fight with the Chinese consul, Sun Sze Yee. As soon as Chan proposed making City Cemetery a landmark, in April 2021, golfers began to worry. The course’s lawns and tees had grown shabby, and the clubhouse was in poor shape, Harris says. Many were concerned that landmarking the cemetery would make it more difficult, or perhaps impossible, for the city to keep the golf course in playable condition. Chan says there’s no reason that making the cemetery a landmark should interfere with maintaining the golf course: “We’re all trying to find ways to share the space and be inclusive and respectful to each other.” In a letter on behalf of the public golf association, Harris urged the city to consider landmarking the whole, multilayered history of the site, including the golf course, the Legion of Honor, and the Holocaust Memorial near the museum, designed by artist George Segal and installed in 1984. But only City Cemetery is being considered for landmark status under Article 10 of San Francisco’s planning code, says Allison Vanderslice, principal environmental planner for the city. The site “is significant for its ability to add to our understanding of history and also its cultural associations and its funerary structures.” It captures the cultural diversity of early San Francisco, too, she says. If the S.F. Board of Supervisors approves landmark status for City Cemetery, the designation will not entail new signage for the site. But, separately, the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission plans to install an informational panel that briefly discusses the history of City Cemetery and the remains found along El Camino Del Mar, says Kari Hervey-Lentz, an archaeologist in the city’s planning department. Hervey-Lentz and Ryder are reluctant to reveal specific places where remains could be found; they don’t want to make it easy for relic hunters to dig up bones or other grave goods. It’s rare, but it happens: in the 1960s, local kids digging for fun in the park near Clement Street and 39th Avenue unearthed a Jewish headstone that dates back to 1858. It may have been moved from an earlier Jewish cemetery at Gough and Green Streets, Ryder says. The poet Kenneth Rexroth once argued that there is “nothing underground about” San Francisco. On the contrary, it is a city with history as layered and rich as the Franciscan Complex stone that underlies it. The original home of the Ohlone people is famed for the Spanish colonizers, the gold rush, the Beats and the Summer of Love, queer and trans rights movements, and the tech boom. It’s also famed for having no cemeteries within city limits, even though it still has a few: the historic graveyard at Mission Dolores de Asís, the National Cemetery in the Presidio, the Columbarium with its thousands of niches for cremated remains. And City Cemetery; most of its dead are still there too. And yet, because San Francisco outsourced its burials in the 20th century, it’s a city where local victims of the 1906 earthquake and fire (3,000), the AIDS crisis (20,000), the Jonestown massacre (909), and the COVID-19 pandemic (946 and counting) couldn’t be buried in the place they called home. In San Francisco, do the dead matter? Time and time again, through a combination of poor planning, lack of foresight, and human greed, city officials have demonstrated that the dead don’t matter. Landmarking City Cemetery may begin to change that. Since the Chung Yeung ceremony last October, there are already signs of it happening, particularly at the Kong Chow monument. Someone has been keeping fresh flowers, incense, and a broom at the site to pay respect to the dead buried there, says Hervey-Lentz. “It’s rewarding to see this work contributing to the heritage of these groups” and the importance of this site recognized. Chan hopes that local Chinese American elders and community organizations will return to the monument each year to celebrate Chung Yeung and similar ceremonies. And she hopes that landmarking the cemetery will create more respect for San Francisco’s historic dead overall. “Not just for [residents] who are here now but for generations to come and for immigrants.… It will remind people that San Francisco has always been a city of immigrants, a refuge for people who want to come here and thrive here.” Q Beth Winegarner is a longtime Bay Area journalist and the author of several books. She loves researching the hidden histories and human stories behind everyday places. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 23
A PAINTER’S PAINTER By EMILY WILSON • Photo by CAROLYN FONG Bernice Bing Steps into View San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum celebrates the work of a queer Chinese American artist with a long-overdue retrospective. I magine an artist: Chinese American, lesbian, and a Californian, her work overlooked in the mostly male and East Coast–dominated field of abstract expressionism. And now imagine that this artist had been orphaned as a little girl and shuttled back and forth between 17 white foster homes, an orphanage, and occasionally her grandma, before earning a scholarship to what is now California College of the Arts. “Bernice Bing, in so many ways, she represents a miracle,” says Abby Chen, a contemporary art curator at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco. “Orphaned at such a young age and with [such] undeniable talent that she was able to get into California College of the Arts. It’s so rare to find an Asian in a prestigious art school [at that time].” Chen has put together Into View: Bernice Bing, on display at the Asian Art Museum through May 1, 2023. This lively exhibition is the first in a series that features the work of underrecognized modern and contemporary artists. “I think for Bernice, who some knew as Bingo, her story was obscured,” says artist Lenore Chinn, a friend of Bing’s who considered her a mentor. “And women in general, I think, in that time frame were passed over in favor of the spotlighting of male artists.” Into View seeks to correct this. The show, which contains 20 paintings and drawings, aims to trace Bing’s journey from the abstract expressionism of the 1950s and ’60s to her blending of Zen calligraphy and abstraction in the 1980s and ’90s. cult circumstances of her life. At California College of the Arts, she studied with abstract painter Saburo Hasegawa, who introduced her to Zen calligraphy and Buddhist philosophy, and with Richard Diebenkorn, an abstract expressionist who became a leader in Bay Area figurative painting. Bing transferred to what’s now known as the San Francisco Art Institute, where she completed her undergraduate degree and studied with other expressionists, including Joan Brown and Elmer Bischoff. She received a master’s degree in fine art from SFAI in 1961 and became one of the few women in the Beat scene in San Francisco. in 1963 that features landscape imagery and focuses on the beauty of nature. In a rare artist statement from 1990, she writes, “For me, all nature is pure, and purely abstracted; the spiritual union links both the seen and the unseen forms of nature. Freedom, for example, is seeing trees as pure energy, light, and mass made up of linear particles.” The show also presents artworks exploring her Asian heritage and Buddhism, including one that references a revered Buddhist scripture, the Lotus Sutra. Bing died in 1998 from cancer, and her last major work, Epilogue (1990–95), a triptych of abstract and figurative forms, also hangs in the show. Bing’s bold colors and dynamic strokes be- CHARLES SNYDER; © BERNICE BING ESTATE Bernice Bing (1936–1998) at her studio in San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood around 1961. AN ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM OF HER OWN Bing was born in 1936 in San Francisco’s Chinatown, a community still affected at the time by the U.S. Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which banned Chinese people from immigrating and prevented those of Chinese ancestry from becoming citizens. Through drawing, she could escape and try to make sense of the diffi- 24 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 Into View includes some of Bing’s early pieces that combine elements from abstract expressionism and the Bay Area figurative movement, like A Lady and a Road Map (1962); ink drawings that have never been exhibited before; and work produced while she was employed as a caretaker at Napa’s Mayacamas Vineyards long to abstract expressionism, but her study of calligraphy and Zen Buddhism, encouraged by her mentor Hasegawa, also shows up in her work, says Mark Dean Johnson, previously an associate dean at SFAI, a former professor of art at San Francisco State University, and the author of Asian American Art: A History, 1850–1970.
Curatorial fellow Naz Cuguoglu (left) and contemporary art curator Abby Chen, at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco.
He relates a conversation that he had with Bing and community arts programs. Cuguoğlu nominated videos for that project about Hasegawa’s influence: “She [told me], Chinn, Bing’s friend and fellow artist, also and organized a reading group for it with art‘You can imagine this Asian woman, who’s ba- recalls Bing’s commitment to others. After ists and researchers from the Asian diaspora. sically looking for their place in the art world, returning from China, Bing moved to the Men- She calls this a good way to support one anothto have someone talking to them about Asian docino County town of Philo but remained a er and come up with alternative institutional philosophy, Asian art history, and suggesting vital figure in the Bay Area. “She would drive structures to “break the hierarchies of learning that it was an opportunity for her to define or to out all the way from Philo, which is up north and knowledge.” help guide her artistic search.’ ” Bing’s work, Cuguoğlu explains, gives her several hours away, and attend our [AAWAA] In 1984, Bing traveled to what is now the meetings or show up for our various events,” a fresh lens with which to view the collection. China Academy of Art, in Hangzhou, to study Chinn says. “And when we put shows together, “She’s this Chinese American lesbian artist inwith Wang Dongling, whom Johnson calls she was there, helping out and lending her volved in the San Francisco Bay Area commuone of the world’s preeminent abstract callig- hand, so to speak.” nity and arts, but so generous and building all raphers. The sojourn led Bing to incorporate Chinn says that it means a lot to see her these allyships and collaboration,” she says. “I’m calligraphic markings into her paintings, in a friend’s work at major institutions like the thinking, How can she give us inspiration?” unique and personal way. Asian Art Museum. And Into View is just the “She had a distinctly Bingo voice that was beginning of what curator Chen, with assis- A NEW CANON both Western and Eastern because she had tance from curatorial fellow Naz Cuguoğlu, Johnson remembers that when he started a number of Asian American influences, not has planned. Cuguoğlu has been a researcher working at SFAI in 1989, he had a conversation just Hasegawa, who I think introduced to her at San Francisco museums and has curated with Villa and some others about how U.S. art the concept of calligraphy as abstract ges- exhibitions in San Francisco, Baltimore, and history books were almost exclusively devoted ture,” says Trisha Lagaso Goldberg, the board her hometown of Istanbul. to white men—with maybe Georgia O’Keeffe president of SOMArts Cultural Center, a Bay “I’m specially focusing on women artists, thrown in. The discussion led to a conference Area arts organization. “Her experience as a queer artists, other underrepresented artists, three years later on ways to make art history Chinese American and growing up more inclusive. Thirty years later, in Chinatown and being part of that Johnson finds the Asian Art Musecommunity also has a part in storyum’s expansion of its mission deeply telling in her practice.” satisfying. Johnson and Lagaso Goldberg re“Carlos and Bernice were friends cently cocurated a show on Filipino and classmates, and the fact that American artist Carlos Villa, Bing’s their exhibitions are overlapping contemporary and fellow SFAI alum, for a few weeks is evidence again of at the Asian Art Museum (on view this recent commitment of the muthrough October 24, 2022). Lagaseum,” Johnson says. “It’s evidence so Goldberg recounts going through of Abby’s vision to highlight local Villa’s archives and being delighted artists, to make it clear that San to discover the many exhibitions he Francisco’s own backyard is ground and Bing had together, notably a zero.” 1960 show, Gangbang, at the Bat“It is vital to acknowledge how man Gallery in San Francisco, that economic, racist, and heteronoralso included Joan Brown and Manmative structures contributed to uel Neri. the historical erasure of her work,” Lagaso Goldberg, like Villa and filmmaker Yoshida says of Bing. Bing, went to SFAI, and she says “During the years around abstract she has a soft spot for the artists expressionism, especially, romantic who came out of the school. “I have partnerships determined a woman’s a real bias for painters who are real success and visibility as an artist. painters’ painters and who really Bernice Bing, as a lesbian and a know how to make a canvas sing woman of color, did not have access through abstract brushstrokes to the same privileges as her counthat are really super brushy or terparts, Joan Brown [married to © BERNICE BING ESTATE; PHOTO © ASIAN ART MUSEUM OF SAN FRANCISCO minimal,” Lagaso Goldberg says. Manuel Neri] and Jay DeFeo [mar“When I look at Bingo’s work, it’s A Lady and a Road Map (1962), by Bernice Bing. ried to Wally Hedrick].” very legible to me that she’s part With Into View, Chen has set out of a history of painting in the Bay Area and and immigrant artists,” Cuguoğlu says. “And my to help Bing and others claim their rightful particularly SFAI.” role is to think about what kind of collecting ap- place in the art world. “I think with both the Bernice Bing exhibition and the research that proach or exhibition approach we can develop.” A BROADER VIEW Buoyed by the Bing show, Cuguoğlu is comes with it, what Naz is doing, I think we are As a prelude to the Into View exhibit, combing the collection, looking for the founda- reinforcing that this is indeed the canon,” Chen two summers ago the Asian Art Museum tions of upcoming exhibitions. “She’s coming says. “Ideally that through all of these different screened the short documentary The Worlds in with a fresh eye and an understanding of practices, we can find new models and new of Bernice Bing, which explores the artist’s what Bernice Bing has done, and using that practices that innovate the institution.” And in doing so, the Asian Art Museum and activism and her prominent contributions to as sort of a northern star to look into what we its upcoming shows honor the work—and the Bay Area arts organizations. “Bing champi- have,” Chen says. oned the disenfranchised and underserved,” When it comes to programming, Chen spirit—of Bing. “It’s long overdue to celebrate says Jen Banta Yoshida, a coproducer of the sees clear value in bringing in new ideas and and sing praises and show our respect and film, via email. “Bing made sure that arts pro- perspectives from outside the museum. Invit- to really shine a light on these San Francisco grams and funding were accessible to artists ing Johnson and Lagaso Goldberg to curate Asian American creative giants,” Lagaso Goldthe Villa show, for instance. Or hiring Padma berg says. “That’s it. To me, that’s the headline. in the community.” Bing served as the executive director of Maitland, an architecture professor at Califor- We’re long overdue.” Q SOMArts, worked for the Neighborhood Arts nia Polytechnic State University and a former Program in Chinatown, was a founding mem- curator of Asian art at Stanford’s Cantor Arts Emily Wilson is a San Francisco freelance ber of the Asian American Women Artists Center, who worked with Chen on a 2021 ex- writer who covers arts and culture. She wrote Association (AAWAA), and cofounded SCRAP, hibition of short videos, After Hope: Videos of about the opera El Último Sueño de Frida y Diego for Alta Journal, Summer 2022. which provides discarded supplies to schools Resistance, at the museum. 26 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21
WHY THIS ART By COURT LURIE Utopian Elation in Julie Mehretu’s HOWL, eon (I, II) W hen I engage with HOWL, eon (I, II), by Julie Mehretu, I am filled with gratitude. I’ve cried when I’ve encountered paintings like this, and this one makes my heart ache. It is a love song that moves me. It is a steeple for pupils of light who arrive at its doorstep seeking questions, searching its face for truth. After deep examination, architecture is revealed, meticulous brushstrokes that spark a story that speaks loudly. Hold still and listen. The painting breathes with gray thunder. Hold still—watch the world unfold through its lines and holes. A world filled with the wails and whimpers of mothers. Yet the palette runs through like a glimmer of hope in the face of rage, injustice, and the greater laws of the land. It exudes connection, deliberate, specific, brilliant. Here, Mehretu handles transitions with wit and grace as color palette meets line meets shadow meets pinks meets blues meets whites. Through lime and peach and pear and pine, through drumbeats, and bass players, and horns blowing, and people glowing. Inside these crevices, mysteries of reconciliation and forgiveness are found. My feet dance in the streets. Mehretu moves my hands to write and my body to paint and draw. To howl in the face of unfound freedom. To scream in the streets for holy redemption! Can mountains be moved with art? I am feeling optimistic (and still a little sarcastic) and have begun to dream again. This painting calls to my people, “Go to one another. Come together, and build together.” The gesture of HOWL is a map of worlds colliding in prose and poetry to shape a language, bridging one reality to another. Crafted like a cerebral poem, HOWL enlivens a conversation about utopian elation. Listen to it and you may hear the whispers of tomorrow. Q Court Lurie’s work hangs in public and private collections around the country, including at Austin City Hall and the Austin-Bergstrom International Airport. She has spearheaded many collaborations with other artists, community organizations, and government projects that advocate for and support the arts, including Art Alliance Austin and Big Medium’s Creative Standard. She lives and works in Austin. © JULIE MEHRETU; COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND MARIAN GOODMAN GALLERY; PHOTOS BY TOM POWEL IMAGING Julie Mehretu’s HOWL, eon (I, II) is a diptych created in 2016–17 that was commissioned by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art as a gift from Helen and Charles Schwab. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 27

SEMPER PARATUS By JULIAN SMITH • Illustrations by MARK SMITH Miracle on the Mountain Deep in California’s Trinity Alps, two firefighters battling a fast-moving blaze were gravely injured by a falling boulder. Their best option for survival: a four-person Coast Guard team adept at sea rescues. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 29

he call came in a little after 9 p.m. on September 5: a medevac was needed for two badly injured wildland firefighters in Northern California’s Trinity Alps, in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest. It wasn’t unexpected. Fighting fires in the backcountry was a dangerous job, and the 2019 fire season was well underway. Lightning had already ignited 124 blazes across the region in September, including 18 in Shasta-Trinity alone. What was surprising was who picked up the call: the U.S. Coast Guard Sector Humboldt Bay in McKinleyville, about 58 miles west of the firefighters. The helicopter rescue team on duty—aircraft commander Derek Schramel, 36; copilot Adam Ownbey, 32; rescue swimmer Graham McGinnis, 34; and flight mechanic Tyler Cook, 23—were just settling in for the night when they were summoned to the command center. They went over what little information they had. Two wildland firefighters, part of a 20-person crew employed by a private company under contract to the U.S. Forest Service, had been hit by a rolling boulder: one in the head and neck, who had been knocked unconscious for approximately 30 seconds, and the other in the leg, whose femur was shattered. The pair were stuck on a steep slope at about 5,000 feet, close to the fire line and miles from the nearest major road. Carrying them out would be next to impossible—the ground was covered with rocks and downed trees—and could put everyone’s lives at risk. The crew’s leader—whom the Coast Guard would call the incident commander throughout this ordeal—said on the radio that both men were in bad shape. He was worried that the one with the broken leg might not survive the night. Two agencies, including the California Highway Patrol, were contacted to perform a search and rescue mission; the CHP was deterred by the risk involved. The incident commander was desperate. Coast Guard helicopter rescue teams train endlessly to do things like pull sailors off floundering ships in stormy seas. In fact, Schramel and the others had spent the afternoon practicing hoists off a 47-foot Coast Guard motor lifeboat. Teams like theirs are encouraged to think outside the box and improvise in new situations. But lifting severely injured firefighters off a burning mountain? “That was vastly outside our realm of experience,” Schramel says. Cook was the newest flight mechanic in the unit, and neither he nor Ownbey had ever flown a search and rescue mission before. Their twin-engine Dolphin MH-65 helicopter was sleek and agile. But the red-and-white craft had limited power and fuel reserves, its performance started to suffer above about 3,000 feet, and fire-heated air is thinner and offers less lift. In any case, landing in a forest of 200-foot trees was out of the question. The firefighting crew had cut down enough trees to make a small clearing, which meant the rescue team would have to perform a cable hoist from a high hover, at night, a challenging operation under the best of conditions. McGinnis had been with the unit for only a few months, but his EMT training compelled him to speak up. A broken femur can be life-threatening, he said. If a femoral artery is cut, you can bleed out internally and never see a drop of blood. That very thing had happened in the same forest in 2008. A firefighter with Olympic National Park, his femur shattered by a falling tree, had bled to death in the back of a Coast Guard helicopter after waiting for hours to be rescued. That wasn’t the only disaster that season: two weeks later, an overloaded helicopter crashed during takeoff from a remote helispot, killing seven firefighters and two pilots. Coast Guard teams evaluate every potential mission in terms of risk versus gain. Everyone has to be in agreement, and anyone can decide to turn around at any time. McGinnis and the others decided that the severity of the injuries and the fact that they were likely the only remaining medevac option within range tilted the equation enough to at least try. They would fly to the scene and see whether a rescue was even possible. They started gearing up and prepping the Dolphin for flight. At 11 p.m., with Ownbey at the controls, they took off from the fog-covered airfield and flew east into the alps. T uring the half-hour flight, the team went over checklists and did their best to game-plan potential scenarios. A quarter moon was setting, leaving the mountains in darkness almost too deep for their night vision goggles. They then cleared a ridge, and a huge glow lit the horizon. “That was a gut check for all of us—what exactly are we getting ourselves into?” Schramel said. A half dozen firefighters were stuck in a north-south canyon about three miles wide and surrounded by sheer ridgelines on three sides, like a bowl. The top half of the east ridge was on fire. Smoke filled the canyon, rising into an anvil-like thunderhead. Schramel took the controls from Ownbey and started circling. They spotted a trail of headlamps on the east ridge about half a mile below the fire line and radioed the incident commander to say they were headed his way. “No, that’s not us,” he said. “That’s our relief team coming up. You need to look higher up toward the fire.” It took one more pass to find the faint glint of more headlamps about 20 yards from the fire line. “You could feel it in the aircraft,” McGinnis says. “Everybody was like—whoa.” Schramel started working to get into a hover over the clearing the firefighters had cut. Every workable approach route seemed to carry them over the flames. The air, already thinned by the heat and elevation, churned with updrafts of up to 100 miles per hour, forcing him to adjust power to keep a steady altitude. Whenever they reached the clearing, the updrafts would abruptly stop, and the Dolphin would start to fall toward the trees. Each time, Schramel had to peel away down the canyon just to stay in the air. He had no depth perception through his night vision goggles, and whenever he looked near the fire, the flames’ light turned his field of vision into blinding static. With no flat horizon for reference, he fought the vertigo that can make helicopter pilots misjudge their orientation and tilt in the wrong direction. Schramel had 11 years of flying experience and was an instructor at the Coast Guard’s Advanced Helicopter Rescue School. But this was the toughest flying he had ever done. “There’s no words to describe how hard it was,” he says. “My sole preoccupation was trying not to kill everybody.” D They were likely the only remaining option. They would fly to the scene and see whether a rescue was even possible. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 31

He kept trying. In the copilot seat, Ownbey served as a second pair of eyes, monitoring the instruments and watching the fuel level creep closer to “bingo,” the cutoff point where there was just enough left to fly back. McGinnis could hear the doubt in their voices as they tried to maneuver into position again and again. After about 10 tries, Schramel found an approach that avoided the flames: he skimmed a high ridge at treetop level and made a fast descent toward the clearing. It was almost midnight when he settled into a hover. The mountainside was so steep that redwoods rose above them on two sides. McGinnis sprang into action. He hooked his harness to the end of the hoist cable and looked out the open door on the Dolphin’s right side. The only light came from the fire and the helicopter’s spotlights knifing through the smoky air. He looked down at the tiny clearing lit by flaming trees. The Dolphin was at least 200 feet above it, and the cable was only 240 feet long. If Schramel lost power or veered just slightly too far in any direction, McGinnis could be dragged through the trees, or the cable could snap, or both. He sized up the situation and told Schramel that if things got out of control once he was on the ground, the aircraft commander should leave him behind, even overnight. Absolutely not, Schramel replied. McGinnis had made it through the Coast Guard’s grueling training program, his branch’s equivalent of the Navy’s SEAL training. During Hurricane Harvey in 2017, he had waded through flooded Houston neighborhoods, searching for people trapped on roofs, and watched as a hoist cable was sheared by a power line. Still, the view over the burning ridge left him momentarily speechless. “What the fuck am I doing?” he said. He knew that flight mechanics like Cook had hundreds of hours of experience in hoisting swimmers to safety. Still, as he prepared to step out the door, he gestured and yelled at Cook to watch out for the “candy cane,” the red-andwhite warning stripes that marked the last 10 feet of cable. “I kind of gave him the googly eyes,” McGinnis says. “ ‘Hey, man, just watch.’ ” It took so long to get to the ground that the roar of the rotors eventually began to fade overhead. Then McGinnis started to spin. “I just remember seeing black, fire, tree, black, fire, tree, over and over,” he says. Cook watched the glow of the flashlight on McGinnis’s helmet grow dimmer. Along with manning the winch, his job was to give Schramel directions to keep them over the clearing: “Tree just off your nose. You’re drifting right. Hold position.” McGinnis was still at least 25 feet off the ground when the candy cane appeared. Cook carefully guided Schramel to bring the helicopter to the side until McGinnis could grab a tree, unhook from the cable, and shimmy down awkwardly. It wasn’t pretty, but it got him to the ground. He scrambled uphill over a mass of felled trees to reach the firefighters. Half a dozen men in yellow shirts and hard hats stood backlit by fire and covered in dust. The two injured firefighters were already strapped onto backboards and covered with Mylar blankets. Within seconds, the rotor wash whipped the blankets away, and McGinnis could see one man’s right foot pointed almost backward. He radioed up for Cook to lower the litter. But on the way down, it started to pendulum in bigger and bigger arcs. Cook had no choice but to bring the litter back up to attach a trail line to it. Before he could do this, they were at bingo. They had only enough fuel left to bring McGinnis up. McGinnis told the incident commander they had to go. They would head to Redding, about 50 miles southeast, to refuel and reassess the situation. He knew there was a chance they wouldn’t be allowed to come back, if the higher-ups decided the mission was too risky. “I didn’t want to give any promises,” he says. “He was obviously disappointed.” Cook had to guide the helicopter even lower so McGinnis could hook back onto the cable. The ride up was just as frightening as the descent. “I had to consciously force myself to stop white-knuckling the hoist hook so I didn’t unintentionally unlock it,” he says. he atmosphere in the cabin was grim on the way to Redding. “Everyone was palpably dismayed—the doubt was definitely creeping in hard,” McGinnis says. They landed at the Redding airport at about 2 a.m. and started talking as the helicopter was being refueled. “I saw the patients, and they’re in bad shape,” McGinnis told his teammates. “And they’re not going to be able to hike these guys out on backboards—it’s just too rugged.” Remember how hard it was just to find the right approach angle, he added. Any other helicopter team that went out would be starting over from scratch. They weren’t just the best hope of rescue—they were very likely the only one. The team started running the numbers on fuel, weight, distance, and time. They did this on every mission, but the margins here were especially slim. Every extra pound of fuel, gear, or people limited their flight time and affected the aircraft’s performance. It was a complex calculation with lives on the line. McGinnis had two ideas that might give them more of a safety margin. Instead of lowering him and the rescue litter separately, they could send them both down at once; then they could bring him and a patient back up at the same time. This would cut hoist time in half and could mean the difference between rescuing one or both men. The maneuver wasn’t part of standard Coast Guard training, and none of them had ever tried it before. But other agencies and private companies apparently did it, and it didn’t seem that complicated. And if they fieldstripped the aircraft of everything they didn’t absolutely need, as another team had done during Hurricane Harvey, they could eke out more time in the air and leave more room for the patients. They checked in with their commander, who approved the plan. They would retrieve both patients, if possible, and bring them to a small airfield in Weaverville, only a five-minute flight from the rescue scene. There, they would transfer the patients to a private emergency air medical service called REACH. That airfield didn’t have refueling services, so there would be no return trip for McGinnis and his companions. The team started dumping out everything that wasn’t nailed down: rafts, searchlights, extra seats, anything related to water rescues. When they were done, over 200 pounds of gear lay piled on the floor of the hangar. By 3 a.m., the Dolphin was aloft and en route. When they updated the incident commander on their position, he said that his crew had tried to carry the femur patient down the mountain. In an hour, they had gone only 40 feet. T The fuel level crept closer to “bingo,” the cutoff point where there was just enough left to fly back. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 33

he Coast Guard team arrived to find that the fire had crawled downhill, closer to the clearing, which was now surrounded by burning trees on three sides. There was only one approach route that wasn’t on fire: flying straight toward the mountainside. That meant that if they lost power, a crash was almost inevitable. Schramel could barely see through the smoke and flying embers. Aiming one of the landing lights horizontally at the trees gave him a makeshift reference point, and somehow he managed to get into a hover again. McGinnis struggled to connect himself and the litter to the hoist hook and wrestle the whole setup into position. The rotors sucked smoke into the cabin like a black tornado as he hooked up and Cook helped him shuffle toward the open door. McGinnis could feel the heat of the fire on the way down. The air was full of dust and ash, and flames were climbing the trees right under the tail of the helicopter. (“That got my attention,” he says.) He landed and lugged the litter up the hill to where the fire crew were waiting, now only a few dozen feet from the fire line. He jammed the litter into the hillside below the first patient, wedging his knees underneath to keep it horizontal. McGinnis estimated that the man weighed about 280 pounds. He screamed as his crewmates lifted him onto the litter. “I could see his thigh jiggling like jello,” McGinnis says. In just minutes, McGinnis and the patient were ready for Cook to begin lifting them to the helicopter. Their combined weight made the Dolphin dip to the right, but Schramel reacted quickly and steadied the aircraft. As McGinnis clambered aboard, Cook helped maneuver the litter inside. The men tried to lift the patient, still attached to the backboard, out of the litter and onto a low shelf inside the low-ceilinged, cramped space. McGinnis squatted and lifted as Cook pushed from below. But no matter how hard they strained, the backboard just wouldn’t budge. “At this point, my brain is going, ‘You’re running out of time, you’re running out of time,’ ” McGinnis says. Every extra second they spent hovering was burning fuel and flight time. McGinnis gave one huge heave and howled as pain from a pulled muscle shot through his back. The backboard popped free—a buckle had been caught on the litter—and he and Cook managed to heave the patient onto the shelf. They immediately started readying themselves to fetch the next man. There was no way they could leave him behind. Beginning his descent, McGinnis could see that just a few minutes of hovering had fanned the flames even higher. Blowing ash and dust were working through the balaclava over his mouth, and he could feel grit on his teeth. But he was humming on adrenaline, and now he knew the new hoist method worked. The second patient was shirtless, with a cervical collar as well as bandages around his head and one shoulder. His fellow firefighters were clearly relieved that their crewmates were likely going to be safe. Just before the cable went taut, one of them, blackened from head to toe in dirt and ash, leaned over McGinnis and said thanks. The final hoist seemed to take forever. McGinnis looked down at the red glow of the fire just feet from where he had been standing. He could feel himself grinning in disbelief. “I can’t believe we just pulled this off,” he thought. With the litter on the floor, there was just enough room to close the cabin door. Schramel had to push the engines to maximum power to make up for all the weight. The altitude slowly ticked up foot by foot. “Thank god that was the last hoist,” he says. “There was no way we could have hovered another 30 seconds.” When they were clear of the burning treetops, he passed the controls to Ownbey and took a deep breath. “I swear on my life, I looked forward and watched his shoulders drop from up near his ears,” McGinnis says. T wnbey landed at the small, unlit airfield in the forest outside Weaverville just shy of 4 a.m. Before he was even out of his seat, the patients were unloaded and whisked to a pair of waiting REACH helicopters. The night was suddenly quiet. The team members looked at one another, exhaustion crashing in, wondering what had just happened. “It was an adrenaline dump, for sure,” Ownbey says. None of them had ever been through anything remotely like the past six hours. Their most immediate concern was where they were going to sleep. They were tired enough to consider spending the night in the Dolphin. Luckily for them, they were able to catch a ride with a California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection crew to a fire station a few minutes away. “We ended up straggling along with them like lost puppies,” Schramel says. A couch and a couple of recliners had never looked so inviting. McGinnis couldn’t sleep because of the pain in his back. He finally gave up and went outside. The rising sun was just starting to burn off the early-morning chill. He found a trail around the building and followed it, trying to stretch out the muscles in his back, going over and over in his head what had just happened and how everything, incredibly, had seemed to fall into place. The two patients survived, and the rest of the fire crew made it out safely on foot. The morning after the rescue, a spokesperson for the firefighting company, GFP Enterprises, told local news site Redheaded Blackbelt that both men were in “really good spirits [and] one wanted to go back to work today.” Schramel later reached out to the company to check on the patients, but nobody ever called him back. “It’s a bummer, but that’s the nature of our work sometimes,” he says. “You rarely get to talk to that person after you drop them off.” (GFP Enterprises didn’t respond to requests for comment.) In the months to come, McGinnis and Schramel would be awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, the U.S. military’s highest aviation award for heroism in flight. Ownbey and Cook would receive Air Medals, recognition for their own heroism. Together, the team would receive the Captain Frank A. Erickson Award for exceptional performance while engaged in search and rescue operations. “You want to chalk it up to your skill as professional military aviators,” McGinnis says. “But honestly, we also got really lucky. If just one thing had gone wrong, it would have been a disaster.… I think we were all in shock that we pulled off a miracle.” Q O “My brain is going, ‘You’re running out of time, you’re running out of time.’ ” —Graham McGinnis Julian Smith’s latest book, Aloha Rodeo: Three Hawaiian Cowboys, the World’s Greatest Rodeo, and a Hidden History of the American West, won the 2020 Oregon Book Award. He is a regular contributor to Alta Journal and most recently wrote about a love affair between a British travel writer and a mountain man in 19th-century Colorado for altaonline.com. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 35
GO VOTE By GUSTAVO ARELLANO • Photos by LARRY HIRSHOWITZ Sí Se Puede Orange County political leader Ada Briceño harnessed the power of protest to help the conservative bastion flip from red to blue. Her next test: the 2022 midterm elections. A summer meeting of the Democratic Club of West Orange County has just kicked off at Congregation B’nai Tzedek in Fountain Valley when Ada Briceño walks in, unnoticed. It is quite the feat. She wears a neon-pink T-shirt, stands nearly six feet tall, and is possibly the only Latina in an audience of about 40. Not exactly a reception befitting the chair of the Democratic Party of Orange County. But this is how Briceño wants it. She has come to give a speech, but she wants to read the room first, from the back. It’s a few days after a shooter killed seven people during a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park, Illinois—and the West O.C. Dems are angry and motivated. After about 20 minutes of letting the crowd vent, Briceño approaches the synagogue’s podium. “I have too many mixed emotions after this holiday,” she says, reading from a cell phone. “Independence Day 2022 will always represent a dark time in our history for me.” She lists some of the calamities that the United States has weathered: A radicalized Supreme Court. Mass shootings. Joe Biden’s declining popularity. But as she sees the pained faces of the Dems before her, Briceño ditches the script. “As an organizer, I’ve been taught ‘Don’t mourn, but organize,’ ” the Nicaraguan immigrant says as people nod their heads. Her hands begin to move, her smile becomes wider, her delivery becomes more rhythmic. Her points—a defense of progressive principles, attacks on the GOP, a call to action—become sharper. The audience applause becomes louder. 36 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 The room is hers. Briceño is a multipronged force in Southern California politics. The 49-year-old mother sits on the board of the Community Action Fund of Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties and serves as a Democratic National Committee member. She’s copresident of UNITE HERE Local 11, which represents hospitality and food workers in Southern California and Arizona and has earned worldwide attention for protests that have called out everyone from Jay-Z and Beyoncé, for crossing the picket line at Chateau Marmont, to Disney, for allegedly overworking maids. But it’s as chair of the Democratic Party of Orange County, a position she has now held for nearly four years, that Briceño wants to make history. My native O.C. made national headlines in 2016 and 2018 when the place Ronald Reagan once described as where “all the good Republicans go to die” voted for Hillary Clinton and then went on to elect an all-Democratic congressional delegation. Under Briceño, Orange County once again went blue in the 2020 presidential election. Registered Democrats in O.C. now outnumber Republicans by more than 75,000. Gains by Briceño’s slate of candidates in the 2022 elections, when Democrats are expected to lose the House of Representatives and possibly the Senate, would represent a powerful blow to the GOP in one of its traditional strongholds and provide hope for Democrats nationwide. “She’s the right leader at the right time,” says Rusty Hicks, the California Democratic Party chair. “She can bring the work that has to be done in a place like O.C. to get the wins not just in front of you, but to secure the wins in the years and hopefully decades to come.” “Ada has not been afraid of taking on a different narrative,” says Norberto Santana Jr., publisher of the Voice of OC, a nonprofit news agency that has covered Briceño for nearly a decade. “Whether you like her or don’t like her, she’s fearless.” In a sign of the political climate, Briceño’s biggest critics today aren’t conservatives; they’re former colleagues. “Ada used to be a progressive whose ambitions to become the most powerful woman Democrat in Orange County made her throw people around her under the bus while aligning herself with people she used to despise,” says a former ally who requested anonymity. There are no haters at the Democratic Club of West Orange County meeting. The people there want to hear from a leader, and they do—mostly. Near the end of her remarks, she throws a challenge back at the faithful: “We’re always waiting for someone to do something,” Briceño concludes. “You’re the ones to do it.” FAITH, HOPE, AND HARD WORK About a week before her speech, I visit Briceño at the Democratic Party of Orange County headquarters in Anaheim. It’s in a nondescript office park, its only signpost a small orange sticker on the outside window, and maybe the padlock on the front door that requires a code to access the key that lets people in. Briceño and I sit in her barren office—a room with just a couple of posters and a standup desk. Subdued volunteers huddle in a nearby conference room. It is the week after Roe v. Wade was overturned. The GOP is bragging that a million voters have joined its party nationally. I ask Briceño how she’s feeling. She uses terms like “heart-wrenching” and “big cloud” at first, but then ceases her selfpity. “I never lose hope or faith,” Briceño says. “And while it does impact me to hear others feel so down, my ‘Sí se puede’ attitude that I learned from housekeepers and dishwashers remains at the soul of my leadership.” The philosophy has governed her life, one marked by good times frequently followed by crashes. She was born in Nicaragua to a family whose patriarch worked as a banker under the Somoza regime. Briceño remembers “lavish” birthday parties at a well-kept home staffed with a cook, a nanny, and a chauffeur who’d take her to private school. Vacations were mostly in Costa Rica, with occasional trips to Disneyland. “My father would just give me whatever I wanted,” she says. “But that came to a halt” after her family fled Nicaragua’s civil war in 1980 for Miami, when she was six. Briceño’s family eventually settled in San Pedro, California. She began to work at 13 as a dishwasher and cashier and dropped out of high school her senior year. Eventually, she landed a job at the front desk of a hotel within walking distance of her apartment. One day, a manager asked Briceño to clean a guest room. “I was drenched in sweat and did it halfassed,” she says. “It shook my foundation.” She soon got a job with the hotel’s union, then known as Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees. One promotion led to another, until Briceño, just 26 years old, found herself president of the organization. It was the early 2000s, and Southern California labor was at a crossroads. Membership was changing from multicultural to mostly Latino. In Los Angeles, a new generation of leaders leveraged this change via street marches to win better contracts and more political power. Briceño sought to replicate that protest strat-
Ada Briceño, Democratic Party of Orange County chair.
people; photos of demonstrators cuffed while dressed as Mickey Mouse, Tinker Bell, and other Disney characters went worldwide. Among the arrested? Briceño, who says she’s been detained by police at least six times while participating in such rallies. “It was one small proof that we weren’t leading [workers] in the wrong direction,” she says of that day. “So it’s validation.” By then, Briceño was also on the board of Orange County Communities Organized for Responsible Development. The nonprofit is modeled on similar efforts in Los Angeles and elsewhere that marry union power and grassroots activism to change local politics. Anaheim was OCCORD’s case study: a Republicanmajority council kept granting hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies to developers as the city became more Latino and less affordable. In 2016, OCCORD helped push Anaheim to switch from at-large elections to a by-district system, which gives voice to smaller groups of voters. The organization became a training ground for young progressives who remain involved in politics to this day. But critics whispered that Briceño was pushing UNITE HERE issues onto OCCORD. It came to a head in fall 2019, when she found herself chairing the nonprofit while her union was fighting Anaheim over the sale of the city’s Angel Stadium to a company owned by Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno. Briceño and local labor sought community benefits that would guarantee affordable housing and union jobs to guard against what government watchdogs said was a grossly unfair deal; OCCORD began to hold town halls on the subject to educate the public. “We felt that that was a perfect convening for what OCCORD was born to do,” Briceño takes a question at a Democratic Club of West Orange County Briceño says. “And they meeting this summer. Registered Democrats today outnumber Republirefused.” cans in Orange County, once a GOP stronghold, by more than 75,000. The town halls were colleagues trying to organize just for basic ne- sparsely attended. Briceño claims that staff cessities and getting killed in front of her eyes,” and other board members ignored the stadishe says of the Guatemalan Indigenous rights um issue. Frustrated, she left OCCORD in the activist. “And I thought to myself, What the summer of 2020. In a statement, the nonprofit said feedback from community members fuck am I crying about?” demonstrated “that Ada’s focus, then and now, is on what Local 11 wanted from OCCORD, not MICKEY MOUSE IN HANDCUFFS In 2008, approximately 1,000 people flood- on the needs of the broader community or the ed the intersection of Katella Avenue and progressive movement as a whole.” But her position was vindicated last year, Harbor Boulevard in Anaheim—just down the street from Disneyland—to protest the lack when the FBI announced a massive investigaof a contract between the theme park and its tion into a “cabal” that ruled Anaheim and had hotel workers. Police eventually arrested 28 orchestrated a stadium deal heavily in favor of egy in Orange County. But about two years into her tenure, her reputation was nearly destroyed. In 2003, four former HERE employees sued the union for discrimination, alleging that they’d lost their jobs in part because they were older white women. One claimed that Briceño “was intent on finding a way to get rid of her because [Briceño] wanted to bring in younger Hispanic employees.” A jury awarded them more than $750,000 in damages. The trial “was just crushing,” Briceño says, and she was ready to resign when she went to hear Nobel laureate Rigoberta Menchú at an event to get her mind off things. “I just remember her talking about her 38 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 Moreno. The city canceled the deal in May. “The rank and file of OCCORD didn’t understand” the severity of the situation, says Voice of OC publisher Santana. “Ultimately, by standing up to the thuggish approach to the stadium deal, Ada was correct.” “OCCORD was 15 years of my life,” Briceño says. “I think that my work in OCCORD speaks for itself, and so I don’t need validation, you know? But I wonder what could have happened and what would have happened.” Before Briceño, community activists clashed with Democratic leaders over how strident liberal politics could become in moderate O.C. Yet by the time she left OCCORD, Briceño was already the chair of the Democratic Party of Orange County. She explains that she had never felt “much of a connection” with local politics, but Trump’s election inspired her to get further involved. Her biggest headaches as chair have been intraparty battles. In 2020, just before the national election, DPOC vice chair Jeff LeTourneau praised Ho Chi Minh—political kryptonite in Orange County, which has the largest Vietnamese population in the world outside of Vietnam. Briceño quickly held a press conference along with other elected officials to denounce LeTourneau, which angered progressive Democrats who had long supported him. Meanwhile, the moderate wing grew angry at Briceño for endorsing a progressive candidate, Buena Park mayor Sunny Park, to take on Orange County Board of Supervisors chair Doug Chafee, another Democrat. “I don’t know if it’s my values changing [or] my experience,” Briceño replies when I ask about her critics. She brings up a progressive candidate who sought the party’s endorsement during this year’s primaries in his run against Representative Lou Correa, a moderate. “When I talked to him, he said, ‘I’m an immigrant rights activist. I’m a labor activist.’ What? I never have seen him in my life.” He didn’t get the party’s endorsement. O.C. THE BELLWETHER My two hours with Briceño are almost up. The DPOC offices hum with more volunteers. Briceño’s phone keeps buzzing. There are elections to win, canvassing to do, lawn signs to distribute. I’m reminded that while all politics is local—so local, in my case, that some of Briceño’s opponents are my friends who’ll text me their disappointment after reading this profile—what happens here can influence the national conversation, this fall’s midterm elections, and even the 2024 presidential race. For Briceño and O.C., the stakes are both small and large. I ask her a final question, one that is more like the challenge Briceño offered her fellow Democrats at the Fountain Valley synagogue. ¿Se puede? Can it be done? I expect her to respond with a pro forma “Sí se puede,” but she doesn’t. Instead, Briceño answers without hesitation. “Claro que sí.” Q Gustavo Arellano is an Alta Journal contributing editor and a Los Angeles Times columnist. His article “Finding Killer Texas BBQ in Orange County,” for Alta, Fall 2021, was a finalist in the 2022 Southern California Journalism Awards.
POETRY By CRYSTAL AC SALAS Crystal AC Salas’s Grief Logic is a cowinner of the inaugural Alta California Chapbook Prize and is available in a bilingual edition from Gunpowder Press. Salas is a recipient of a 2021–22 California Arts Council Established Individual Artist Fellowship and lives in Los Angeles. After seeing my community’s grief in the summer of 2020 as a result of structural and systemic violence, I noticed that storytelling for the bereaved often involves trying to rationalize the injustice and pain of loss. “Qualifying Animacy” shows how language not only fails but also betrays us when trying to convey what someone meant to us. “grief logic #6” is also about loss, the passing of Tío, my second father. He fell gravely ill from a non-COVID sickness during the initial months of the pandemic. Hospital safety protocols meant that physical contact, a basic human need in the face of death, was not only forbidden but dangerous. I wasn’t able to bestow this tenderness upon my uncle until after he was already gone. Q Qualifying Animacy after reading reporting on the murder of Andres Guardado They killed another young man yesterday this time at his job. When asked for comment, the police said: no uniform no one saw it When asked for comment, his tío promised: grief logic #6 for Mike (2020) I never saw him sad or angry. Tío there is no holding here if you are trying to stay When I saw the news, my first rage and spit: He was a teen. He was a student. so this our last closeness at the door of history does not matter your breath already thinned from the air and look at how I qualified his breath with a résumé. I thought of you and what mothers must collect as proof of the light that once warmed the body outside of their own: birth times I kissed your brow after you left it though I could not endanger anyone else with my touch could not hold Tía T’s hand as your chest slowed to stop brown eyes el mundo detras de pestañas largas and I birthed your death for all others retching into the phone dodgers hats faded blue we don’t know hair slicked in tres flores and mother’s spit second grade pictures tucked along the edges of the bedroom mirror that you used to fall asleep on the sofa a near-grown man dreaming in soft mijo peace what’s inside of us but somehow are trying to stay here together I see you everywhere I called your name in emergency how is it the first time I kissed your forehead was the last? and someone still awake in the house draped you in tigre cobija as you drifted that it crowned dandelion when you laughed. PHOTO BY GETTY IMAGES ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 39
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The Sierra Nevada near Grover Hot Springs State Park, where the Alta Journal Expedition picked up the trail of the Walker party. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 41
THE PATHFINDERS By ROBERT ROPER • Photos by TOD SEELIE IN WHICH ALTA JOURNAL COMMISSIONS AN EXPEDITION TO RETRACE THE FIRST EAST-TO-WEST CROSSING OF THE SIERRA NEVADA BY NON-NATIVE PEOPLE. IN 1833, THE JOURNEY WAS MARKED BY BLIZZARDS, FROSTBITE, AND NEAR STARVATION; 189 YEARS LATER, THE WINTRY CONDITIONS ARE NOT TERRIBLY DIFFERENT. icture the young man, after a hard day’s travel by foot and horse, jotting down a few words in his journal by the stub of a candle. It’s October of 1833, a searingly cold, snowy season in the Sierra Nevada. California, along with the rest of the world, is in the grip of what will later be known as the Little Ice Age, a period of punishing temperatures that lasted from 1500 till 1880. The Spanish sea captains who first explored California’s southern coast— Juan Cabrillo in 1542–43, Sebastián Vizcaíno in 1602–03—noted how wintry everything was, and Sir Francis Drake, who may or may not have landed at Northern California’s Point Reyes, reported that the ropes froze on the Golden Hind, while his chaplain marveled that the coastal hills were snow-covered even in June. The young man, Zenas Leonard, recorded that P the ground was covered with a deep snow.… These peaks are…incapable of vegetation; except on the South side, where grows a kind of Juniper or Gin shrub, bearing a berry.… Here we passed the night without anything to eat except these gin berries, and some of the insects… our men had got from the Indians. Leonard is a clerk and a trapper, one of 58 men on an expedition led by Joseph R. Walker of Missouri. Walker was famous in his day, a contemporary of Kit Carson, Jim Bridger, and other prominent beaver skinners. He had led sizable expeditions before and would lead others, but this was the one that would make his reputation, the one that came closest to catastrophe. Walker, in Leonard’s description, was Recruited by Benjamin de Bonneville, of later Salt Flats fame, Walker undertook to lead a party across the Intermountain West, trapping and mapping along the way. Then, should conditions prove favorable, he would cross the California mountains, something that Euro-Americans had never done in a westerly direction. A little short of 200 years later, five of us set out to duplicate that crossing. We would be traveling not on horses but on snowshoes and skis, and we would start out not in future Wyoming but at Grover Hot Springs, scene of many a steamy California frolic. What I remember from our first day is the ungodly backpack. I was convinced that the others were carrying less than I was, although when I looked their packs over, I realized it was probably the other way around. The amazing fact about the Walker party is that they did it on horses. Leonard recorded that each man had four of them, one to ride and three to carry; by my calculation, that’s 200 horses clambering up granite benches, wallowing through snowdrifts, in places needing to be lowered on ropes. Mid-October in the Little Ice Age was bleak. We, in contrast, were heading up in April, but conditions were not all that different: The previous December had been the snowiest in Sierra history, and we found snow everywhere above 7,000 feet. Most of the high lakes were frozen. I had an old down bag that I’d borrowed and a flimsy backpacker tent; the guide who came with us, SP MATHEW BRADY Parker, had told us to acquire four-season tents, to Joseph R. Walker (circa 1860) found a route protect against bitter nights and possible storms, to the Sierra Nevada that was later widely but I figured I could fake my way through, and used by those traveling west to California wasn’t our goal to experience something of what during the gold rush. the Walker party had? To tough things out a bit? a man well calculated to undertake a business of this kind…well hardened to the hardships of the wilderness—understood the character of the Indians very well—was kind and affable to his men, but at the same time at liberty to command without giving offense,— and to explore unknown regions was his chief delight. 42 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 IN WHICH THE WALKER PARTY, FOR A TIME, AVOIDS VIOLENCE AND CLUELESSNESS Leonard is sleeping rough: no fancy Hilleberg tent for him, just a buffalo robe or some blankets for warmth. He’s wearing moccasins GRAPHIC BY MATT TWOMBLY

in the deep snow. Shoes made of leather, from a factory, are a sign of greenhornism; once those shoes wear out, a trapper has to make his own footgear or trade for it. Leonard is no greenhorn. At age 21, he set out from Pennsylvania, making it to St. Louis in 10 months; there, he signed on with a fur company and headed for the Rockies. When the company went under, he became a free trapper, living by his own wits, and here we can perhaps allow ourselves a brief time-lapse montage as the young fellow sprouts a first scraggly beard, grows his hair down to his shoulders, gets rid of his wool trousers and store-bought jacket and becomes a figure in stained buckskin, like everybody else on the expedition. From their beginning in the Rockies, the group headed south and west, entering “the most extensive & barren plains I ever seen,” Leonard wrote. A few others had been here before them. Peter Skene Ogden of the Hudson’s Bay Company had trapped along Nevada’s Humboldt River, and the first U.S. expedition leader to pass through was Jedediah Smith, on his return from an 1826 trip to California, which he entered not via the Sierra but through the Mojave Desert. Smith was a bold explorer with an unfortunate propensity for losing the lives of people who accompanied him. While crossing the Colorado River in 1827, his party came under attack from Native people, losing 10 men. The year before, Smith had been greeted with kindness and generosity in the same region, where a group of Paiutes had sent forth an emissary with a rabbit as an offering; when the emissary was not harmed, the Paiutes sent out a dozen more people, each bearing an ear of corn, unmistakable tokens of welcome. What had happened in just a year? Smith had no clue. (What had happened was that another party of trappers had roared through, taking many beaver; when a chief of the Mohave demanded a horse in return, he was refused, leading to a dustup in which the chief was shot dead, leading to an attack from the Mohave camp, leading to a counterattack by the trappers in which the camp was wiped out, after which “we suspended those that we had killed upon the trees…to dangle in terror to the rest,” as one participant wrote.) Cluelessness was widespread—white cluelessness, mostly. Walker, who was known for not losing people, for bringing back all who traveled under his protection, blundered badly along the Humboldt River. Here was not another beaver wonderland, as in the Rockies, but a mostly trapped-out region where the buffalo did not roam. Yet it supported many, many people. Most were hunter-gatherers, small and naked and without much body fat; they had no firearms and were as likely to eat a horse as to ride it. Communicating by sign, they advised the Walker group to lay in a supply of meat: 60 pounds of buffalo jerky per man. Of a band of Natives encountered west of the Great Salt Lake, Leonard wrote, “They have paths beat from one spring or hole of water to another, and by observing these paths, they told us, we would be enabled to find water without much trouble.” This advice proved invaluable. The leader of this second group—probably Western Shoshone—described in detail the route the party would need to take to get safely across the Great Basin. Though he himself had never climbed the Sierra, he was able to specify landforms that marked the way there, and these features rolled out for the Walker party as if on a GPS screen. The leader warned, though, that near the end of the basin “we would come across a tribe of poor Indians, whom he supposed would not be friendly,” and this forecast proved highly accurate. IN WHICH THE WALKER EXPEDITION FOLLOWS THE HUMBOLDT RIVER ACROSS PRESENT-DAY NEVADA AND ARRIVES AT THE BATTLE LAKES Before they began their climb, the Walker party killed some people. Leonard’s journal says that their traps were getting stolen, which so angered the men that they killed “two or three” Native people at random and the next day killed a few more. But this was not the “disposition of Captain Walker,” to kill randomly, and he promised to punish any further unauthorized reprisals. The number of people living on the Humboldt was astonishing. After the killings, “the trails of the Indians began to look as if their numbers were increasing,” and it was easy to imagine they were massing for a revenge attack. The empty wilderness west of the Great Salt Lake was proving to be not empty at all; indeed, it was a populous nexus, a 44 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 teeming homeland of several related tribes, collectively known as the Numa. They had been in the region for a thousand years at least, ancestral groups evolving into denominations of Paiute, Shoshone, Bannock, and Ute. Walker and Leonard would give the name “Shoshoco” to most of them, thus burying distinctions that might have saved the party much trouble later. Flash forward a few days. The trappers are now at “some lakes, formed by this river…which we supposed to be those mentioned by the Indian chief ” with the GPS-like mind. They make camp at an area known forever after as the Battle Lakes. Then, “a little before sun-set, on taking a view of the surrounding waste with a spy-glass, we discovered smoke issuing from the high grass in every direction. This was sufficient to convince us that we were in the midst of a large body of Indians…in arms to revenge the death of those…killed up the river.” Walker’s men prepare to be attacked. But, Leonard wrote, “before we had got everything completed…the Indians issued from their hiding places in the grass, to the number, as near as I could guess, of 8 or 900 and marched straight towards us, dancing and singing in the greatest glee.” Invitation to a party? Performance of songs of friendship? Even today, the meaning of this dancing and singing is debated among historians, some convinced of the entirely peaceful intent of the Native people—now believed to have been Paiutes. Walker’s different opinion can perhaps be understood, though. There was no attack by the 800 or 900 that night, but the next morning the trappers were followed for hours, “Shoshocoes” with bows and arrows repeatedly trying to surround them, and eventually “a party of 80 or 100 came forward, who appeared more saucy and bold than any others. This greatly excited Capt. Walker, who was naturally of a very cool temperament, and he gave orders for the charge.” The result: 39 Paiutes dead. Leonard wrote that “the remainder were overwhelmed with dismay—running into the high grass in every direction, howling in the most lamentable manner.” Thereafter, the trappers ran into other people, who fled from them. They caught a mare and a colt that these people abandoned; the next morning, the trappers ate the colt for breakfast. IN WHICH OUR PROTAGONISTS FIND AN “INDIAN PATH” TO THE CREST OF THE SIERRA NEVADA, WHICH THEY EXPECT TO BE NARROW Historians have long disagreed about where, exactly, the party crossed the Sierra. The debate started with an obituary written in November of 1876, in which it was said about the recently deceased Walker that “His was the first white man’s eyes that ever looked upon the Yosemite.” This claim was carved into Walker’s tombstone in the Alhambra Pioneer Cemetery in Martinez, California, which reads, in part: “Camped at Yosemite, Nov. 13, 1833.” Walker had died during the U.S. centennial. It made sense to many that someone of his stature would be the discoverer of Yosemite; by 1876, the area was an acknowledged national treasure, the subject of President Abraham Lincoln’s Yosemite Valley Grant Act of 1864 and of John Muir’s ardent campaign for its preservation. Walker himself never claimed to have found Yosemite. He never laid eyes on it in 1833, he reportedly told one writer, yet the idea that he had became embedded in popular belief. It was repeated in newspapers and in serious-minded books, such as H.H. Bancroft’s History of California (1884–90) and more recently Francis Farquhar’s History of the Sierra Nevada (1965) and the standard reference guide Geology of the Sierra Nevada (2006), published by the University of California Press. If Walker didn’t cross at Yosemite, then where did he? We know that once his party left the Great Basin, they were on their own; they had no maps or written descriptions to go on, and the Native people shunned them. While scouting for a break in the mountain wall, one of the Walker trappers shot and killed two more Native people; afterward, he said he was sorry, but the impulse to kill-before-maybe-they-kill-you was hard to overcome. Now came a lucky break. Another scout looking for a way up “found an Indian path,” which he “thought led over the mountain—whereupon it was resolved that in the morning we would take this path, as it seemed to be our only prospect of preservation.” Walker’s great skills as a western pathfinder—and they were truly great, experts acknowledge, unsurpassed by those of other mountain men—came down to this:
Author Robert Roper (center), guide SP Parker (right), and photographer Spencer Harding (left) set out from Grover Hot Springs on the first day. following another Indian path. As it happened, this one did lead up, to a kind of way through. But it was far from the easiest route over the mountains, and following it nearly killed them. In later years, Native people in the area directed other groups of white people to routes that were simpler, less about danger and suffering, and they did it out of, as far as I can tell, a desire to help the stranger. IN WHICH ALTA JOURNAL’S WRITER FINDS OUT ABOUT WALKER’S TRUE TRANS-SIERRA ROUTE We had maps, many maps. Long before we started out, I sent them to Parker, our guide, who ran them through the CalTopo trip-planning software he likes, producing something that looked like it belonged on a cell phone: four nights out, five days on the trail, 9,000 feet of elevation gain, starting point here and end point there, for a total of 34 miles (see map on page 43; further study produced a plan for five nights out, six days on the trail). Our route relied heavily on Leonard’s journal, so to understand it better, I turned to Scott Stine, a former professor of geography who had spent decades thinking about and exploring Walker’s crossing. Stine’s excellent book, A Way Across the Mountain (2015), is sharpeyed but not iconoclastic. Yes, “the Walker brigade would have benefited greatly from a more peaceful encounter” at the Battle Lakes, he writes, but Ogden of Hudson’s Bay had had the same sort of trouble along the Humboldt in 1829, hundreds of warriors swarming his men; maybe the swarming was a kind of playacting, a formalized showingoff, but what was Walker to have done? Waited for the first arrow to catch someone in the neck? The question of what white men were doing there—whether they had a right to explore the West and trample Native lands, to take up space in the New World, any space—is not Stine’s concern. He reads Leonard’s journal ingeniously, finding that the descriptions considered geographically incorrect by earlier commentators are in fact accurate and prove that the trappers missed Yosemite. The real entry point into the mountains was much closer to Lake Tahoe than to Yosemite—just south of Tahoe, the Carson River runs out of the Sierra, and this was the entry point for the Walker party, up the Carson River drainage. They followed the Carson till the going got too rocky. The route from there, passing close to modern-day Markleeville, resembles a proposed Walker party route that a U.S. Forest Service supervisor, William Maule, first wrote about in 1938. Maule’s route, because it ruled out Yosemite, never gained much popular traction. But Stine took it seriously, investigated it, investigated others, and came up with a route that agrees with virtually every detail and date in Leonard’s journal. Hoping that the crest of the range, when they got to it, would prove narrow, Walker planned to just push on through. After that, the streams would all flow west, and the trappers would pick one and simply follow it out of the mountains. But the Sierra crest is not narrow where they climbed. It is miles wide, with long interior valleys, deep canyons, and streams that flow north, south, and southeast as well as southwest. With only berries and insects to eat, some of the men became “unmanageable” and “desirous of turning back,” Leonard wrote; Walker announced that anyone who wanted to was free to turn back, but could take no ammunition or horses with him. Nervous about facing the Natives again unarmed, no one took him up on this offer. IN WHICH ALTA JOURNAL’S INTREPID WRITER CONSIDERS THE CHALLENGES OF NATURE AND THE WINTRY SIERRA NEVADA Snowshoeing is not the same as walking: this was my great discovery, after five days of slogging with the heavy backpack. Yes, you put one foot in front of the other, but sometimes one snowshoe clips the other, and you end up with your face in the snow. Your companions try not to laugh as you struggle to your feet. At the end of a long day of this, your toes are numb and wet inside your supposedly waterproof ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 45
The Alta group descends from Wheeler Peak on the final day of their journey. 46 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21
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boots. You force down some dried food and then rush into your sleeping bag, inside the limp tent that you pitched on snow. Walker’s route meanders, but as we followed it day by day, it always made sense. One curious proof of this was all the bear signs that we kept seeing. As the bears came out of hibernation and roamed for food, they often headed in the same direction that we took, using the same breaks in the landscape that allowed us to get from point A to point B efficiently. Our challenge—Walker’s challenge, too—was to gain a high point from which an escape route could be spied out. This led his party up and up, almost to the summit of Deadwood Peak (9,846 feet), Stine argues; from there, no magical way through appeared, but a giant ridge descends from the peak, and Walker followed it down. The ridge leads into the very deep canyon of the North Fork of the Mokelumne River. This is a famous stretch of whitewater, I learned in the late stages of my research, a dream destination for kayakers able to handle Class V+ rapids. In late April and early May, it is often in full spate, roaring with snowmelt. OK. Hadn’t thought about that. When I shared my new concern with Parker, he joked that we would just have to bring wetsuits and swim the damned thing. We did bring not wetsuits but a packraft, a small inflatable boat. It was not much, but it was something—might prove useful in a pinch. As our takeoff day approached, I began waking up each morning at dawn, remembering shots from some extreme kayaker porn I’d stumbled on; our section of the North Fork really did look crazy, and what if one of our young photographers fell into the whitewater and drowned, or the magazine writer himself? And if the river proved impassable, how would we get out of there? At that moment, we would be ninetenths of the way to our exit point, and turning back would be physically and psychologically difficult, if not impossible. IN WHICH THE LEGACY OF WALKER’S JOURNEY IS SCRUTINIZED AND HIS ROLE AS “HERO” RECONSIDERED On balance, Walker was not considered an Indian killer, not one of the more egregious ones. His reputation, rather, was that of a humane, foresighted man who achieved remarkable things through sheer competence and who treasured above all his freedom to travel at will with a few trusted companions. In 1836, he married a Shoshone woman whose name is lost to history. Thereafter, he “always took along with him on these lonely trips” his wife, according to Thomas Breckenridge, a fellow trapper. He likely spoke Shoshone with her. Sometime around 1841, he returned to Missouri, where he had many relatives, bringing his wife along. They attended the Six Mile Baptist Church in Fort Osage Township, and Walker introduced her to his extended family, who appear to have embraced her. The couple had several children together, but after 1846, Walker was again seen alone; some sources say that his wife and children had died of cholera. He had other terrible losses, too. The worst one, in the eyes of historians, was the loss of his journal in a fall into a river. In it, he had kept an “exact accounting” of everywhere he had ever been and everything he’d done, he later told his grandnieces and grandnephews. None of this makes him a hero, or not a hero, or less implicated in the human losses that attended his expedition to California, the bloodiest of his career. But as we snowshoed on, day after day, finding ourselves in glorious parts of the Sierra that I had never seen, I began to appreciate his energy and trail sense. For fleeting moments, I felt that I could share at least a particle of the anxiety he must have felt as he committed 57 other men to an arduous, half-cracked exploration, the horses they herded “dying daily,” Leonard reported, the men increasingly mutinous, hurrying to butcher the “black, tough, lean” horseflesh as soon as an animal faltered, then gorging on it. IN WHICH OUR FAITHFUL ALTA JOURNAL SCRIBE AND HIS FELLOW TRAVELERS CONFRONT THE INEVITABLE QUESTION: WHAT WOULD WALKER DO? At the end of day four, we stood atop a steep mountain wall, look- 48 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 ing half a mile down to the Mokelumne. Somehow we had to descend with our ungainly packs, climbing through granite cliff bands and manzanita thickets, along game trails slippery with pine needles. I had a glimpse of a thin stretch of river below. At this distance, it looked mirage-like, fantastical; it was frothy white, no calm sections showing darker and smoother, nothing that looked raftable, that was for sure. We down-climbed, camping not on snow this night but in a damp forest a hundred yards from the river. I found some of the gin berries that Leonard mentioned. It was spring where we were camped, below the snow, with new leaves but no flowers yet on the currant bushes. The Walker expedition had passed close by—it was possible they had grazed their horses in the same grassy forest. In late October of 1833, the river would have been fordable, the spring flood long over. The problem for Walker was to cross at a place where the opposite bank was not a sheer granite wall but rather a side canyon wide enough for the horses to pass up it. Our maps showed just such a place, these days known as Jackson Canyon, a few hundred yards east of us. The next morning, heading up that way, we found two kayaks stashed in a crevice in a rock face. One had a busted hull, but the other was in good shape, still equipped with a $900 paddle. We discussed various scenarios in which two boats could have ended up so placed. Then we kept ascending—ascending, because the Mokelumne has a steep gradient along its course, and to follow it in an eastward direction is to go uphill. Parker, as guide, was surely thinking in more useful ways than I was about what was now likely to happen. Some possibilities: We come to the river and find it roaring and thrashing, decide to give up, not getting in that water no matter what, not in a raft, not even in a submarine. Or, we come to it and find a calm section, decide to take our chances, and the first guy paddles over to the other side, trailing a rope; we pull the raft back and then cross one by one, but someone’s pack falls in, and he loses his balance and… Or, a logjam has made a bridge over the river, which Parker’s assistant, an athletic young guy, crosses easily; now it’s somebody else’s turn, the writer’s turn, and those logs are slippery and… Parker did not seem anxious. Surely he understood better than anybody the trap we had potentially made for ourselves, coming this far with no escape but to turn around, but he was cheery, eager to kick this little problem in the behind. Two days before, he had posed the general question “What would Walker do?,” and I wondered if he wasn’t channeling the Old Pathfinder a bit, just for fun. Walker was “well hardened,” in Leonard’s description, “kind and affable” yet able to “command without giving offense,” and this pretty much described Parker. We followed his instructions because he knew more than we did, had been in countless situations and come out OK, along with his clients. He and Omri Navon, his assistant, were wizard-like with the GPS feeds on their phones, and while Navon was at the start of the long educational process that makes someone a guide, Parker had been on the board of directors of the American Mountain Guides Association, had been a certified alpine and rock guide for more than 30 years, and had been a teacher and examiner for the AMGA. You could read this on his website’s buried pages, but he never talked about it. Walker hadn’t liked to talk about himself, either. To say that Parker was modest would not be quite right—he seemed to have a pretty good opinion of himself. What it boiled down to was that when we finally headed toward the river, he seemed up for the encounter, and his mood was a reassuring thing to be around. I imagined that Walker, too, had led in this spirit; it just suited his temperament to go first, and his companions would have appreciated that. IN WHICH THE ALTA JOURNAL GROUP RECEIVES A MIRACLE, A 14-KARAT MIRACLE Imagine that the river, 26 miles of froth and maelstroms, does have one slightly calmer section without a sheer rock wall on the opposite bank. Imagine, further, that Walker intuited that, somehow sniffed it out, and headed upstream instead of down, against the dictates of common sense. Jackson Canyon is not a narrow granite chute gushing into the freezing Mokelumne but, at its mouth, more like a delta, a wetland, with a few small streams debouching close to one another, draining the snow slope above. Both banks here were broad and flat, and the river itself wasn’t especially turbulent. Yes, it was moving fast, but you could imagine
SPENCER HARDING Parker crosses a calm section of the North Fork of the Mokelumne River near the end of the Alta group’s journey. crossing it in a raft if that was your only way of getting out of the woods. disgust. We would soon be feasting too, on veggie burgers in the town We were all, I think, astonished to find this calmer spot. But here was of Jackson, in Amador County. something even more astonishing: “Someone’s been going to church,” For the Walker expedition, everything from here on would be difParker commented, shaking his head. “Someone’s been praying, I think.” ferent; everything would be an experience of a worldly paradise. It “Yeah, I have,” I said. “I’ve been praying nonstop. Just not in a church.” included wonders such as gigantic reddish trees “from 16 to 18 fathoms There was a tree—a miraculous tree. It had fallen across the river, round the trunk,” “deer, elk, grizzly bear and antelopes…remarkably making a pretty footbridge. Not an iffy bridge: it didn’t totter when you plenty,” many streams and rivers flowing down out of the mountains, stepped on it, and it was well above the water, so it wasn’t even wet. soil that was fantastically fertile, and timber standing “as thick as it It looked alive, this tree, despite having fallen. The canopy was still could grow” on the margins of the gigantic central plain. “It is quite green, the needles still bushy. Walking across was like walking on a romantic,” Leonard concluded, and we were dazzled along with him, paved road. It took about 30 seconds for each of us. thinking of that world of not so long ago, fewer than 200 years, a mere Later, we debated what kind of tree it was. I thought split second on time’s big chronometer. it was a sugar pine, the tallest western pine; Parker It was some days before they encountered any peothought it was a ponderosa. Why it had fallen right ple. When they did—and for the rest of their California there, exactly where we’d hoped to get across and where sojourn—the Walker party did not threaten, did not the Walker group had crossed, I leave for the metaphyWant to learn more plunder, did not injure; on the contrary, they sought about this Alta Journal to get “in company with” any Native people they could, sicians to figure out. Parker took it in stride: he had Expedition? Visit and when at last they came upon a Native village, they been confident and merry before, and he was confident altaonline.com/serials hurried to calm the fear felt at “the approach of beings and merry now, as we joked a bit and then headed up to read “Surviving the so mysterious as we were to them.” It was as if they had Jackson Canyon. Sierra,” Robert Roper’s learned something in the Great Basin. Walker quickly Twenty-four hours later, we stood atop Walker’s high multimedia version of this offered to smoke—at the Battle Lakes, the Paiutes had lookout, the perspective he kept seeking but only found story, told in five parts, advanced with pipes as well as bows in hand, but Walker when the trouble was mostly over. Leonard called it “the that retraces (in detailed had refused to engage, taking it as a deadly ploy. brink of the mountain,” the far side of the mountain range; prose with video and Now things went better. The Native people had horsStine refers to it by an old local name, Sleeping Indian photography) Joseph R. Ridge. Below was a yellowish plain, which Leonard rees to trade, and they were generous with information Walker’s 1833 expedition. corded as “one of the most singular prospects in nature.” to the extent that they could understand Walker’s sign Walker took out his trusty spyglass and soon declared that language. These were different people, entirely unfathe Pacific Ocean could not be far beyond the horizon, miliar with English. They had traded with the Spanish, because the yellow plain itself had the appearance of a beach. Might as however, and their horses had a Spanish brand. Trade is always a good well start calling it the Golden State right then! And start carving the first way to start. surfboards! The view was of a hundred-mile stretch of what we now call The Walker party moved on, with “five of the best of their horses,” the Central Valley, with the future city of Turlock to the southwest. on their way to camp beside a lovely beach, a real Pacific beach with For us retracers, the view was, unfortunately, obscured by clouds pounding surf, at “the extreme end of the great west,” Leonard wrote, and valley dust. Still, it was good to have made it here, to see this. Only “near a spring of delightful water.” Q hours after they reached the brink, the Walker party feasted on a small deer and then on “two large black tailed deer and a black bear,” the first Robert Roper writes novels and biographies and is the author recently of fresh game they had had in many weeks. This marked the end to their The Savage Professor and Nabokov in America. He wrote about huntliving on “stale and forbidden horse flesh,” Leonard wrote with frank ing and gathering in prehistoric California for Alta Journal, Fall 2021. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 49
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SPECIAL SECTION hiskey and watches! Grains and guitar strings! Stationery and sandals! They’re beautiful, functional, sometimes even edible, and all were made right here in the Golden State. Join us as we celebrate creators and crafters and tell the stories behind their work. If you’re looking for some gift ideas that support artists and local businesses, we’ve got you covered. W STIRRING THE POT Interview by ROBERT ITO 52 THE MOCHI MIRACLE By ROBERT ITO 54 BUMPER CROPS By JOY LANZENDORFER 56 GUITAR STRING HERO By GUSTAVO ARELLANO 58 PAPER PUSHER By LYNELL GEORGE 60 HEADS UP Interview by STEFFIE NELSON 62 GOLDEN DRAMS By JOY LANZENDORFER 64 OLD-WORLD SAGE By JESSICA ZACK 66 WHEELS OF FORTUNE Interview by ROBERT ITO 70 JAM SESSION By LYDIA LEE 72 FLOUR CHILD Interview by LYDIA LEE 74 A TIME TO BUY By AJAY ORONA 76 SEEING THE LIGHT By MONICA CORCORAN HAREL 78 © 2022 MICHAEL SCHWAB STUDIO ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 51
CLAYWARE Interview by ROBERT ITO • Photos by CHRISTIE HEMM KLOK E dith Heath transformed the art of ceramic dinnerware, eschewing the “Sunday best” formality of white china in favor of versatile pieces crafted in rich, earthy textures and tones. A sometime art teacher and largely self-taught potter, she founded her studio in Sausalito in 1948, using clay from north of Sacramento and proprietary glazes she created herself. Seven decades later, Heath Ceramics is still going strong. In 2012, the company opened its Clay Studio, a creative testing ground for prototypes and small collections, in San Francisco and hired Tung Chiang, an industrial designer turned master potter, as its director. We talked to Chiang about his love of clay and about the hallmark of the studio, his Design Series—an annual offering of themed pieces, from candlesticks and planters to figurines of three-legged dogs. A Q&A with Tung Chiang, who keeps things spinning as studio director at the legendary Heath Ceramics. Let’s kick off with news: the next edition of the Design Series, objects with lids, will be the 10th and last of the series. How does that feel? Lidded objects open and close. So this is the closure of the Design Series but the opening of the next chapter for me as Heath’s Clay Studio director. How did you get into working with clay to begin with? Sort of by accident. I was working as an industrial engineer in [San Francisco’s] Noe Valley, sitting in front of a computer all day. I really wanted to make something, but I didn’t know what. I stumbled upon a clay studio and took my first class. As soon as I started learning, I found it really satisfying. STIRRING THE POT What was it about clay that touched you? It’s natural. As an industrial engineer, I was working with a lot of synthetic, plastic materials. Clay is a natural material that people have been using for thousands of years. The material itself could be millions of years old. And you could spend a long time learning how to make something on a wheel, but if you’re a kid, you could also make a little animal in no time. Ceramics have traditionally been functional. Do you mind if people just put your ceramics up on the mantel as decoration and never use them? I am also a collector, so that’s a perfect question for me. Last year, the Design Series was planters. If 52 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 Japanese American fiber artist Kay Sekimachi wrapped a vase designed by ceramicist Tung Chiang in real leaves for this collaborative piece. someone tells me, “I pulled out all the plants and locked the planter in a glass shelf,” I’ll probably be less happy than if someone says, “You know what, I’ll be careful, but I’m putting a plant inside.” I don’t want to judge. But as a maker, I’m happier if they’re used the way I designed them. Do you have a favorite Design Series line? The animal series is one of my favorites. Heath Ceramics is famous for their functional ware: dining plates, saucers, mugs. I thought, “What if I brought a story-oriented approach, with animals?” I always loved tripod dogs, dogs that are missing a limb. When humans are injured, it brings them so much emotional stress. But in animals, they don’t see a lot of difference. If they have three legs, they still run and play and chase. So I loved the spirit of it. In the end, I cared less about whether it looks like a dog or doesn’t look like a dog. I was more interested in making a sculpture about the story of a three-legged dog. What would you do if you couldn’t be a potter? The funny thing is, I’ve been thinking about that every day. If you ask most potters, we have back pain, shoulder pain, tendinitis. You can see my wheel is on this very tall platform, because I have scoliosis. Have you seen My Left Foot? I always thought that if I was missing my hands, I would use my foot to throw. If I can connect my brain to a 3-D printer, I’ll just start printing objects. Q
Tung Chiang, the director of Heath Ceramics’ Clay Studio in San Francisco, in front of the company’s signature bud vases.

CONFECTIONS By ROBERT ITO • Photos by ANDREA D’AGOSTO Y ears ago, I had my first manju, a traditional Japanese confection, at Benkyodo, a shop in San Francisco’s Japantown. It was a mochi manju— sweet glutinous rice (that’s the mochi part) around an even sweeter red bean filling. I thought it was delicious, but the combination of the gumminess of the mochi rice and the graininess of the mashed beans is not for everyone. In the 1987 indie film Living on Tokyo Time, directed by the Oscar-winning filmmaker Steven Okazaki, the hero, Ken, an over-assimilated, third-generation Japanese American like myself, goes into a sweet shop just like Benkyodo looking for a jelly doughnut and is offered a manju instead. “Looks weird,” Ken says. “I’d rather have a doughnut.” Although one can find Japanese food items like sushi and ramen nearly everywhere, manju is still something of a culinary outlier, even among many Japanese Americans. For plenty of dessert lovers in the United States, its primary significance is as the inspiration for the nationwide sensation that is mochi ice cream. In the early 1990s, Frances Hashimoto, the head of Mikawaya, a Los Angeles– based manju confectionery, began tweaking the traditional recipe to make a more accessible dessert. She replaced traditional red bean paste with balls of ice cream, and mochi ice cream was born. The original Mikawaya store in Little Tokyo had been in Hashimoto’s family since William Howard Taft was president. The confectionery served traditional handmade desserts whose lineages could be traced to the 14th century. Hashimoto was born in 1943 in the Japanese American internment camp at Poston, Arizona, and grew up in L.A.’s Boyle Heights, then a Japanese American enclave. A University of Southern California grad and former grade-school teacher, she probably had plenty of Kens in mind when she created mochi ice cream. It was a pretty radical idea at the time. Few non– Japanese American folks had even heard of mochi. And why would you want to muss up a perfectly good scoop of French vanilla by packing it inside a thick skin of sticky sweetened rice? Beyond the weirdness of the combo, there were the logistics to consider: How do you fill mochi before the ice cream melts without all that glutinous rice getting stuck to your fingers? (Answer: Move quickly, and cornstarch.) Hashimoto devised the frozen concoction with the help of her husband, Joel Friedman, who got the idea while on a trip to Japan. In the mid-’90s, they began selling the treat at Mikawaya’s flagship shop, where it became the top seller. Mochi ice cream transformed Mikawaya into a dessert destination in Little Tokyo, a generation before boba shops, Taiwanese patisseries, and Hawaiian shave ice purveyors put down stakes in bigcity neighborhoods and the malls of suburbia. Not long after I moved to Los Angeles, when one was jonesing for a sweet treat in Japanese Village Plaza, there was imagawayaki—red bean cakes served hot off the griddle—at Mitsuru Café, Mikawaya’s mochi ice cream, and not much else. If it was hot outside, the choice was clear. At first, Mikawaya’s mochi ice cream offerings were limited to your U.S. standards (chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry) and Japanese favorites (green tea and, perhaps in a nod to manju’s roots, red bean). Before long, though, the company added more flavors to the mix, including plum wine, black sesame, and matcha. So lucrative was Hashimoto’s creation that, three years after her death in 2012, a private-equity firm bought the company. Originally sold in Mikawaya stores in U.S. cities with large Asian populations— like Torrance and Gardena in Southern California and Honolulu—Mikawaya mochi ice cream can now be found in the freezer sections of Japanese grocery chains like Nijiya and Marukai as well as Whole Foods, Target, and Trader Joe’s. Alas, the original THE MOCHI MIRACLE flagship store in Little Tokyo closed in 2021, after 111 years in business. (Sadly, after 115 years in San Francisco, Benkyodo also closed, in March of this year.) In the late-’80s setting of Living on Tokyo Time, Ken has two options in that sweet shop: jelly doughnut or manju. And the one he picks has cultural implications, particularly to the manju-shop guy (played by Lane Nishikawa, a fellow third-generation Japanese American who was also the artistic director of San Francisco’s groundbreaking Asian American Theater Company). What sort of Japanese person would eat a jelly doughnut when they could choose a manju? In the end, Ken is cajoled into picking the manju and is none too happy about it. Today, of course, he could have mochi ice cream and live in the best of both worlds. Q Combining ice cream with gummy rice for a dessert treat had its risks. But the payoff has been sweet. Robert Ito wrote about the Planetary Society for Alta Journal, Summer 2022. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 55
PLANTS By JOY LANZENDORFER • Photos by ANDREA D’AGOSTO W hen it comes to home gardens, Californians are spoiled. Not only does the pleasant climate afford long growing seasons, but our rich agricultural history means we have access to a huge variety of plants that we can try out in our own yards. Whether you’re looking for organic or native or just delicious, here are seven standout seed companies to turn to as you’re planning your 2023 garden. 1. WILD BOAR FARMS There’s just no comparison between a homegrown tomato and the ones from the supermarket. Bradley Gates at Wild Boar Farms in Napa Valley understands this, which is why the farm is devoted to providing the ultimate tomato-growing experience. For 20 years, it’s been breeding tomato varieties from heirloom strains, and it’s created more than 70 in a kaleidoscope of shapes and colors, including pink, purple, orange, brown, and blue. Take, for example, Black Beauty, which is coal black on the outside and bright red on the inside. Or Berkeley Tie-Dye, whose green, yellow, and red stripes have different flavors. It’s no wonder Wild Boar’s tomato seeds are prized by chefs and home gardeners alike. wildboarfarms.com 2. THE PLANT GOOD SEED COMPANY If you want to take ecological gardening to the next level, the Plant Good Seed Company in Ojai is a place to start. The seeds are certified organic—you can view the certificate online—and chosen because they’re adapted to the Southern California climate. Many are sourced directly from owner Quin Shakra’s farm, Ivan’s Meadow, named after his cat. Aside from vegetables, flowers, and herbs, Plant Good Seed sells an unusual selection of grains, fiber and dye plants, and cover crops. This is the place to find culinary dandelion, ornamental tobacco, or oat plants for your own organic milk. plantgoodseed.com 3. RENEE’S GARDEN Thirty years ago, Renee Shepherd started her business with one goal in mind: to provide flavorful culinary vegetables to home gardeners. Today, her company sources seeds from all over the world and tests them in its trial garden in Felton. Her edible collection ranges from purple basil to yard-long beans, while the ornamental-flower roster includes cathedral bells and the black hollyhocks once grown at Monticello. “Our thoughts are, Is it wonderful to cook with?” says Shepherd. “That’s our shtick.” Once she and her team choose a plant, 56 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 botanical illustrator Mimi Osborne paints a watercolor portrait of it to grace the front of Renee’s distinctive seed packets. reneesgarden.com 4. TRADE WINDS FRUIT If you’re a more experimental gardener, why not try growing some rare fruit? Trade Winds in Santa Rosa features a wide assortment of seeds, from tropical plants to “super hot extreme heat” peppers to carnivorous species to “ultra-rare” varieties. Consider the ground cherry, a marble-size tomato relative with a lacy cover that looks like a paper lantern. Or the 60-foot-tall cardon cactus, which produces fruit for jams and jellies. I might try the musk strawberry, prized in Europe for its flavor but hard to find in the United States. Or the tepin pepper, believed to be “the wild parent of all domesticated chiles,” according to Trade Winds. And frankly, it just makes me happy to know that something called an ice cream bean exists. tradewindsfruit.com 5. SWALLOWTAIL GARDEN SEEDS While many seed companies focus on vegetables, Swallowtail Garden Seeds in Santa Rosa puts flowers first. Since 1998, owners Don and Lynn McCulley have offered a large number of annual and perennial flowers as well as vines, herbs, and, yes, vegetables. They have the biggest retail selection of zinnias online—121 and counting—and 40 varieties each of coleus, cosmos, petunias, and sunflowers. There are also some truly arresting options mixed in, like the xeranthemum, which feels like paper, and the Armenian basket flower, which looks like a pineapple. swallowtailgardenseeds.com 6. PEACEFUL VALLEY FARM When it comes to organic seeds, Peaceful Valley Farm in Grass Valley has one of the largest and most reputable selections. Since 1976, the company has striven to be a one-stop shop for those who want to invest in healthy and sustainable gardening practices. The farm sells certified-organic, non-GMO vegetable, herb, and flower seeds as well as other products that can be shipped to your door: beneficial insects, drip-irrigation equipment, potato and onion starts, bare-root trees, and mushroom kits. groworganic.com 7. LARNER SEEDS Gone are the days when people regarded native plants as mere weeds. Now we know that they’re an important addition to the garden, for us and the environment. Not only do natives thrive in local soil, but they also tend to use less water and are a haven for birds, beneficial insects, and other wildlife. Larner Seeds in Bolinas specializes in California natives, including wildflowers, grasses, trees, shrubs, and even edibles. Owner Judith Larner Lowry forages seeds from all over California and propagates them in her 1.5-acre demonstration garden and on property in Mendocino County. More than 200 species are available. larnerseeds.com Q
BUMPER CROPS Watch your fall garden grow with a little help from these seed purveyors. 1 4 3 2 7 6 5
Gabriel Tenorio at his studio in Boyle Heights.
INSTRUMENTS By GUSTAVO ARELLANO • Photos by CHRISTINA GANDOLFO G et within a half-block radius of Gabriel Tenorio’s studio in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Boyle Heights, and you won’t just hear him hard at work—you will feel it. Most mornings, there’s a vibration from the tensile testing Tenorio performs in his cramped garage as he cuts, spools, and stretches metal and plastic wires to fashion strings for all sorts of strummed instruments. Thick, bumpy cords to withstand the resonant plunks of an acoustic bass. A taut combo of nickel and steel capable of sustaining a Fender Telecaster’s wah-wah squeals. The nylon threads that make a ukulele ring loud and bright. Slinky-like strings for the trademark shimmy of a Django-style jazz guitar. “Down the street is a plumber—he’s who everyone goes to when there’s a leak,” says Tenorio, his round-frame glasses rising up and down as he gets more animated. “Over there is the gardener. Me? I’m the neighborhood string maker.” Skinny but with muscly forearms, the 49-yearold Tenorio stretches out a thin steel wire on his workbench. He twists each end with a foot-controlled metal winch and plucks a perfect high E note. He then tries to make a thicker A string with a phosphor bronze overlay. “This is the core,” he explains. “You loop others around it. You know what they call a core wire in Spanish? El alma.” The soul. Tenorio rubs the string with beeswax, hits it with a heat pen, and feels the finished product. He frowns. “This is not a happy string,” he declares, inviting me to run the entire length between my thumb and index finger. Seems fine to me until I catch an almost imperceptible bump about three-quarters of the way through. “See?” Tenorio declares triumphantly. “I can’t use it. I feel and hear, like, ghost notes that almost no one else can!” He’s one of the last manual guitar-string makers left in California, in a profession that never had many members to begin with and counts even fewer today, when big companies can bust out 1,000 strings in an hour. A good day for Tenorio is 150. His handiwork goes for four to five times more than mass-produced strings—a full set of six can run more than $100—but for Tenorio and his customers, this is no luxury item. “I’m making a tool,” he says. “When you’re not thinking about breaking a string, you’re thinking about playing and creating. Most guitarists have to change strings every night. Mine last for fucking ever.” Born in El Paso, Tenorio has spent most of his life in Boyle Heights in the world of Chicano cultural activism, moonlighting as a teacher, a filmmaker, a composer, and even a nonprofit director. A skilled guitarist, he was a músico for hire during the 1990s and 2000s for multiple iconic Chicano bands, from the refried Elvis tribute El Vez to jarocho rock luminaries Quetzal. Tenorio’s own neo-traditional band, Domingo Siete, toured the world. Early in his career, he made a pilgrimage to Santa Barbara to meet Francisco González, a Los Lobos founder who left the band before they became big to focus on string making. Under González, Tenorio learned to search for material wherever he could find it, from industrial fibers in L.A.’s Fashion District to fishing line at bait-and-tackle shops. “Francisco always said he wanted musicians to have a job,” Tenorio says of his mentor. “Old methods aren’t worth keeping just because they’re old. He’d keep vintage strings for us to see not as a reminder of the good old days, but how shitty musicians from the past had it!” González ended up selling his business, Guadalupe Custom Strings, to Tenorio and a friend, who continues to run it in East Los Angeles. In 2016, Tenorio created his own namesake company to focus on electric guitars, although he does the occasional custom job on traditional instruments ranging from the balalaika GUITAR STRING HERO to the tololoche, a Mexican-style upright bass. As much as Tenorio loves his craft, he knows he has only a couple of years left. His hands constantly ache—a mason jar of marijuana-laced ointment sits above his workbench—and he’s developing tendinitis. He does have an assistant, but frets about whether anyone will want to take over the business. As for mass-producing his strings to make more money and keep doing the work once his hands give out—for Tenorio, that’s out of the question. He recites some advice that legendary guitar maker Bob Taylor gave him: “ ‘You can do like me and make millions and never touch a guitar, or you can be the most expensive guy, but then be able to help people who really need it.’ ” Tenorio starts on another string. “It’s all about the latter, man.” Q Using metal wires, nylon threads, and everything in between, Gabriel Tenorio keeps axes taut—and in tune. Gustavo Arellano wrote about the book and film American Me for Alta Journal, Summer 2022. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 59

STATIONERY By LYNELL GEORGE • Photos by CHRISTINA GANDOLFO E arly on, I made note: most kids don’t look forward to much of anything that follows the words “Back-to-School.” It often seemed I was the one student who enthusiastically embraced the prospect of back-to-school supplies: three-ring binder, looseleaf paper, marbled composition books, pocket folders, fresh pens and pencils, and, of course, the pouch to store them in. Back then, nothing signaled a new beginning quite like the full sweep through the stationery aisle and choosing my statement for the year: Op art? Earnest ecology? Basic blue canvas binder? Those once-a-year browsing trips are the bedrock of my pen-and-paper obsession, an infatuation that continues to this day. I spend a large amount of time at keyboards, filling up virtual pages; it’s the format in which, as a journalist, I file my finished pieces. But my old habit of writing longhand, which has always been a way to tap into how I feel—and sound—is still very much part of my process. It even survived the reproach of a long-ago editor who blanched when he saw me scratching out a lede on a yellow legal pad in pencil. On deadline. “No time for that!” I never repeated the outrage—in his presence. Nowadays, free of a newsroom setting, I find that if the topic is complex and my thoughts are fast-moving, my impulse is still to step away from the blinking cursor and reach for my tools of choice—a favorite pen and notebook. A few years back, I was searching for a special notebook on the shelves of my neighborhood bookstore’s stationery section—something more grown-up, elegant but sturdy, different from my default college-ruled, wire-bound workhorses. I was beginning an important project, and those new, crisp pages would be its designated workspace. The simplicity of what I found called to me, made me almost wistful: a notebook with a plain brownbag-looking cover, brass-tone wire rings, off-white paper. Its lightweight yet firm back promised durability, everyday-carry potential. Centered low on the back cover, the embossed logo announced, “Iron Curtain Press/Los Angeles.” If I had been wavering, this hometown declaration would have decided it. Some months later, I learned that Iron Curtain Press, the printshop and maker of that eye-catching notebook, had opened a brick-and-mortar store in L.A.’s Highland Park neighborhood and had named it after the press’s stationery line, Shorthand. The news arrived via a friend’s brief text: “OMG, I thought of you immediately!!!!” She followed up with snapshots of a sweet storefront—its hand-painted window sign and a sidewalk sandwich board announcing Shorthand’s grand opening. I was there in days. Inside, I found an eclectic range of unique, madein-house letterpress cards, notebooks, and task pads alongside all manner of stationery-store staples from the world over—erasers, scissors, calendars, pouches, binder clips, all in a rainbow of colorways— catering to a clientele ranging from intrigued be- ginner to veteran professional. It was a blast of nostalgia. I lingered over the options, then purchased a pack of Blackwing pencils; a delicate wooden micro-tipped, Japan-made ballpoint pen; memo pads; and squat reporter’s notebooks, for writer friends who also puzzle out their first thoughts on paper. That first love, Shorthand’s Standard Notebook, still provides a perfect launchpad. There is no rigid spine, allowing it to lie flat. The paper’s surface is smooth yet sturdy enough to handle a range of writing instruments and media: pencil, fine-point felt-tip, gel roller, fountain pen—all of which can be found at the shop. And if you time your visit right, you can catch a glimpse of the staff in the back, working through orders and inventory on their beautiful letterpress. Those old-fashioned stationery stores, once plentiful, now rapidly vanishing, have always symbolized possibility to me: a brand-new season, a brand-new page, a brand-new chance. With the right tools, you can create something with the flourish of your style, in your own hand. That tactile connection was important for me, especially during the earliest weeks of the pandemic, when, like so many others, I felt marooned on an unfamiliar island. I needed to take a break from the various screens upon which I’d begun to train—and strain—my eyes. I wanted to connect with loved ones, but without the interruption of adrenaline spikes of breaking news and deadline demands. Instead of texting or emailing, I crafted handwritten notes, attempting to untangle the enormity of what I was feeling. Shorthand had acquired a limited batch of handmade stationery that perfectly fit my needs— envelopes made from old Thomas Guide street maps of Southern California, the navigational bible of my childhood. Sentence by sentence, I was able to get my bearings. As I reminded loved ones of their place in my heart, pen to paper, I reminded myself of the deep source it all comes from. Q The clean, crisp pages of a handmade journal help a writer puzzle out her thoughts. Lynell George last wrote about L.A.-based, New Orleans–born DJ Chuck Taggart for Alta Journal, Summer 2021. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 61
ACCESSORIES Interview by STEFFIE NELSON • Photos by CHRISTINA GANDOLFO W A Q&A with Gladys Tamez, whose handmade hats top the noggins of everyone from Lady Gaga to LeBron. hen Lady Gaga appeared on the cover of her 2016 album, Joanne, unadorned except for a gently tapered pink felt hat, the Mexican American designer Gladys Tamez officially stepped center stage. She launched her line, Gladys Tamez Millinery, in Los Angeles in 2014 and would become one of the first Latina hat designers in the Council of Fashion Designers of America. Clients like Beyoncé, Kendall Jenner, and LeBron James (who bought the felt Optimo cap in every color) also sport her chic creations. We chatted with Tamez at her Arts District showroom and atelier, where antique hat blocks are displayed alongside contemporary art, to discuss her roots, her inspirations, and what true luxury means. You’ve described yourself as Tex-Mex. How has your heritage influenced your work? I’m Mexican, but I was born in Texas. I grew up in Reynosa, Mexico, and McAllen, Texas, on the border, HEADS UP and when you live on the border, you go back and forth all day. We used to go to a ranch on the weekends, and the rancheros wear cowboy hats, and of course they do in Texas, too. Hats were always around me. Yet millinery is a specialized field. How do you go from wearing hats to making them? I’m from the Taurina family of bullfighters. My husband, Oliver, and I were doing a road trip in Spain, and we passed through this little town called Vitoria. There was a hatmaker who had been there for four generations, making hats for policemen, clero—the priests. I was having a bolero hat made, and right then and there I saw it, the spark: I love this. I want to do this! I had a clothing line, and I closed it, and I started looking for a teacher. Millinery is called a secret art—I guess there are schools in Paris, but it’s hard to find them—and organically I found this 62 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 amazing lady, Lois King, and I took a class with her. She’s retired now. Your signature is the unique shapes of the crowns of your hats, which look traditional but are quite sculptural. I studied art in Florence, and then I came to L.A., and I was really passionate about the architecture here—[John] Lautner is one of my favorites—and I started expressing that in the construction of the hats. Some designers use a lot of decoration, but my hats are more minimal. Were you always creative? I was always interested in fashion. My parents had a bookstore called Tivoli, and at 10, I was reading Vogue. Where does your design process start? My inspiration comes from everywhere: a photo, a trip, a book. Lately I’ve been playing golf, and we launched a golf capsule collection for summer ’22. My spring/summer ’23 collection is inspired by the Mexican movie star Dolores del Río, who lived for many years in Hollywood. She wore a lot of red, and classic fedoras. Speaking of inspirations, the hat you made for Lady Gaga was instantly iconic. Gaga and I collaborated on the pink hat for the Joanne album cover, which was a tribute to her aunt. And that turned into the tour, and all her presentations, and New York Fashion Week. I think we made two hundred and something hats for her, but I lost count. You’ve said that Gladys Tamez Millinery is a true luxury, heritage product, as opposed to a luxury brand. What is the distinction? We make everything by hand in Los Angeles, and that, to me, defines luxurious more than the way something is marketed. I could produce the hats in Italy, but it’s important to me to keep production in-house. I do freestyle shaping, and we create everything with the finest materials: straw from Ecuador, grosgrain ribbon from France and Japan. A good hat can be passed to the next generation. How should someone feel when they wear a Gladys Tamez design? I want to give confidence to people. People tell me, “I can’t wear hats, I don’t look good in hats.” I say, “Come to see me. Let’s try.” I always say, the hat doesn’t wear you; you wear the hat. What can we look for this fall? Our fall/winter collection, Tivoli, is an homage to my mother, Elizabeth, who recently passed. She was my personal style icon and my muse. Her support and encouragement and her grace and poise have most informed who I am and how I design. Q
Gladys Tamez in her showroom and atelier in L.A.’s Arts District. She launched her line, Gladys Tamez Millinery, in 2014.
GOLDEN DRAMS 4 Tap the barrels of the state’s finest whiskey purveyors. 1 3 5 2
SPIRITS By JOY LANZENDORFER • Photos by ANDREA D’AGOSTO 6 C alifornia has opened so many craft distilleries in recent years that some say the state is developing its own style of whiskey, much as it did with wine some decades ago. The jury’s still out on that, but in the meantime, here are six contenders—ranging from around $30 to $80 a bottle—to consider. 1. MOYLAN’S AMERICAN WHISKY Given the similarities between whiskey and beer making, it’s not surprising that many brewers are moving into distilling. This is true of Brendan Moylan, owner of Moylan’s Brewery in Novato. In 2004, he teamed with Stillwater Spirits in Petaluma, and he’s been making award-winning whiskey ever since. The American Single-Malt Whisky is made from 100 percent barley malt, aged in American white oak, and then finished in orange brandy barrels. It’s full of bright citrus, nutmeg, and maple flavors, with a spicy finish. Another tasty option is finished in a port barrel. moylansdistilling.com 2. ALLEY 6’S WHISKEY If artisanal distilleries are your jam, small-batch operation Alley 6 in Healdsburg has a product line worth savoring. Head distiller Jason Jorgensen and his wife, Krystle Jorgensen, run a tasting room and distillery in a warehouse near the downtown wine hub, where they produce gin, brandy, and whiskey. Every part of the process, from milling to mashing to bottling, is done on-site. You can’t go wrong with Alley 6’s single malt or its rye whiskey, which is aged for a minimum of 18 months in oak barrels, resulting in a peppery, oaky flavor, hints of vanilla, and a fiery kick. alley6.com of corn-mash bourbon and spicy rye is “relaxed, but sophisticated, with a rugged edge,” according to Wine Enthusiast. It’s smooth and slightly sweet, with hints of vanilla and cinnamon. At 42.5 percent alcohol and around $30 a bottle, it’s made for a casual night with friends or chilling on the couch. calidistillery.com 5. OLD POTRERO’S STRAIGHT RYE WHISKEY In 1993, following the success of Anchor Brewing, owner Fritz Maytag turned his attention to pot-distilled whiskeys, which weren’t made in the United States at the time—at least legally. Maytag wanted to re-create the original U.S. methods using historically accurate small copper pot stills. The result was Old Potrero, named after the hillside neighborhood in San Francisco where the whiskey is distilled. It’s made from rye mash and has a balanced texture, with a touch of spice. oldpotrero.com 6. ST. GEORGE SPIRITS’ BALLER SINGLE MALT WHISKEY St. George Spirits in Alameda seems to do little wrong when it comes to distilling, whether it’s gin or fruit brandy or Japanese-style whiskey. Made with 100 percent malted barley, Baller is aged in a series of wood casks, including one that used to hold umeshu, a Japanese plum liqueur. The result is crisp, with sharp plum and mineral notes and a lingering smokiness. It’s a surprising take on Japanese whiskey, similar to scotch and yet, like so many California whiskeys, uniquely itself. stgeorgespirits.com Q 3. REDWOOD EMPIRE’S LOST MONARCH WHISKEY Redwood Empire in Sonoma County is committed to protecting the environment as well as making good-quality liquor. Its Lost Monarch whiskey is named after a 320-foot-tall redwood, one of the biggest trees in the world. The blend of aged bourbon and rye has notes of maple, vanilla, and cloves and a peppery finish. And the company plants a tree for every bottle sold (617,554 at the time of writing). shop.redwoodempirewhiskey.com 4. CALI DISTILLERY’S CALI WHISKEY Howard and Marni Witkin, the husband-andwife team behind Cali Distillery in Los Angeles County, are reimagining U.S. sipping whiskey to reflect the Southern California lifestyle. This mix ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 65
DECOR By JESSICA ZACK • Photos by PENNI GLADSTONE For four decades, Claudio Mariani has been restoring—or re-creating— furniture with design techniques that reach back centuries. A s a young boy, living in the southern Italian town of Taranto on the Ionian Sea, Claudio Mariani trained with his artisan father and grandfather in the art of furniture making. In the five decades since, he’s established himself as a preeminent antiques restorer and a gifted craftsman of fine, museum-quality furniture in another town-on-thesea, more than 6,500 miles away: San Francisco. Thirty-six years after opening his 33,000-squarefoot gallery and workshop, C. Mariani Antiques, which has been dubbed the “Louvre with price tags,” Mariani uses the same centuries-old methods to painstakingly repair and bring back to their original condition furnishings and domestic treasures that once resided in Europe’s finest homes and estates— or to re-create the furniture himself. OLDWORLD SAGE When it comes to restoration, Mariani shuns modern advances, using products and formulas that have been favored by craftspeople since the 18th century: unadulterated European beeswax; flaked French polish derived from pine resin; fish glue Mariani makes from boiled sturgeon bones and skin (“a family tradition passed on to me,” he says), for veneer work; and leather-embossing wheels made from 24-karat Italian gold leaf and brass, which he collects on trips abroad. He knows his fastidious attention to historical fidelity can seem out of step with trends in design, especially in a tech-enthralled city that’s endlessly fascinated with the new. But Mariani would say that’s the point. Clients go to him because he honors tradition with uncommon devotion. “If you want museum quality, you have to stick 66 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 with the originality of the finish,” Mariani said on a recent afternoon visit. He would no more use a new chemical formula (something plenty of vendors have tried to sell him) to polish wood than he would carve or build a desk with a robotic arm or a 3-D printer. “Using chemicals and materials I don’t suggest using on antiques, to try to simplify the process, it really ruins the piece,” he says. “We do things the same way they’ve always been done. That’s why people come back to us over and over again.” Mariani has built a clientele of high-end designers and collectors, including Oprah Winfrey (he worked on pieces for her Montecito home), Golden State Warriors owner Joe Lacob, and Joe Montana (“one of my favorite clients,” Mariani offers). As you step through C. Mariani’s unassuming Harrison Street entrance in the South of Market district, impeccable taste and restoration skills are on display in every corner of the first floor: gleaming gilded chandeliers, massive neoclassical statuary, hand-painted chinoiserie cabinets, Dutch marquetry desks, dozens of ornate colonial tea caddies, even an ancient Egyptian burial mask. Mariani, who is almost 70, is tall and fit and looks younger than his age. Wearing his well-worn monogrammed work apron, he steers me toward an English Regency mahogany partners desk and a George III walnut games table, running his fingers over each as he explains the delicate process of handembossing them “with gold leaf I get in Florence.” It’s a skill he acquired, along with marquetry, parquetry, stonework, and metalwork, at Florence’s Accademia di Belle Arti, where he began his studies at 18. “Let’s sit and talk at the 17th-century table,” Mariani says when he sees my eyes wander to an enormous ash refectory table, perfectly restored and oiled. We pull up chairs. Well, to be clear, these are no ordinary seats. They’re “19th-century Brescia carvedand-inlaid walnut meuble de style chairs from Lombardy,” according to their tag (“price upon request”). I tuck my iPhone away after being distracted by its brash newness on the 400-year-old tabletop; the device is so out of place in an environment where nothing has been mass-produced. “Knowing this piece has been here for hundreds of years, and wondering what stories and history it’s seen, is what still intrigues me,” Mariani says of his lifelong fascination with antiques. O ne need only hear Mariani describe the differences between the graining in the bottom boards of wood drawers constructed in the 18th century (vertical graining) and in the 19th (horizontal) to appreciate the satisfaction he derives from knowing the precise details that have defined well-made, elegant furniture for hundreds of years—and make it worth preserving. (The oldest pieces Mariani has sold date to 1690.) “Everybody in my family was involved in antiques,” he says. His late brother, Antonio, moved to
Claudio Mariani, owner of C. Mariani Antiques in San Francisco. Trained in Italy, Mariani opened his workshop and gallery 36 years ago.
WHO KNEW? The story behind some surprising products born in the Golden State. WD-40: THE TRUE KING OF CALIFORNIA’S OIL INDUSTRY WD-40 is the handiest of lubricating goos. Since its formulation in 1953, the multipurpose oil has been used by customers around the globe to keep doggy doors swinging, break in new baseball mitts, shine stainless steel, and unstick gum. During the Vietnam War, soldiers applied it to their M-16s to prevent rust damage; on one occasion, according to company lore, police officers slathered the stuff inside an air-conditioning duct to extract a naked burglar. The original makers of WD-40 could hardly have foreseen such utility. The three employees of the San Diego–based Rocket Chemical Company were just trying to create a rust-prevention solvent for the aerospace industry. Forty attempts later, they got their “water displacement” formula just right (hence, WD-40). At one point, a can of WD-40 could be found in four out of five U.S. homes. Today, the company, now named after its signature product, manufactures millions of cans a year in its San Diego factory. A handwritten copy of the secret formula— nearly seven decades old—rests in a Bank of America vault not far from the company’s Scripps Ranch headquarters. SUPER SOAKER: THE WATER GUN THAT SATURATED THE TOY MARKET California’s aerospace engineers have long helped Californians have fun, designing such devices as the modern surfboard, windsurfer, and boogie board. Add to that list another invention that keeps us cool in summertime: the Super Soaker. The idea came from Lonnie Johnson, a Jet Propulsion Laboratory engineer with a master’s degree in nuclear engineering from Tuskegee University. In 1982, he was experimenting at home on a heat pump that used water instead of Freon. When he attached a nozzle to his bathroom sink and shot RAINBOW SANDALS: THE ORIGINAL SURF AND TURF About 20 pairs of tattered sandals are encased in glass displays throughout the Rainbow Sandals factory and retail outlet in San Clemente. It may sound odd, but customers get it: wearing down Rainbows takes effort. Owners often mail in their retired flip-flops with letters about a high-pressure jet of water across the room, inspiration struck. After several more years of developing a prototype, he applied for a patent and licensed the design to Larami (later acquired by Hasbro) in 1989. The Super Soaker was soon the most popular toy in the United States. It has racked up more than $1 billion in sales, and its success allowed Johnson to invent full-time; he also holds a patent for the Nerf gun as well as less fun but more practical ideas like a wet-diaper detector. —PETER WESTWICK how they wore them across continents, on the sand, on dates, and even in winter rains. Jay “Sparky” Longley sparked Rainbow mania when he made the first pair in 1972 using scissors, a belt sander, and a sewing machine. Today, Sparky still visits his shop, where two million pairs of Rainbows are handcrafted each year with nubuck leather and closedcell rubber midsoles that form to your feet—thanks to a technique that Sparky invented. Interested in a pair? Get them only if you’re ready for commitment. —AJAY ORONA —ROBERT ITO 68 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 PHOTOS BY CHRIS HARDY
SRIRACHA: THE BELOVED SAUCE THAT BRINGS THE HEAT When David Tran first mixed up a potent brew of red jalapeño chile peppers, vinegar, garlic, salt, and sugar, he didn’t imagine that his concoction would become the United States’ most popular hot sauce and would hold pride of place on restaurant tables around the world. A Vietnamese immigrant who arrived in the United States in 1979, Tran wanted to create a perfect spicy addition to slurp with his pho. He started a company called Huy Fong Foods—after the freighter, the Huey Fong, that had carried him into a new life. Now his company produces 20 million bottles of sriracha sauce annually (look for the rooster label) in a massive factory just off the 10 freeway in the San Gabriel Valley city of Irwindale. A lawsuit initiated by the city over the spicy gases emitted by the factory almost caused a shutdown, but then-governor Jerry Brown’s office stepped in and brokered a deal that included modifications to rooftop vents to better absorb the chile and garlic smells. This year, the spring chile harvest was weak, and by summer, restaurants were scrambling to grab up the red stuff. So were we. Q —KATHARINE GAMMON Mariani working on a reproduction of a coffee table using raffia, which requires the pieces to be glued one at a time. California in the 1960s. When Mariani followed him to San Francisco in the 1970s, “there were very few people here that knew or liked antiques,” he recalls. Mid-century modernism reigned. But as the Mariani brothers’ reputations as dealers, restorers, and craftspeople grew, antique lovers started to look to them for one-of-a-kind pieces to anchor their home collections. Mariani now employs 20 artists and master craftspeople, most of whom he’s trained himself, in his sprawling second-floor workshop. He’s a calm presence in the atelier, slowly checking on and complimenting his artisans in a space that’s buzzing with activity, sawdust in the air. Workers are reupholstering velvet chairs from Queen Victoria’s reign in one corner. In another, a carver is replicating a floral detail on an antique child’s bed. Thick slabs of recently delivered Italian burled walnut are stacked on the floor. It’s like Santa’s workshop—if the world’s children asked for handcarved pearwood tables ($45,000 for the set) and filigreed boulle-work mirrors. Since 1983, Mariani has also run a thriving apprenticeship program based on the 15th-century Renaissance model, keeping these hands-on traditions alive for the next generation. “He is right there looking over the shoulder of his carvers, gilders, and painters, which is the best sort of quality control one can have,” says Amanda Ahlgren, a design principal at San Francisco–based interior design firm Tucker & Marks, who has known and sourced furniture from Mariani for 24 years. She’s expecting a 17-by-5-foot dining table from Mariani for clients in the Santa Ynez Valley; it’s based on a carved detail of the property’s oak leaves. “We were able to go into Claudio’s gallery, see a similar table with a different type of leaf pattern there, and say, ‘This is what we want,’ ” Ahlgren says. “Then we drew it up, and now he’s doing a sample of the carving. Knowing Claudio, I know it will be amazing.” Mariani says that 60 percent of his work is these custom projects, which range in price from a few thousand to upwards of $20,000. Customers come to him with a photo or sketch of something—a bed, a table, a gilded sconce, for example. Maybe it’s something the client saw in a castle, or museum, or magazine spread. Mariani prides himself on replicating anything, not as a faux reproduction, but with the expectation that the quality of the new piece will stand the test of time, just as the original has. “There are very few people born in this country who can do this work,” he says, introducing me to carvers from the Philippines employed by the company, including master carver Jesus Bong, who has been with C. Mariani for 30 years. “Mostly, this is a lost art, and it’s very difficult. They call me the ‘last of the Mohicans,’ ” Mariani says with a laugh. High-end antiques have plummeted in popularity in the 21st century (though the pandemic sparked a craze for all things vintage), and many top-tier dealers in New York have shuttered. But C. Mariani’s enduring appeal, and whopping price tags, prove that living with furnishings that predate modernism (and tell stories of their own) has never lost its draw among a certain U.S. elite who can afford them. When asked whether he himself is still handson in the workshop, and is not just the boss giving his stamp of approval, Mariani lights up. “Oh, yes,” he says. “It still brings as much joy. I love doing this.” Q Jessica Zack is a Bay Area journalist who wrote about High Desert artist-philosopher Andrea Zittel and aerial photographer Michael Light for Alta Journal, Summer 2021. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 69
George Powell holds a Powell-Peralta Dragon Formula wheel and a Bones Brigade skateboard deck at the company’s factory in Ventura, California.
TRANSIT Interview by ROBERT ITO • Photos by CHRISTINA GANDOLFO P owell-Peralta, maker of some of the most iconic and recognizable skateboards anywhere, is the unlikely love child of two Southern California entrepreneurs. George Powell was a Stanford-educated engineer with a gift for creating high-performance skate decks and wheels. Stacy Peralta, a member of Venice’s legendary Z-Boys skate team, was the highest-ranked skater in the world. When the two launched Powell-Peralta in 1978, they revolutionized the way skateboards were made and marketed; they also assembled the greatest skateboarding team of all time, the Bones Brigade. The company’s signature boards from the ’70s and ’80s fetch thousands of dollars on the collectibles market. Earlier this year, the 13th reissue of Bones Brigade decks, constructed at the company’s Ventura factory, sold out within a week. We chatted with Powell about the company’s beginnings—and why its boards still rule the ramps. How does an engineer working in aerospace end up building skateboards? When my son was eight, I gave him my wife’s skateboard, and we would skate around Pacific Palisades on clay wheels. One day, he came home and said, “Dad, my friends have yellow wheels, and they’re really good.” And I said, “Oh, come on, yellow wheels don’t make any difference.” So we trundled over to Palisades Hobby, and I looked at the counter, and lo and behold, there were clear yellow urethane wheels. A light bulb went off in my head. Every time we hit a pebble or a seed pod, our wheels stop and fly off. This was going to make skateboards a viable product. I bought two sets and started developing skateboards in my garage. A few years after that, in the mid-’70s, Stacy Peralta was the top-ranked skateboarder in the world. Did you know him? Stacy lived near LAX, and I lived in the Palisades. He had grown up skating at Paul Revere [Middle School] and Palisades High, and I occasionally went to those spots to test new equipment, so I met him a couple of times. [The award] was possibly the industry wishing we would retire. Vernon Courtlandt Johnson’s Skull and Sword deck art for you is instantly recognizable. Why do his decks strike such a chord? There are certain images that are sort of transcendental in the collective subconscious of mankind. Skulls are one of them, and dragons are right up there. We have more fun with skeletons because you can do so many things with them. Images like the Ripper, Skull and Sword—those original graphics are very special in the industry. Did you have any idea Powell-Peralta would become so big? You know, I did. It was that aha moment when I A Q&A with George Powell, whose engineering mojo led to a revolution in skateboard design. WHEELS OF FORTUNE saw urethane wheels. I remember going home after I rode them and thinking, “Damn, every kid in the world is going to love skating.” Because it’s really fun when you’re not falling down every time you turn. Q How did the two of you team up professionally? Stacy was working for G&S, a San Diego–based surf and skate company, back then. I was happily working in a vacuum, not connected to the existing industry at all, and Stacy was one of the most famous skaters of his time. We finally got together when he decided to leave G&S. He wanted to form his own team and bring kids up and help them develop, as opposed to hiring skaters away from other companies, which was the common practice. Still is, actually. Speaking of teams, you formed the Bones Brigade, which included Steve Caballero, Mike McGill, and Tony Hawk. All of those guys are in the Skateboarding Hall of Fame. In 2016, even Powell-Peralta itself was inducted. Aren’t you supposed to retire before you get that sort of honor? Powell-Peralta decks and transfers (the graphics that appear on the undersides of skateboards) are designed and made in Southern California. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 71
CONDIMENTS By LYDIA LEE • Photo by ANDREA D’AGOSTO JAM SESSION Enjoy a little California sunshine— right out of the jar. A good preserve expresses the beauty of the fruit,” says June Taylor, the Bay Area–based grande dame of artisanal jam. Taylor has scaled back her business considerably in recent years, but her fruit-forward approach (using a light hand with sugar) continues to inspire others. We’ve rounded up six wonderful ways to celebrate the state’s lavish fruit basket. 1 2 1. LADERA PATISSERIE’S APRICOT & VANILLA CONFITURE With the addition of whole vanilla beans, luscious Blenheim apricots become even more decadent. The dessert-like combination is made by chef Fateha Id boubrik, who drives down to Hollister for the apricots and makes the jam in a commissary kitchen in San Francisco. Trained in the culinary arts in France, Id boubrik took top honors in 2021 at Confituriades, a prestigious competition that is also known as the World Jam Championships. laderapatisserie.com 2. FROG HOLLOW FARM’S ORGANIC PEACH CONSERVE Frog Hollow Farm’s renowned peaches retain their core identity as fragrant preserves, thanks to a finely tuned process followed by farm co-owner Rebecca Courchesne. She leaves the skins on for better 72 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 flavor and cooks a shallow layer of peaches down quickly in a tilting brazier, commonly used by restaurants to make stock. It also helps that Courchesne has complete quality control over the fruit—grown organically just east of Mount Diablo, it’s picked at peak ripeness and frozen, so regardless of when a jar is purchased throughout the year, it’s always from a fresh batch. froghollow.com 3. INNA’S FLAVOR KING PLUOT JAM The pluot, a plum-apricot hybrid bred in Modesto, took the fruit world by storm in the 1980s. Its depth of flavor, balanced by plum tang, results in preserves with exceptional richness and complexity. Dafna Kory, the founder of Emeryville-based Inna, produces single-varietal jams to showcase the subtle qualities of each variety—in this case, organic Flavor King pluots from Fresno County. innajam.com
4 6 3 5 4. E. WALDO WARD & SON’S ORANGE PAPAYA MARMALADE Established in 1891, E. Waldo Ward & Son is the oldest jam company in California—even older than Knott’s original berry stand. Jeff Ward, part of the fourth generation to run the family business, continues to make marmalade on a parcel of the original orchard in the foothills city of Sierra Madre, about 20 minutes from Downtown Los Angeles. Among his innovations is an inspired pairing of Valencia oranges and Maradol papayas from Mexico; the sumptuous papaya pulp pushes the bitterness of the peel into the background and lets the sweetness of the orange take center stage. waldoward.com 5. EMANDAL’S GOOD OL’ RED STUFF Besides baking bread and cooking farm-to-table meals for guests at Emandal, owner Tamara Adams puts up around 80 kinds of preserves a year, inspired by the bounty around her. The vintage summer resort on the edge of the Mendocino National Forest has a one-acre organic garden and orchard. It provides strawberries, raspberries, wild plums, rhubarb, and tart red cherries, combinations of which are then supplemented by purchased peaches and apricots to make Good Ol’ Red Stuff, a perennial favorite for its tart-sweet character. emandalgeneralstore.com 6. FOURTEEN MAGPIES’ CITRUS PRESERVE ORANGE SPICE This marmalade is an ode to fall: navel oranges are accented with cinnamon, star anise, and cardamom, which will pique your taste buds. Jam maker Tanya Seibold uses only organic fruit from the trees on her 5.5-acre farm in Santa Rosa and what she gleans from residential orchards in Sonoma County, saving perfectly good fruit from going to waste. And yes, she also makes marmalade from an abundance of Meyer lemons, the unofficial state fruit. fourteenmagpies.com Q ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 73
Rachel Britten, the owner of the Mendocino Grain Project, in one of her wheat fields in Northern California. The company offers milled flour through a subscription box.
GRAINS Interview by LYDIA LEE • Photos by PENNI GLADSTONE I n the unlikely setting of central Mendocino County, where vineyards and cannabis farms claim the vast majority of the agricultural real estate, Rachel Britten is cultivating 35 acres of amber waves of grain. As the owner of the Mendocino Grain Project in Ukiah, Britten has partnered with other farmers to launch a unique monthly subscription box. The contents? Locally grown organic dry goods. In addition to the flour milled from Britten’s wheat, the customizable box includes quinoa and heirloom beans. We caught up with Britten in late June, at the start of her third harvest season. Wheat farming conjures up the plains of the Midwest. Why grow grain in California? Grain lets you grow plenty of calories to sustain yourself, and it can be easily stored, which is why it is so relevant to food security—as we’re finding out from Ukraine. So much of the world’s wheat comes from there, but there are risks as well as efficiencies to consolidation. In March 2020, the big-box supermarkets couldn’t keep flour on the shelves. For a time, we were the only flour at the local co-op, which was a pretty interesting experience. Even though our sales grew twentyfold in a month, we had relationships with other farmers who filled in our supply gaps. It underscored how local food systems create resilience. Just like you can get a cucumber from anywhere or you can choose to buy it from the farmers market, there are advantages to getting your dry goods locally. For one thing, it tastes better! You wouldn’t think that freshly dried beans would make a difference, but oh man, it does. Especially with quinoa—you can taste the difference, no question. What are you growing? I’m focusing on heirloom varieties known specifically for their flavor. There’s a romantic buzz around heirloom crops, but the practical aspect is that they were bred for conditions that are more like the conditions that I’m putting the plants in. I dry-farm, which means that I’m not using any irrigation—I’m farming with the rain and the pervasive drought. Sonora is a white wheat that has been cultivated in California for a long time. It’s the gateway drug for whole wheat baking. White wheat is used to make pastries and cakes—it’s a little more delicate. So if you’re interested in switching from white flour to whole wheat flour, this is the variety I recommend. We also grow Red Fife. Bakers rave about its flavor, but it has lower protein content, so it’s harder to get big, fluffy breads out of it. What’s it like to farm grain in California? In produce farming, if you can get up at 5 a.m. and hustle, you can beat the heat and be out of there by 2 p.m. Grain farming is not like that. In the morning, the grain is too wet to harvest. You specifically have to wait until it’s miserable, and then you start harvesting. With the increased fire danger, we take a break in the heat of the day and go back again in the evening. We’re right on the Russian River, and we don’t The Mendocino Grain Project sells milled flours along with pantry staples like beans and quinoa. use any fertilizer other than compost and cover crops. We use a low-tillage system, which means minimizing the disturbance to the soil. It’s part of my farming values, but it also feels like a responsibility to my community. Local farming creates a really beautiful loop of accountability and understanding. What are your plans for the future? When I took over the business from Doug Mosel, who started it in 2009, largely what I inherited was the equipment. It’s a pretty equipment-intensive game, and that’s one of the reasons I think we’re not seeing other young farmers raising staple crops. If you have a half-acre parcel, there is no way it makes sense FLOUR CHILD for you to own a combine, and it definitely doesn’t make sense for you to own the equipment to clean the grain. So we are creating an opportunity for small farmers who want to produce small batches of grain. I have a friend in Humboldt who grows quinoa, and we do the processing of the quinoa for him. I have a network of small farmers that I’m often doing grain processing for, so when something cool comes through, I can say, “Hey, can I buy a couple thousand pounds?” My vision is to diversify our products from collaborations with other farmers and provide exposure to a lot of interesting and extremely tasty dry goods. Q A Q&A with Rachel Britten, who’s growing wheat in Northern California—not North Dakota. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 75

WATCHES By AJAY ORONA • Photo by ANDREA D’AGOSTO I never had an interest in fashion growing up. I skipped the prevailing hipster aesthetic of my college years—skinny jeans, button-ups, beanies—for baseball caps and baggy cargo shorts, looking like the classic frat bro I wasn’t and never would be. If nicer garb couldn’t help me better do the things I loved, like boogie boarding or judo, what was the point? But I did find inspiration in three numbers: 007. I wasn’t too taken by the Tom Ford suits that Daniel Craig wore as James Bond in Skyfall—my favorite of the Bond films—or by his sky-blue swim trunks by the British outfitter Orlebar Brown. What mesmerized me was Bond’s Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M. With its stainless steel bracelet, bulky winding stem, and crenels on the bezel, the diver watch looked like just another Bond tool, yet its orange-tipped second hand, silver zero mark, and white trimmings indicated it was a work of subtle precision. The Seamaster gave Bond a rugged elegance that I flatly coveted. As the name indicates, a diver is a timepiece designed for scuba diving, capable of withstanding pressure at depths of 90 meters or more. It’s also meant to look good paired with a suit or a T-shirt and jeans. The only problem for me was another set of numbers: I was a broke student, and the Seamaster cost upwards of $5,000. “This is fine,” I thought. “In a couple of years, I will get something just as nice.” Ten years later, I’d amassed a modest collection of also-rans: a couple of Casio G-Shocks, a Nixon, a vintage Seiko Mickey Mouse, and a Hamilton field piece. Several times, I could have broken the bank for a Seamaster, but it never made sense while saving for a wedding, a car, or, more recently, a baby crib. I could have bought a more affordable diver, but hitting up Quora forums and visiting countless watch kiosks revealed that pieces at my $600-or-under price point looked like something you’d find inside a Happy Meal. Then I discovered the Vaer D5 Arctic. With its sleek black dial, bold markers, and peach-dipped second hand, it certainly looked like a secret-agent accessory. I was shocked to discover that it was not designed on a Swiss mountaintop but in my hometown of Los Angeles. Vaer was founded by a surfer and a designer in Venice who met at a tech company. They poured their personal savings into a timepiece that looks and functions like a Seamaster but is, at $549, around a tenth of its price. I figured the D5 Arctic was quartz powered but then flipped it over: it’s actually an automatic. The apparatus behind automatic movement is intricate, but the basic idea is that energy from the wearer’s wrist actions is transferred from a weighted rotor mechanism to springs, literally making the watch tick. To showcase this process, the sapphire caseback on the D5 Arctic, etched with “Designed in Los Angeles,” is partially see-through. As for the diver function, the watch can plunge to depths of 20 ATM (660 feet). Its attractive face is encased within a double-domed sapphire crystal, increasing scratch resistance and enhancing visibility. The company assembles its timepieces in California and Arizona, helping bring the craft of watchmaking back to the United States. That’s already an admirable undertaking, but in the process, Vaer has also helped make owning a designer watch attainable for many. An obsession with James Bond leads to another obsession: divers. A TIME TO BUY I’ve decided I have one last mission to complete before rewarding myself with a diver: scuba certification. The good news is that I won’t have to wait 10 years; I am on track to complete my training hours this fall. I could be diving off Catalina with the D5 Arctic as early as November, although it will be at a depth of only 35 feet or so, where the water is warmer and the little orange garibaldi are easier to see. Of course, this pales in comparison with the scene near the end of Skyfall in which Bond battles a henchman underneath a frozen lake without the help of a mask or a tank. But hey, it’s a start. Q Alta Journal associate editor Ajay Orona wrote about NFTs for Alta, Spring 2022. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 77
ART By MONICA CORCORAN HAREL • Photo by CHRISTINA GANDOLFO I won’t forget the first time I saw Ray Howlett’s art. It was over a year into the pandemic, and my 11-year-old daughter, Tess, had become a nautilus. Like the cephalopod mollusk in its hypnotizing spiral shell, she had withdrawn to a deep, dark crevice. I had not seen her sly smile in months. I couldn’t even recall the echo of her laugh. Watching her slowly disappear was like looking at a solar eclipse. My eyes burned. My heart skidded. I didn’t admire Howlett’s piece in a pristine setting like the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. I had walked into a beach house in Malibu that late afternoon planning to drink some tequila with good friends and watch the sun sink into the sea. But as soon as I stepped inside and kicked off my shoes, life changed. There, perched on a table in the entryway, was one of Howlett’s two-foot-high SEEING THE LIGHT During dark times, Ray Howlett’s sculptures offered a mother some hope. 78 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 infinity light sculptures. At first, I just circled the vibrant pyramid of coated glass and mirrors and electric light. Neon pink and blue and green ladders of illumination—as intricate and graceful as DNA— beckoned me closer. Howlett’s sculptures are known for inducing the dizzying illusion of eternity. The reflection is never-ending. Call it a human-made mirage. But instead of seeing the crushing continuum of the pandemic and my daughter’s depression in that moment, I felt a flicker of hope. “When you see something you can’t process, the mind shuts down and your emotions open up. You get enlightened. You get to feel stuff,” says Howlett, who is 82 and lives in a cabin about two hours north of Los Angeles in Pine Mountain Club. I tracked the artist down online a few days after I saw his light sculpture. Howlett’s work wasn’t easy to surface on Google, since I didn’t know his name and could only describe his art. He’s not nearly as well-known as James Turrell, Larry Bell, Helen Pashgian, and other visual artists who came up during the Light and Space movement of the late 1960s in L.A. “I was a nobody,” he tells me. “Too shy. When I did go to one of those parties where artists socialized, I left after 15 minutes. I was so uncomfortable.” Howlett had moved from his native Nebraska to Silver Lake in 1965 and was hired as an interior designer for the Downtown department store Bullock’s. Once he committed to being a full-time artist, he worked out of studios in beach towns from Venice to Malibu. He left California for two decades to take care of his widowed mom and shared his art with curators in a self-funded traveling exhibition. Now he spends about 12 hours a day in his mountain studio, fulfilling a long waiting list of commissions for his light sculptures. “I don’t want to socialize. I don’t want to go to a party. I just want to make art,” he tells me. Before COVID, Tess would initiate games of tag just by yelling “I’m it!” and chasing anyone nearby. She went on sleepovers every weekend. But the social isolation, coupled with the bewildering onset of puberty, stole her confidence. It probably didn’t help that she grew almost eight inches in a few months. “I don’t know what to say to anyone,” my only child whispered to me and my husband when we tried to arrange “safe” masked playdates. We got Tess a therapist, who recommended a pet. We got Tess a rabbit, who didn’t like to socialize either. Images of Howlett’s art became my beacons. I gazed at them on my laptop over coffee every morning. Somehow, these flat versions of his complex, multisensory work summoned the same sense of buoyancy I’d felt in Malibu. The scientific study of how art affects the brain is known as neuroaesthetics. When I am moved by the stimulus of Howlett’s sculpture, apparently, my mind is able to muse more freely on the past and the future. The memory of Tess’s smile had been fading, like a photo left in the sun—but I could start to see the lift of her lips and the light in her ocean-blue eyes. In navigating Howlett’s illusion of infinity, I could visualize a future in which she looked up at me and laughed again. When I ask Howlett what inspired him to flirt with endless time and space in his art, he talks about staring at the ocean in Malibu for the first time. “Being at the beach and the openness of Los Angeles gave me the ability to come up with something outside of what I learned in art school,” he says. “I’m a California artist.” A few months ago, Tess started to resurface. She talked to a psychiatrist about her sadness and social anxiety; medication helped too. She smiles a lot now. When I look at my daughter, who will be 12 in a few months, I see an aura around her. Sometimes, it’s a soft blush. Other times, she gives off a bold blue. She’s my own light sculpture. Q Monica Corcoran Harel wrote about space fashion for Alta Journal, Summer 2022. She runs Pretty Ripe, a media platform for women over 40.
Ray Howlett with a work-inprogress light sculpture in his studio north of Los Angeles.
OCTOBER 20 A PLACE AT THE NAYARIT BY NATALIA MOLINA Join us for a Zoom event featuring Natalia Molina in conversation with John Freeman. Learn more at californiabookclub.com.
FALL 2022 SELECTIONS WHY I WRITE By NATALIA MOLINA Keeping Place, Memory, and History Alive I write for many of the same reasons people feel compelled to take a photo and post it on social media: to present or engage with people, events, and places that feel unique yet speak to a universal human experience. Such moments illuminate the resilience of people, their bravery and ability to triumph under difficult conditions. These impulses compelled me to write about my grandmother and her restaurant in my most recent book, A Place at the Nayarit: How a Mexican Restaurant Nourished a Community. There I tell the story of immigrant workers—including my grandmother, Doña Natalia—as placemakers, who nurtured and fed the community through the restaurants they established, which served as urban anchors. I never met my grandmother, but I grew up surrounded by people who had worked at the Nayarit or had been regular customers, and I listened, fascinated, to their stories. And yet, when it came time to write my version of the story, I encountered many difficulties because the Nayarit is a prime piece of what I call underdocumented Los Angeles. These overlooked places, people, and events nonetheless make the city what it is. The lives of Doña Natalia and her fellow placemakers in Echo Park were also comparatively underdocumented, meaning that their individual stories are not well served by printed records, which usually inform the historian’s efforts to paint a picture of a community. Understanding their daily lives means studying them alongside, not exclusively within, official archives. While I was able to re-create a lot about my grandmother’s life through research—using oral interviews as well as business permits, census records, genealogical searches, photographs, and restaurant reviews—getting at her interior life was more difficult. One approach that helped was to look at her possessions. While she didn’t leave a diary or letters, I do have her dishes, given to me by my mother. They’re from the Franciscan Ceramics plant in Atwater, hand-painted with apples and leaves around the edges. In the book, I write, “Those dishes say a lot about my reserved grandmother. She wanted elegant tableware, and she got it for herself, piece by piece. I like to imagine her setting her place and enjoying the sheen and the col- PHOTO BY DUSTIN SNIPES or of those dishes, not just as a sign of aspiration, but also as a way of embracing the place where she lived and asserting her belonging.” I read this section over the summer when I did a book event at Boyle Heights Bar. The audience was composed of community members who don’t usually attend readings but were curious about this history. Many were in their 60s and 70s, Latinx, retired teachers, water and power employees, restaurant workers. Before we got started, they shared with me that they didn’t know a lot about Latinx history. And why should they have? They certainly were not taught it in their textbooks. So I read to encourage them to tell their stories. You don’t have to write a book to do that. I asked them, Do your partners, children, grandchildren, neighbors, coworkers, and fellow churchgoers know your story? Hands started to shoot up around the room. One woman remembered learning to sew at the age of seven on her grandmother’s Singer sewing machine with the push pedal. She made a dress for her mother that she has now inherited and still wears. Another woman recalled that both her mother and her husband’s mother collected Blue Chip Stamps, and each could buy one piece of dishware every week, which they viewed as a sign of their fortitude, a way of making a place in their new homeland. A third woman, Shirley, from Burma (Myanmar), sat proudly with her chin in the air as Dan, her husband of 50 years, described the dishes from her homeland, such as curries, that she still made for her extended family and friends. That was yet another way to keep place, memory, and history alive. I know it’s important to record these histories, but it’s even more essential that people see themselves in the larger history of the United States and that, if they don’t, they stand up and tell their story. This is why I write. Q Natalia Molina is a distinguished professor of American studies and ethnicity at the University of Southern California. A 2020 MacArthur Fellow, she is the author of How Race Is Made in America: Immigration, Citizenship, and the Historical Power of Racial Scripts; Fit to Be Citizens? Public Health and Race in Los Angeles, 1879–1939; and A Place at the Nayarit: How a Mexican Restaurant Nourished a Community. WHY YOU SHOULD READ THIS N atalia Molina understands that history is a living thing. “Placemaking,” she writes in A Place at the Nayarit: How a Mexican Restaurant Nourished a Community, “has worked in distinct ways for racialized groups.… The ethnic Mexican immigrants who congregated at the Nayarit were attempting to carve out a niche for themselves in their new homeland. Their story is not simply about struggling to gain access to urban space by grabbing a slice of the existing pie, but an expression of challenge that, in its own way, works to remake the existing city altogether.” A Place at the Nayarit is a groundbreaking work, a book that blurs the line between vernacular history and scholarship—and in the process creates a territory all its own. Using the restaurant that her grandmother Doña Natalia Barraza opened in 1951 in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Echo Park, Molina writes about place and family, but equally about community. Those “who worked and ate at the Nayarit,” she explains, “were not just putting food onto the table or into their mouths. They were creating meaning, establishing links with one another, and tending to roots both old and new.” This idea of place, or placemaking, has been part of Molina’s project all along. Her first book, Fit to Be Citizens? Public Health and Race in Los Angeles, 1879–1939 (2006), examines the way cultural and ethnic stereotypes became weaponized around health to justify discrimination in Southern California. Her 2014 follow-up, How Race Is Made in America: Immigration, Citizenship, and the Historical Power of Racial Scripts, addresses the use of discriminatory narratives to marginalize “racialized” groups. For this work as well as her teaching (she is a distinguished professor at the University of Southern California), Molina received a MacArthur Fellowship in 2020. A Place at the Nayarit both extends and expands her vision by evoking the history of her grandmother’s restaurant, which was not only a successful business but also a kind of cultural and social center—placemaking at its most profound. This is important because it reaches beyond the family. “Between 1959 and 1973,” Molina writes, “the spirit of placemaking and place-taking that Doña Natalia had nurtured helped at least six former Nayarit employees open businesses of their own, all of which went on to become urban anchors.” But it is also important because Molina never loses sight of her grandmother’s role. Doña Natalia was more than a placemaker; she was a social catalyst, creating an example and a set of opportunities. Molina traces this by way of a necessary double vision, as both historian and granddaughter, sharing the family stories and excavating what they mean in regard to the city at large. Q —DAVID L. ULIN ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 81
NOVEMBER 17 THE GOLD COAST BY KIM STANLEY ROBINSON Join us for a Zoom event featuring Kim Stanley Robinson in conversation with John Freeman. Learn more at californiabookclub.com.
WHY I WRITE By KIM STANLEY ROBINSON An Acceptable Degree of Coherent Narrative T he covering-law model of historical explanation states that an event is explained if it can be logically deduced from a set of initial conditions and a set of general historical laws. These sets are the explanans, and the event is the explanandum. The general laws are applied to the initial conditions, and the explanandum is shown to be the inevitable result. An explanation, in this model, has the same structure as a prediction. On the morning of August 6, 1945, Colonel Paul Tibbets and his crew flew the Enola Gay from Tinian Island to Hiroshima and dropped an atomic bomb on the city. Approximately 100,000 people died. Three days later, another crew dropped a bomb on the outskirts of Nagasaki. Approximately 70,000 people died. The Japanese surrendered. President Harry Truman, in consultation with his advisers, decided to drop the bombs. Why did he make these decisions? Because the Japanese had fiercely defended many islands in the South Pacific, and the cost of conquering them had been high. Kamikaze attacks had sunk many U.S. ships, and it was said that the Japanese would stage a gigantic kamikaze defense of the home islands. Estimated U.S. casualties resulting from an invasion of the home islands ranged as high as a million men. These were the conditions. General laws? Leaders want to end wars as quickly as possible, with a minimum of bloodshed. They also like to frighten potential postwar enemies. With the war in Europe ended, the Soviet Army stood ready to go wherever Stalin ordered it. No one could be sure where Stalin might want to go. An end to the Japanese war that frightened him would not be a bad thing. But there were more conditions. The Japanese were defenseless in the air and at sea. U.S. planes could bomb the home islands at will, and a total naval blockade of Japan was entirely possible. The Japanese civilian population was already starving; a blockade, combined with bombing of military sites, could very well have forced the Japanese leaders to surrender without an invasion. But Truman and his advisers decided to drop the bombs. A complete explanation of the decision, omitted here owing to considerations of length, would have to include an examination of the biographies of Truman, his advisers, the builders of the bomb, and PHOTO BY CAROLYN FONG the leaders of Japan and the Soviet Union, as well as a detailed analysis of the situation in Japan in 1945 and of U.S. intelligence concerning that situation. President Truman was elected in 1948, in an upset victory over Thomas Dewey. Two years later the United States went to war in Korea to keep that country from being overrun by Communists supported by the Soviet Union and China. It was only one of many major wars in the second half of the 20th century; there were over 60, and although none of them were nuclear, approximately 50 million people were killed. Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle says that we cannot simultaneously determine both the velocity and the position of a particle. This is not a function of human perception but a basic property of the universe. Thus it will never be possible to achieve a deterministic prediction of the movement of all particles throughout space-time. Quantum mechanics, which replaced classical mechanics as the best description of these events, can only predict the probabilities among a number of possible outcomes. The covering-law model of historical explanation asserts that there is no logical difference between historical explanation and scientific explanation. But the model’s understanding of scientific explanation is based on classical mechanics. In quantum reality, the covering-law model breaks down. The sufficient-conditions model of historical explanation is a modification of the covering-law model; it states that if one can describe a set of initial conditions that are sufficient (but not necessary) for the event to occur, then the event can be said to be explained. Deduction from general law is not part of this model, which is descriptive rather than prescriptive and “seeks only to achieve an acceptable degree of coherent narrative.” Q This piece is adapted from “A Sensitive Dependence on Initial Conditions,” originally published in 1991. Kim Stanley Robinson is the author of more than 20 books, including the Mars trilogy— Red Mars, Green Mars, and Blue Mars—and more recently Red Moon, New York 2140, and 2312. In 2016, he received the Robert A. Heinlein Award for lifetime achievement in science fiction, and asteroid 72432 was named Kimrobinson. His most recent book is The High Sierra: A Love Story. WHY YOU SHOULD READ THIS I t’s astonishing to revisit Kim Stanley Robinson’s The Gold Coast in 2022. Published in 1988, the novel, which is the second volume in the author’s Three Californias trilogy, is set in a future that then seemed suitably distant, taking place in Orange County in 2027. Nearly three and a half decades later, the potential future Robinson imagined is coming up fast in front of us, less a harbinger or a warning than a slice of life. This is the challenge of all science fiction that unfolds in the near future—I think of Blade Runner (1982), which crossed its point of singularity three years ago, or Harry Harrison’s Make Room! Make Room!, written during the 1960s and set in an overpopulated New York City in 1999. The Gold Coast fares better, temporally speaking, than either of those precursors; the future it posits remains recognizable through the lens of the present we occupy. That’s because, even early in his career (The Gold Coast was his fourth book), Robinson was a visionary writer, if not prescient exactly— prescience, it turns out, only appears to emerge in hindsight—then highly attuned to the world both as it was and as it could become. The story of a disaffected young man named Jim McPherson, the novel unfolds in a landscape that has been overdeveloped, traversed by freeways and blanketed with condos and malls. Cars rely on computerized navigation systems, while defense contractors bid to supply the Pentagon with drones. Jim’s father, Dennis, works for one such company, which adds a layer of generational conflict to the narrative. It’s not hard to imagine, from where I live in Los Angeles, everything Robinson describes in the book occurring at this moment, just a few miles down the road. Such a tension, of course, is necessary, the backand-forth on which science fiction relies. The best of the genre is not about the future but, rather, is a response to, or an extrapolation of, the world in which we find ourselves. This can lead to hope or to despair; in Three Californias, Robinson engages in both. The trilogy’s first book, The Wild Shore, imagines an agrarian culture that has emerged after a nuclear holocaust. The third, Pacific Edge, presents a full-on ecotopia, in the vein of Ursula K. Le Guin or Ernest Callenbach. The Gold Coast represents a counterpoint. It is a novel about what goes wrong when (in some odd way) nothing goes wrong. Without some sort of external disruption, it observes, we will continue to amuse ourselves, even if it leads us to the grave. “A map,” Robinson writes here, “is the representation of a landscape, after all, and many landscapes, like Orange County’s, are principally psychic.” A map, and a work of fiction, too. What Robinson is doing in this novel, then, as he does throughout Three Californias, is framing his own map of the future through the conundrums of the present—not to resolve them, necessarily, but to confront them and, in so doing, to raise necessary questions about who we are and how we want to live. Q —DAVID L. ULIN ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 83
DECEMBER 15 GORDO BY JAIME CORTEZ Join us for a Zoom event featuring Jaime Cortez in conversation with John Freeman. Learn more at californiabookclub.com.
WHY I WRITE By JAIME CORTEZ Because Every Quixote Needs to Pick a Damn Windmill and Charge I write because writing is the best way to explore the delicious, perplexing, maddening frictions that surround me on all sides. Which is to say that writing helps me think like an adult. Which is to say that I can, for minutes at a time, rub together two opposing ideas until they heat up and begin to smoke: QPeople can be savage one moment and tender the next. QEvents can be both horrible and funny. QTranscendence and trauma are entwined like snakes in mid-fuck. No, wait—I write because I’m too fat to breakdance, but I crave attention. No, wait—I write in tribute to the captivating, hilarious storytellers I grew up listening to around the dinner table. No, wait—I write because every Quixote needs to pick a damn windmill and charge. No, wait—I write to give love to immigrants and Latino/a people, who get way too much of the stuff that is not love launched in their direction. No, wait—I write because I am a middleaged gay man who survived that other pandemic and knows that every day, every hour, every exhale is a gift. To write is to say thank you for those extravagant gifts. No, wait—I write to send a Molotov valentine to the loving and monstrous tribe I was born into. No, wait—I write in the hope that my writing might have a longer life than me, so that I can forestall that future day when my name is uttered for the last time and I evaporate into lumpen obscurity like 99.9999999 percent of humanity. No, wait—I write because I never feel optimistic, but writing and imagining that the writing might go somewhere allows me to take optimistic action. No, wait—I write because making people laugh is one of my two writerly superpowers, and a good laugh is one of only five things that most everyone wants and wel- PHOTO BY CHRIS HARDY comes most all the time (the others being gold, orgasms, chocolate, praise, and a little more chocolate). No, wait—I write because reading fine writing never saved my life (nor did music, dance, or any other art), but it made me measurably better, smarter, and more human/e. I’m grateful for that and hope that one day I can do that for some reader somewhere. No, wait—I write because writing is the forensic tool par excellence for picking through the smoking rubble of what I think happened and unearthing what really happened. No, wait—I write because it gives me a reason to claim and defend my solitude, which I love as much as I love people. Maybe more. No, wait—I write because while growing up, I almost never encountered someone like me in books, people like my peeps in books. I hope that someone reads my book and finally sees something shaped like them in those stories. When that happens, I hope they feel less alone and take a small comfort in being visible. No, wait—I write to undercut my respectability and fag out in public. No, wait—I write to conjure my demons, gaze upon them, and hopefully conclude that outside the darkened dungeon in my mind, them bitches ain’t all that impressive. No, wait—I write because when I’m writing, I’m like the ancients who stared up into the random pinpricks of light in the night sky and began to connect the dots, to trace meaning and pattern into it. Here is a jaguar. Here is a scimitar. Here is a plumed serpent. Here is the tiny boat that cuts through the night, slices clean through all obstacles, and takes you wherever you dare to go. Q Jaime Cortez is the author of Gordo, a collection of short stories, and the graphic novel Sexile, created for AIDS Project Los Angeles. His work has appeared in Kindergarde, No Straight Lines, Street Art San Francisco, and the San Francisco atlas Infinite City. WHY YOU SHOULD READ THIS P erhaps the most astonishing aspect of Jaime Cortez’s first collection of short fiction, Gordo, is how funny it is. Bringing together 11 linked narratives, the book opens at a migrant worker camp on the Central Coast, then shifts to a small house in Watsonville. Revolving around a boy nicknamed Gordo, it is, in part, a coming-of-age story, or a set of coming-of-age stories. At the same time, Cortez also tells us about family and belonging and the small and intimate gestures of community, which renders the world of the pickers and their children through a nuanced and recognizable lens of grace. What I mean is that Cortez has a light touch. Or, perhaps, it’s that he’s interested in the humanity of his characters, who are struggling in a world where opportunity is often at arm’s length. Gordo doesn’t shy away from that, but it also seeks to peel back the surface, to find consolation and camaraderie in the spaces between. “This is the way Jesus should taste,” the main character imagines, chewing a bite of doughnut, in the appropriately titled story “The Jesus Donut,” which opens the book. Cortez is not being satirical or trying to make a social statement; he is writing about bliss. This, too, sets Gordo apart— Cortez’s willingness to look for, and to find, transcendence in the least expected places. In the story “Alex,” the protagonist finds himself compelled, and confused, by his family’s neighbor, who reads as a man but whose gender identity remains unclear. This fascination may or may not be reflective of Gordo’s questions of identity, which remain a bit below the surface, although he tells us, “Sometimes I feel different, too.” The territory is one Cortez has worked throughout his career, from the anthology, Virgins, Guerrillas & Locas: Gay Latinos Writing About Love, that he edited in 1999 to the graphic novel, Sexile, written and illustrated for AIDS Project Los Angeles in 2004. That book told the story of Adela Vázquez, a transgender activist, and suggests the range of Cortez’s work. In Gordo, he is operating in a different register: writing from the point of view of a character too young yet to have the language to articulate who he is. On the one hand, Gordo is a child, growing up in the 1970s, being introduced to pop music and pornography and the inchoate longing of being alive. On the other, he is a seed, or a kernel, not yet blossomed but containing all that he will one day become. The sensibility, then, is one of emerging, which gives the stories in Gordo a kind of fluid movement, between who the characters are on the inside and who they are out in the world. “Some people have to walk around with so many sad stories,” Cortez tells us. “They have to get up, brush their teeth, wash their face, go to work like everybody else, but they’re not like everyone else.” The power of the collection is that this applies to everyone, not least the narrator himself. Q —DAVID L. ULIN ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 85
BON APPÉTIT O By JIM LEWIS • Illustration by THOMAS EHRETSMANN She Was Not a Food Writer f course, many of the great American prose writers of the 20th century were women, especially when it came to essays and criticism: Elizabeth Hardwick, Mary McCarthy, Susan Sontag, Joan Didion, Pauline Kael, M.F.K. Fisher. What strikes me as more surprising, or at least more notable, is that the last four all came from California, far removed from the magazine culture where they made their names. Why this should be the case I can’t say, not least because the figures I mention vary widely in substance and style, method and consequence. I could make some kind of argument about independent and self-reliant pioneer spirits, about the death and rebirth of the New World on the beaches of the Pacific coast, about first-rate public universities (Kael, Sontag, and Didion went to UC Berkeley, though only Didion finished there). But perhaps none of that’s true; perhaps it’s an accident. Nevertheless, the broader point is worth mentioning: cultures are continually renewed by outsiders, who leverage their estrangement into influence—and then become insiders, in a universe of their own devising. It’s Fisher who interests me here, because she’s the least known and celebrated of the lot, the only one who, even to date, hasn’t found her proper place. She should have a Library of America volume, if not two or three, but she has none. Her fans, and I’m certainly one, are a devoted lot, but 86 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 we’re surprisingly small in number. Many others have read a thing or two or heard her name. Many more have not. The subhead in her New York Times obituary (she died in 1992) read “Ignored for Years.” And why? No doubt much of the reason has to do with her subject matter. She’s widely known as a food writer, perhaps the first American to elevate that genre into an art form. But that’s banal, a bit tame, like calling Bruce Chatwin a travel writer or Anne Carson a literary critic, and Fisher threw it back. “I do not consider myself a food writer,” she once said, testily, wearily, accurately. It’s harder to say what, instead, she was. The fact that it’s so difficult is part of her charm: like most originals, she’s elusive, the prerogative of our betters. With the exception of How to Cook a Wolf, from 1942, a guide to getting by on wartime rations, she didn’t write cookbooks, not really, and while there are instructions for specific dishes scattered throughout her books, they seem like The words of M.F.K. Fisher—one of 2oth-century America’s best, if overlooked, voices—describe a magnificent feast of ritual, meaning, and life.

AN M.F.K. FISHER PRIMER THE ART OF EATING Fisher published dozens of books in her lifetime, and more were published posthumously. Fortunately, the five canonical books most directly about food—Serve It Forth (1937), Consider the Oyster (1941), How to Cook a Wolf (1942), The Gastronomical Me (1943), and An Alphabet for Gourmets (1949)—have been published in a single volume called The Art of Eating. THE PHYSIOLOGY OF TASTE By Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin Brillat-Savarin was a 19th-century French lawyer, eccentric, witty, and proud. This quasi-scientific treatise was translated by Fisher in 1949 and includes notes so copious that they amount to a conversation with her hero. She considered the book her finest achievement. A LIFE IN LETTERS: CORRESPONDENCE 1929–1991 Another side of Fisher, more relaxed and open, this 1997 volume, published five years after her death, is a counterpoint to the measured prose of her essays. —J.L. 88 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 afterthoughts. A recipe for North Country Tart in An Alphabet for Gourmets calls for four ingredients, in no specified quantity or proportion. Another, for a sort of poorhouse stew, includes the line “Cover the thing with what seems like too much water.” Advice wasn’t really her field. She often said that The Joy of Cooking was the only resource most people needed. Her own best-known work, a collection of five short volumes she wrote on food, is called The Art of Eating, a curious phrase if you think about it: it’s not the one who makes the meal who’s the hero of this tale. It’s the one who partakes, and anyone can step into that role, even you and me. She is neither a historian nor an anthropologist, not a purveyor of exotica, not a critic. She offers no restaurant reviews, though she often writes about eating out. If she ever visits a kitchen to chat with the chef about technique, I don’t remember it. But she loves waiters, especially those in France’s rural provinces, kind, eccentric, ingratiating, and proud, with their dramas and sorrows and the tenderness with which they serve. In fact, she’s a writer who uses food as an excuse; her essays usually start with a dish, a meal, an ingredient, and then drift this way and that, return home for a moment, and then maunder away again, tossing off rich little apothegms. (“A group of deliberately assembled relatives can be one of the dullest, if not the most dangerous, gatherings in the world.” “No vegetable should be cooked for as long as you think.”) She cites Lucretius, Talleyrand, Pope, weaving in memories and observations, opinions and exhortations. Hunger and satiety are simply experiences, hardly distinguishable from their surroundings: travel, romance, grief. “It seems to me,” she wrote, “that our three basic needs, for food and security and love, are so mixed and mingled and entwined that we cannot straightly think of one without the others.” Though she admits to having once eaten a pound of caviar over the course of a single day, she was neither a gourmet nor a glutton. Instead, she was a connoisseur, of food, yes, but also of the rituals that surround it. A democratic connoisseur, if you can imagine such a thing, with a taste for simplicity: fresh vegetables, local sourcing, clean compositions, nothing too fancy, no heavy sauces, exotic spices, or elaborate stews. A newly harvested snail; oysters (she wrote an entire book about them); cauliflower; fresh, ripe tomatoes. Another paradox: the first line of An Alphabet for Gourmets is “A is for dining alone…and so am I, if a choice must be made between most people I know and myself.” And yet she had enormous influence on American cooking, in large part because of her extraordinary capacity for friendship. They came to her door: James Beard and Julia Child, Ruth Reichl and Alice Waters, not out of deference, exactly, since they were formidable figures themselves, but because they loved her. I t seems it never occurred to Mary Frances Kennedy to be anything other than a writer. She was born in Albion, Michigan, in 1908: her father was a newsman. She liked to say that he wrote 2,000 words a day, every day of his working life—if true, an astounding rate, roughly equivalent to three Moby-Dick-length manuscripts a year. By 1912, he had moved the family down to Whittier, California, a small town of about 4,500 in southeast Los Angeles County, where he bought and edited the local paper. At the time, it was a Quaker community focused on citrus crops (today, it’s best known as the town that gave us Richard Nixon). The Kennedys were Episcopalian, Mary Frances a somewhat obdurate child, who wrote poetry and later worked as a stringer for her father. She did a semester at one college, a year at another. At the age of 21, she married Al Fisher, a grad student and would-be poet. Within a few weeks of their wedding in 1929, they moved to Dijon, where they lived for three years. In France, she discovered the true depth and entanglement of her appetites: for food, for travel, for love. Of their first night’s meal, she writes, “Everything that was brought to the table was so new, so wonderfully cooked, that what might have been with sated palates a gluttonous orgy was, for our fresh ignorance, a constant refreshment.” Upon their return to California, she began writing, and her first book, called Serve It Forth, was published in 1937. Soon after came another, many magazine articles, another book, a move to Switzerland, and her life came to a boil. She started an affair with a man named Dillwyn Parrish, a close friend and next-door neighbor: he was the true love of her life, and each left their spouse to marry the other, but their time together was short. Parrish had a rare neurological disease, which left him in excruciating pain. There was no treatment: a leg was amputated, the disease progressed, more amputations were on the horizon, and Parrish took his own life with a pistol. Mary Frances heard the shot and was neither surprised nor appalled. It was what he had to do. A few years later, she had a daughter, whose father she never identified, even to the girl herself, who desperately wanted to know. In 1945, she married her third husband and had another daughter; in 1950 came her second divorce. She came back to California, eventually settling in Glen Ellen in Sonoma County. At this point she was halfway through her life. I mention all this because her life was of a piece with her work: both voluptuous and touched by a certain melancholy, the need for pleasure tempered with a toughness of mind, a capacity for delight alternating with a hard-won worldliness. She was intemperate and impatient, in a mild sort of way. She disliked rewriting and rarely did it, except under duress (she often complained that the editorial process at the New Yorker was too finicky and intrusive). She endured events—a series of marriages interrupted by infidelities, a love child, the perpetual scramble to make a living—that might have left another woman cowed by scandal or smothered in resentment. She had no time for that: there was always another story to be told. The boundaries of her production are hard to establish: no one seemed to bother to keep track of it all, least of all Fisher herself. According to the Times obit, she published 15 books. “More than 20,” says one of her publishers; 31, says her great admirer Reichl; 33, says Wikipedia. Fisher’s own website says 35. Her biographer says 37, as does her official bibliography, with a few score more appearing as special limited editions, repackagings, and the like. Along with them, there were God knows how many essays—hundreds, for everyone from Ladies’ Home Journal to Westways, a magazine published by the Automobile Club of Southern California. And there were travelogues, a study of folk medicine, a children’s book, many short stories, one novel (which, despite its brilliant title, Not Now, But Now, is, by her own admission, not very good). When asked if she would consider publishing her journals, she said, “No, they’re very personal.” After her death,
three volumes’ worth of entries were published: together, they ran to more than 800 pages. A separate volume of letters added 500 more. On top of that, there was the miserable year she spent writing gags for Hollywood movies and a spirited and lasting translation of Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin’s 19th-century classic, The Physiology of Taste, which she considered her greatest achievement, though it is not. Blurbs, reviews, anthologies, an M.F.K. Fisher reader. Not just a cottage industry: an entire sector. This is not a bibliography of unprecedented length—John Updike, for example, published at least twice as much—nor does it come across as graphomania, though Fisher herself describes it as “compulsive.” She was, on and off, a single mother, who claimed that she never in her lifetime received a royalty check for more than $500 and once received one for $10. She wrote for love and she wrote for money; she wrote because she had to, because she enjoyed it, and because, well, it was easy. I say this carefully, and with a certain disbelief. I don’t think I’ve ever looked deeply into an author’s life and found so little struggle—with writing itself, I mean. Rarely, if ever, does she express doubt, despondency, blockage. Henry James once wrote of Flaubert, “He felt of his vocation almost nothing but the difficulty.” Fisher was quite the opposite: not joyous, perhaps, but not the slightest bit balky either. She seems to have been blessed with a mixture of confidence and modesty: tart with those who underestimated her, and dismissive of those who fawned. Most essays about her include the fact that W.H. Auden helped elevate her status a notch or two. “I do not know of anyone in the United States today who writes better prose,” he said in the introduction to a British edition of her work. When she was reminded of this some years later—a vivifying touch from a distant god—she shrugged and replied, “I don’t remember. Did he really say that? How nice.” And yet she wrote in her own high style, with a fully formed voice even at 29, already regal, tough in her way, carnal, every word in its place, every assertion steady. You can tell this was a choice by reading her letters, which are very different: chatty, full of ellipses and exclamation points, occasionally scatterbrained, often mischievous, and sometimes wicked. “Please write some juicy gossip, if any…and believe EVERYTHING YOU HEAR about unicorns and other mythical beasts!!!!!” she wrote to James Beard and his family. You don’t hear that tone in her books. “It is difficult to write about physical pleasures without being either coarse or over-delicate, vaguely sentimental or dry and scientific,” she once wrote. This extends to sex, which she covered the way she covered everything else: frankly but elegantly. The Gastronomical Me, an autobiographical volume published in 1943, begins with an account of a pass made by a fellow student at the girls’ boarding school she attended as a teenager, an event that coincided, almost too perfectly, with the first time she tasted an oyster. It ends with the story of a mariachi singer with a silvery voice named Juanito, who developed a crush on Fisher’s brother during a vacation in Mexico, gradually revealed himself to be a Juanita and then, heartbroken, went back to male drag. In neither case does Fisher indulge in the usual clichés of stories like these: sensationalism, titillation, misplaced pity, pronouncements on the human heart. She simply tells what happened, in calm, rhythmic, flawless prose, and then moves on. In this she reminds me of no one so much as Colette: she’s sensual but not decadent—and, in fact, Colette was one of her favorites (she once considered translating the latter’s complete works into English). And like Colette, she’s easy to underestimate: because it’s trivial, isn’t it, these stories of meals and friendships and love affairs? But they’re the objects of our deepest appetites and greatest enjoyment. She wrote about taste, not to scold but to celebrate. If that’s trivial, then we’re all trivial, because our choice among pleasures is fundamental to our humanity—more so, I PAUL FUSCO/MAGNUM PHOTOS think, than our ethical standards or our capacity for reason. It may be an accident that the taste we sense with our tongues and the taste we apprehend with our minds have the same name, or it may be one of those strokes of genius that are embedded in the language. Because taste in food, taste in clothes, taste in paintings, these are all aspects of a single faculty, and so is taste in people, in behavior, in landscapes, in belief. The exercise of that faculty is life itself: where we go, and with whom, what we do, and above all what we enjoy. And this is why Fisher is more than a food writer. What she’s after, and it shows on every page, is not just a better meal, but a better way of being—a eudaemonia, as the Greek philosophers called it: a Good Life. I do believe she found it. Q Mary Frances Kennedy Fisher in the kitchen of her home in Glen Ellen, California, in 1982. Jim Lewis’s latest novel is Ghosts of New York. His interview with the late art critic Dave Hickey for Alta Journal, Fall 2021, was a finalist in the 2022 Southern California Journalism Awards. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 89
FAMILY AFFAIR By WILL HEARST Marion Davies on Her Own Terms A new biography of the famous actress reveals her to be far more than the mistress of William Randolph Hearst. I t isn’t every day you are asked to review the biography of your grandfather’s mistress. Time tends to soften the intensity of family wounds. A dutiful grandson, I’ve always had the greatest regard for my grandfather. As a little boy, I spent summer vacations at San Simeon, his castle in Central California. It seemed like a marvelous Disneyland, with sun-filled gardens, a compound on the scale of a hilltop Spanish village, an amazing art collection, and grand architecture—which meant nothing to me then, except that it was something impressive, extraordinary, rare; and the garden smelled very good. I knew that my dad, one of five sons (W.R. Jr., widely known as Bill Hearst), had reservations about Marion Davies. I came to believe, as a young adult, that three of my uncles who were younger than Bill had even more disdain for her. Once you reach a certain age, if your parents’ marriage breaks up, you are a little more able to understand the complexities of human relationships. But if you are a younger child of the family, it may feel like a terrible betrayal: of your parents by each other and, perhaps, by your parents of you. I didn’t grow up with any personal impression of the Hearst-Davies affair; it was an unspoken subject, until I went to see the film Citizen Kane as a college student in the late 1960s. The movie seemed very glamorous. And of course, it’s a riveting, legendary motion picture, though I thought some of the portrayals seemed overly dramatic. And Xanadu, the movie’s castle, seemed completely wrong from my own personal experience of San Simeon. By my mid-20s, I had become a newspaper reporter, and a few years later I was a magazine editor working for Jann Wenner, the founder of Rolling Stone. I came across the Davies memoir from 1975, The Times We Had: Life with William Randolph Hearst. Long in paperback, this testimony of Davies’s was sold for many years at the Hearst Castle gift shop. 90 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 It’s not a real autobiography, more a lengthy interview—but it was the first time I heard her voice. Or began to understand that she, too, was a historical person with emotions, ambitions, and, of course, frustrations, along with a celebrated film career. Now, finally, there is a deeply researched and fair-minded biography of Davies’s life and movie work: Captain of Her Soul: The Life of Marion Davies, by Lara Gabrielle. In this book, Davies is not simply the consort of a famous man—she’s a working actress, someone with her own personality, judgments, and perspective. Gabrielle’s work offers a look at my own family’s mythology through the opposite end of the telescope: from the viewpoint of a woman who was part of my grandfather’s life—but who saw the world in different terms. Davies was a remarkable person who should be known for her philanthropic generosity as much as for her movies. But her life story has been overshadowed until now CAPTAIN OF HER SOUL: THE LIFE by the great men who OF MARION DAVIES ruled the earth in her generation, industry, • By Lara Gabrielle and epoch. • University of California The author dePress, 344 pages, $34.95 serves special credit since this was a difficult subject that she took on with intense scholarly devotion. This biography is not merely a summer beach read but a careful examination, a precisely drawn work, so it’s an enormous adjunct to our understanding of Hearst and Davies’s era and the movie business back then. Leaving aside the opinions of the Hearst family, Davies’s life story has been in the shadow of so much mythology. One major overhang is the Orson Welles penumbra—i.e., the character of Susan Alexander Kane in Citizen Kane is a shallow and grasping woman who has no talent as an opera singer but has a boyfriend who can use his newspapers to promote her career. Welles wrote on more than one occasion that this was one of the few regrets he had about the film. Sadly, the Susan Alexander character has become a substitute for the real Marion Davies. Welles felt he owed her an apology and wrote the foreword to Davies’s memoir, which was published posthumously. Seven years later, in 1982, he tried again to make amends for the conflation of Alexander with Davies: “It seemed to me to be something of a dirty trick and still strikes me as something of a dirty trick, what we did to her.” As a film viewer, I always thought this was just one of the things that happen when you’re making a movie as opposed to writing history—so I admired Gabrielle’s effort to excavate the real Davies. It was a project facing a stiff headwind. Another difficulty is the Hearst Castle tour guide problem—for almost 60 years, the standard spiel has tended to present some hybrid People magazine version of Susan Alexander. The tired tourist is fed a hackneyed but lurid tale of extramarital adventures and lavish costume parties by the Neptune Pool. This version of Davies as a kind of party girl with no actual career of her own is another obstacle of mythology—a simpler, faster, easier snapshot to remember—and it corresponds to the dated pop culture view of actresses behaving badly with wealthy men. Finally, the W.A. Swanberg biography Citizen Hearst—still sold at the castle gift shop— has become the de facto official version of my grandfather’s story, and it is also a scholarly work. Yet its treatment of Davies as yet another shiny object in Hearst’s life distracts from her real nature. So bravo to Gabrielle. However you read the life of Hearst and the movie career of Davies, you’d be challenged to not notice that this was a great love affair. On numerous occasions, my grandfather sought a divorce, but in that era, a wife could obstruct the dissolution of a marriage. My grandmother, Millicent, wanted no part of it. I believe my grandfather was reluctant to either make false accusations or engage in a lengthy, hurtful, and public legal battle. His view was that his life with Davies was happier than his life with my grandmother, which had become unhappy and filled with quarrels. It wasn’t the first time an unfaithful husband found himself at odds with his wife. As Gabrielle writes, my grandfather thought it was better to avoid an acrimonious divorce; he could simply spend his time with the woman he truly loved. One could launch a thousand objections to their set of choices. One might wonder why Davies accepted the arrangement. She did not inherit a great fortune from my grandfather or seek control of his assets. So one should eliminate financial gain as the reason she persisted in a three-decades-long relationship with a man who was unable to remarry. But that’s what happened. So we must ask: Why did the relationship work; what was in it PHOTO BY GETTY IMAGES
Marion Davies and William Randolph Hearst in Bad Nauheim, Germany. Davies’s pet dachshund peeks his nose out from her coat.
for both of them? How did they end up feeling at the end of their time together? Those are more difficult and dark questions than anything in Citizen Kane, and Gabrielle has done a wonderful job of presenting the raw facts. It’s a story told from Davies’s point of view, one that ends with my grandfather passing from this earth in 1951 (he was 34 years older than her) and Davies having yet another life with another man soon after. As well as being a detailed biography of Davies’s film career, this is a profile that does not lend itself to easy, moral, or psychoanalytic answers. But if the various possibilities of human relationship interest you, this book will take you to a rare corner of love—and life in an era not so distant from our own. Marion and W.R. (as they are called in the book) were deeply in love. They were not perfect people, but they stayed together longer than many married couples, without any legal sanction. I fear that the end of my grandfather’s life was filled with sadness for him and for Marion, but I would not presume that they had many regrets about the years they’d spent together. Readers who expect juicy tidbits about the fabled 32-year romance of Marion and W.R. may be disappointed. Captain of Her Soul is a university-press publication, with pages of footnotes and an extensive bibliography. I can see why Gabrielle’s book didn’t attract a traditional New York publisher; it reveals the real story of Marion. The photos chosen for the book follow the narrative and bring vivid documentary imagery to the story. One arresting photograph shows an elderly Marion on the presidential inaugural platform, a few chairs back from John F. Kennedy as he takes the oath of office in 1961. In a sense, Gabrielle’s book is two stories interwoven seamlessly. One thread is a detailed narrative, told chronologically, of a genuine romance. Much as with Furious Love: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, and the Marriage of the Century, the reader follows the couple’s movements, and experiences, almost day by day. But Marion and W.R. had a less tumultuous affair than Liz and Dick, bordering on the domestic. The other thread is an equally detailed narrative of the motion picture industry, in the same time frame: from the silents of the 1910s through the talkies of the ’20s and on up to the 1960s. Historians of U.S. film will find this side of the story—as seen through the eyes of Marion, W.R., and a vast array of friends, writers, celebrities, press agents, and actors—to be a kind of oral history of the era, including how films were cast, produced, and financed. Gabrielle’s appendix lists 49 movies in which Davies appeared as a billed actress. So one can’t discount her career as a working actress and as a professional woman with her own income. Gabrielle steers away from salacious detail, but if you are a fan of three-dot names, your reading will be richly rewarded. The text is filled with celebrities and other talents of the era: Charlie Chaplin, Clark Gable, Louis B. Mayer, George Bernard Shaw, Frances Marion, Hedda Hopper, to name just a handful who appear regularly at lavish parties at the pair’s Santa Monica and San Simeon residences. Many of them are both friends and colleagues of their hosts. There is even a cameo by Adolph 92 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 CLARENCE SINCLAIR BULL
COURTESY OF THE ACADEMY OF MOTION PICTURE ARTS AND SCIENCES Clockwise from top left: Davies’s last public appearance, at the inauguration of John F. Kennedy in January 1961. She is circled, top left; Davies eyes the microphone before her radio debut with Gary Cooper and Ted Healy in a production of Operator 13 (1934); after Hearst’s death, Davies married Horace Brown; Davies in a scene from Zander the Great (1925); Davies with her beloved dachshund at San Simeon. Hitler. Marion had become aware of the treatment of Jews in his emerging regime. She and others urged W.R. to meet Hitler and to express alarm about what they were hearing. On the couple’s next European trip, he met with the German leader, who denied any such behavior. W.R. left with suspicions about the Führer’s honesty and character. “W.R. was not impressed by him,” Marion recalled. Despite the enormous fun, travels, and energy of their years together, Gabrielle portrays them as living under a shadow of sadness. W.R. would fret over Marion’s “flirtatious nature.” Yet Marion had no temptation to wander, saying, “I had no intentions of ever getting married to anybody, because he knew I was in love with him.” Nevertheless, she clearly would have preferred marriage, and very quickly after W.R.’s death, she accepted a proposal from Horace Brown, a close friend of theirs. During their time together, W.R. experienced disappointments of his own. Gabrielle writes that he very much aspired to be a toptier movie producer but fell considerably short of that ambition. With their age difference, it was likely that he would die years before his lover, so some of the satisfactions of a long, happy marriage were denied them both. Gabrielle’s book left me admiring just how deep their love must have been, so I asked the author whether she felt their romance was truly heartfelt. She wrote me back: Over the years, I’ve come to see the genuineness of their relationship as axiomatic.… Marion was never bound to him in any way. She had nothing forcing her to stay, she had her own money, her own livelihood, there was nothing keeping her but the love she had for him. She could have left at any time, but never did. She said on her autobiographical tapes “I had plenty of opportunities to get married. But how can you marry when you’re in love with someone else?” At the end of W.R.’s life, Marion cared for him and comforted him. She commissioned a portrait of him as an infant with his mother for his final birthday. On his end, there were the little notes that he wrote her and slipped under her bedroom door every night. Of these tender instances, Gabrielle wrote me, “If we couldn’t tell it was genuine before, that seals the deal, I think.” After W.R. passed, Marion was not invited to the funeral, which was held in San Francisco. She gathered with friends in Los Angeles, and as the memorial service got underway, Marion sat on a shag rug and recited the Lord’s Prayer. In the final analysis, Gabrielle, like a detective or an archaeologist, has reconstructed a life history and made a convincing case, contrary to the prevailing cliché, that Marion was a complex, happy, and talented actress— and that whatever sorrow darkened her days, her love affair with W.R. Hearst was genuine, long-lasting, and intensely satisfying. If either had wanted to escape, it would have been much easier than a divorce. Their loyalty, and candid expressions of affection, are enduring proof of an intense romance. Q LOS ANGELES EXAMINER, DOHENY MEMORIAL LIBRARY COURTESY OF MARION LAKE CANESSA Will Hearst is Alta Journal’s editor and publisher. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 93

BY THE BOOK By DAVID L. ULIN • Illustrations by STEVE CARROLL The Dark Season John Gregory Dunne’s Vegas is an epic of displacement. I n the middle of a dark season, I flew to Las Vegas to participate in a book festival. It was a Saturday in late October, and I was on the 7 a.m. flight out of LAX. The plane was full of Philadelphia Eagles fans, en route to see their team play the Raiders at the arena a Las Vegas writer of my acquaintance has taken to calling the Boondoggle Dome. The actual name is Allegiant Stadium: I saw it, looking like an enormous Kodak Instamatic Flashcube after all the bulbs had burned out, as my taxi pressed north on I-15. Across the freeway stood the Mandalay Bay, where four years earlier, in the autumn of 2017, the deadliest mass shooting in United States history had occurred. At the beginning of 2017, I’d spent four months in Las Vegas on a fellowship, and this was the freeway exit I had used. Tropicana east to Maryland, then a few blocks north to the subdivision where I’d rented a small unit in a triplex on Elizabeth Avenue, around the corner from the Crown & Anchor British Pub. I remembered watching coverage of the shooting from my home in Los Angeles and feeling something not unlike proximity. How many times had I been right there? All the same, I understood that this was just a story I was telling, that I was no closer to the tragedy than anyone else. I hadn’t been present, and if I knew the ground, the territory, so did every tourist who had ever visited the Strip. The Mandalay was gold with smoked glass; it had a saltwater aquarium and a pool with a wave machine. Were I looking for a metaphor, this might add up to one, although if Las Vegas had taught me anything, it was that metaphor could never be enough. When I use the phrase “dark season,” I’m borrowing from John Gregory Dunne, who employed it in the subtitle of his 1974 book, Vegas: A Memoir of a Dark Season, which has long been out of print. Prior to Vegas, Dunne had been a journalist at Time and a freelance columnist and screenwriter. He had published two books: Delano (1967), an account of Cesar Chavez and the California grape strike, and The Studio (1969), for which 20th Century Fox had given him a year of unrestricted access, to its eventual chagrin. Each involved its own sort of immersion, which was also the case with Vegas, albeit on somewhat different terms. For Delano, Dunne, assisted by his wife, Joan Didion, did extensive on-the-ground reporting. (The book grew out of a piece he had written for the Saturday Evening Post.) With The Studio, he functioned as with a heightened fly-on-the-wall point of view. It’s a strategy we associate with New Journalism, although that’s something of a misnomer for what Dunne was doing. Perhaps more so than Didion, who distrusted narrative as much as she recognized its necessity, Dunne was a storyteller; just look at his novels True Confessions (1977), Dutch Shea, Jr. (1982), and The Red White and Blue (1987). Vegas, however, refuses to be so straightforward. Here more than in any of his other books—including Harp (1989), which comes billed as a set of “autobiographical examinations”—Dunne turns the lens inward, not on the facts of his existence so much as on the feeling, his sense of distance and disentanglement. “My wife says I am clinically detached,” he writes early in the book. My wife would not say the same, but in a lot of other ways the experiences—the displacement—Dunne evokes in Vegas remained resonant for me. “In the summer of my nervous breakdown,” he begins, “I went to live in Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada. It had been a bad spring, it had been a bad winter, it had been a bad year.” I read those lines a few weeks before leaving for the book festival, in an Airbnb just north of Hamilton High School in Los Angeles, around the corner from a house my wife and I had once tried to buy. We were there because we’d been forced out of our home by a burst pipe and a flooded bathroom. It had been a bad year for me as well: Not only the bathroom but also issues with my parents, who were aging and needed more help than I knew how to give. My daughter had graduated from college and moved across the country. The coronavirus kept mutating, and we had returned to some strange state of semi-lockdown, riding out the Delta surge. We left our house so quickly, my wife and I—just for a few days, we believed…until the bathroom was stripped to the studs—that we did not recognize the severity of what was happening. Then the days turned into weeks, and the weeks turned into months. The opening lines of Vegas echo something Didion had written a couple of years earlier, in her essay “In the Islands”: “We are here on this island in the middle of the Pacific,” she reports from the Royal Hawaiian Hotel in Honolulu, “in lieu of filing for divorce.” The resonance, I imagine, is not unintentional. Vegas, after all, tells the story of another marital disruption, during which Dunne decamped to a dumpy apartment complex called the Royal Polynesian, on Desert Inn Road. Royal Hawaiian, Royal Polynesian…it’s a nifty bit of doubling, although there the similarities end. I’ve been to the Royal Hawaiian, wandered its long and stately corridors, watched the sun set over the ocean at the beachfront bar while drinking Kona Longboard Island Lagers. I have also been if not to the Royal Polynesian then to many places like it—“in each unit,” Dunne reports, “there was a blackand-white television set, a hot plate, a plastic dinner service for two and two peanut butter jars reincarnated as water glasses.” The uniformity, and the transience, remind me of the now-shuttered Red Roof Inn about a mile from the Strip where I once spent the night, or even ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 95
my old place on Elizabeth Avenue. They’re all similarly rootless, similarly anonymous. That, of course, is the idea; Dunne was in Las Vegas not to be found but to get lost. “The question,” he observes, “was where to go to find that perfect place where one could look for salvation without commitment. And then one day I was driving on La Brea Avenue in Hollywood and saw a new billboard high atop the office of a credit dentist. On a brown field there was a picture of an enormous roulette wheel and a gold-lettered legend that said simply, with a Delphic absence of apostrophe: VISIT LAS VEGAS BEFORE YOUR NUMBERS UP.” Dunne is trafficking in cliché here: Las Vegas as illusion, or escape. What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas, a slogan I have long resisted, both for how it reduces the city to a catchphrase and because nothing ever remains so contained. “That was the year,” Didion suggests in “Goodbye to All That,” her 1967 essay about leaving New York, “…when I was discovering that not all of the promises would be kept, that some things are in fact irrevocable and that it had counted after all, every evasion and every procrastination, every mistake, every word, all of it.” This is one of the essential tensions of Vegas also, despite—or possibly because of—the fact that the book is, or may be, broadly fictionalized. “What you have read,” Dunne acknowledges on the final page, “is a myelogram of six months of my life. I can offer no guarantee that everything you read actually happened, only that insofar as it was perceived by my fractured sensors it was true.” What is Vegas, then, if not an autofiction? What is it if not a self-constructed myth? What is it if not (to frame it in more contemporaneous terms) a fictional memoir in the vein of Frederick Exley’s A Fan’s Notes, an impressionistic narrative unbound by the journalistic strictures, new or otherwise, of Delano or The Studio? The same could be said of all art or literature, which we create out of the questions we can’t settle, the conflicts we can’t resolve. I was interested in Vegas for all these reasons. I was interested because it was a lost book. To get a copy, I’d had to order from a used bookseller in England. It had cost me 90 bucks. The volume, paperback with a dust jacket, smelled like ancient wood pulp. The edges of its pages were stained and brown. The cover featured an image of a slot machine, bars aligned to reveal a woman, nude. It was an artifact from another time. During the flight, I kept the book flat in my lap, to hide that picture. I hid my face behind an N95. I kept thinking about those elements—the cover, the mask—as emblematic, two very different sides of a coin. Once, the louche aspect of the photo might have played as daring, transgressive even, a swipe at puritan pieties. Now, it was the opposite: a tawdry reminder of retrogressive attitudes. Someday, the mask I wore might appear similarly outmoded, although I couldn’t imagine ever flying unmasked again. Together, they were points on a line from past to present, with the future, as always, a question mark. That was what this fall, this dark season, had reaffirmed, beginning with our displacement, the necessity of leaving home for first one Airbnb and then another, no end to our expulsion in sight. There was nothing you could count on, nothing that couldn’t dissipate in some unan- 96 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 ticipated way. Seventeen years, my wife and I had lived in our place. We’d raised our children there. Now, time and location had unraveled. We couldn’t say when we’d return. Flying to Las Vegas felt similarly fraught, surrounded, at seven in the morning, by football fans already half in the bag. Behind my mask, I kept my distance. I kept my distance in the airport, too. As I moved through the terminal to the cab line, I could hear the bells and chirrups of the slot machines. I recalled another flight, during the months of my fellowship, from this airport to Austin, getting up at four in the morning in the high desert darkness for a six o’clock departure. That morning, too, the slots had kept ringing. People were drinking as they played. Had they been up all night? Anything to keep the party going. Anything to keep the fantasy intact. What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. Airport as casino, difficult to find a clock or a window, a microcosm of the city’s most prevailing clichés. The book festival, it should go without saying, was not a prevailing cliché of the city. For me, that was part of the appeal. It took place at the Historic Fifth Street School, a Depression-era mission revival compound that had been redeveloped as an arts complex. I’d “In the summer of my nervous breakdown, I went to live in Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada. It had been a bad spring, it had been a bad winter, it had been a bad year.” attended in 2019, driving in from Los Angeles. That had been my plan this time as well, until my disenchantment led me to rethink. I didn’t want to spend four hours in the car each way. I didn’t want to have to stay overnight. I wanted to get in and out, nice and clean, like a scalpel or a thief in the night. This would be my first in-person event in a year and a half, and I wasn’t sure I wanted to be here, although I was trying to prove something to myself. Amid the disruption and the instability, I felt…what?… the need to find a way back to routine. Our home was a construction site. Either my wife or I drove over every morning, to let in workers and pick up mail. The bathroom remained undone. The landlord had taken the opportunity to do other upgrades to the building: bolting the structure to the foundation, revamping the heat and the electrical. Three weeks earlier, while tented for termites, our house had been burglarized. The perpetrators had stolen a set of silver flatware bequeathed to my wife by her grandmother and a watch that had belonged to my father-in-law; they’d left a pair of sneakers and two partially consumed cans of Diet Coke. In her 1990 story “Health,” Joy Williams imag- ines a family coming home after a fumigation to discover a burglar lying dead in their living room. It is no exaggeration when I tell you that I regret we didn’t come upon the same. What’s that I was saying about a thief in the night? Three weeks later, my anger still felt like whiplash. It kept me awake. I was angry at the burglars and the extermination company. I was angry because no one had known to pay extra for security. “It’s probably an inside job,” the investigating officer told me, writing his report at the dining room table, mask below his nose. A lot of tented houses, he went on, were burgled; it was something of a cottage industry. I handed him the sneakers and the soda cans as evidence, but we never heard from the police again. At the festival, I sat at a table in the outdoor author reception area, sipping a cup of coffee. A dozen or so feet away, a family of musicians rehearsed. Two men who looked like brothers played jarana and requinto; a drummer kept the beat. The singer and one of the siblings were partners, I soon realized. An abuela looked after their two daughters, a toddler and a slightly older girl in a pink dress and a flowered headpiece. As I watched, the band worked through a number, while the kids darted back and forth. At one point, the singer picked up her younger child and danced with her as she sang. The players repeated a figure, and then again, practicing a rhythmic break. I preferred this to the polish of performance, music starting and stopping, shifting tempo, the missed notes, the collaboration on the fly. The singer had on green pants, and after a bit, she spoke up: “Showtime. We gotta go.” She lifted the toddler again, and the group moved out into the plaza, leaving me alone. Their seriousness, their spirit on a Saturday morning in Las Vegas, stood in contrast to the airport. Together, the scenes added up to something more defining than either one alone. It was Dave Hickey’s democratic demotic: “As Americans,” he had written nearly 30 years earlier in The Invisible Dragon, “we are citizens of a large, secular, commercial democracy; we are relentlessly borne forth on the flux of historical change, routinely flung laterally by the exigencies of dreams and commerce.… As such, we are social creatures charged with inventing the conditions of our own sociability out of the fragile resource of our private pleasures and secret desires.” A collage culture, in other words, which was what Las Vegas represented. A city barely a century old, built on the residue of a collective dreamscape. I had often wondered, during the four months I had spent here, what an archaeologist or an extraterrestrial visitor 10,000 years in the future would make of the postmodern mash-up of the city, the scaleddown Tour Eiffel and Empire State Building, the gondolas in the ersatz Venetian canals. Hickey was a signature voice of Las Vegas; I was at this festival to discuss his work. But Dunne had observed a similar dynamic. “The side of the road out there,” he writes, describing an excursion to the end of West Sahara Boulevard, “…resembled the trail of an army in full retreat. Carcasses of cars, refrigerators, propane heaters, furniture with the stuffing ripped out.… Tires, old radios, television sets with no picture tubes, stoves, washing machines,


bicycles, ironing boards, supermarket carts, air-conditioning units. Why here?… I could not find an answer, but today, years later, that stretch of highway out on the edge of the desert seems a more vivid image of Vegas than the lights of the Strip that even then were struggling against the summer twilight.” Do I need to say I felt the same about the glitz and glitter? Do I need to say I felt the same about the Strip? Over the course of my fellowship, I had visited it only twice—both times for dinner with friends from out of town. For Dunne, what he discovers along the fringes of the city represents the detritus of a disposable society. The gleaming surfaces obscure more than they reveal. To his credit, the author understands that; he builds much of Vegas around a trio of characters: a stand-up named Jackie Kasey, who once went on tour with Elvis; Artha, a prostitute taking classes at a local beauty college; and the private investigator Buster Mano, who runs surveillance on missing husbands, an irony of which the author is not unaware. The intention is to portray these individuals as representative. And yet, this gets complicated because none of the three existed in real life. What does it mean, then? I think again of Dunne’s assessment of his book as a myelogram, literature as Rorschach test, in which the facts may or may not have anything to do with the truth. What is truth anyway, especially in a city such as Las Vegas? It’s a question that occupies the center of the book. In places, Dunne’s explorations can veer into male posturing, licentiousness as liberation or something like that. He spends too much time on the dynamics of sex, or at least its possibilities; he introduces Artha with a paragraph-long list of statistics: “She had turned 1,203 tricks with 1,076 johns,” it begins. The specificity of the numbers (and, later, of the acts) reveals their artifice. Contrast that with what I think of as the book’s “truest” sequence, even though it emerges from similarly conditional terrain. Late in the narrative, Jackie tries to set Dunne up with a younger woman. The narrator remains, as he has throughout, ambivalent. Seeking clarity—or perhaps permission—he calls his wife in Los Angeles. “It’s research,” she reassures him. “It’s a type, the girl who’s always available to fuck the comic’s friend. You’re missing the story if you don’t meet her.” When Dunne responds that he doesn’t want to meet her, “there was a long silence at the other end of the telephone. ‘Well, that can be part of the story, too,’ she said.” His wife is right, although this is part of her persona: cool, dispassionate. At the same time, the passage functions as a kind of parody. Dunne makes that explicit in the way he sets it up. “She said that she was lonely and depressed,” he tells us. “The septic tank had overflowed. There was a crash pad next door and one of the couples had taken to boffing on the grass in clear view of our daughter’s bedroom window. The wind was blowing and there were fires at Point Dume. The maid had quit, the fire insurance had been canceled and the engine in the Corvette had seized on the Ventura Freeway.” The Corvette, of course, is the one from those Julian Wasser photos of Didion. The rest of the passage reads like a pastiche of her essays, not least “Los Angeles Notebook”: “The baby frets. The maid sulks. I rekindle a waning argument with the telephone company, then cut my losses and lie down, given over to whatever it is in the air.” There’s an intimacy to Dunne’s portrayal, or at least I want to think that’s what it is. There’s also a lot of rage. Considering it now, I have to wonder: Is this why Vegas has been out of print for nearly 50 years? “Time took on a kind of pattern,” Dunne writes of Las Vegas. “For days on end I did not leave the apartment.” I know exactly what he means. The months I’d spent in the city were another season of displacement, during which I often felt nothing so much as lost. I drove back and forth from Nevada to Los Angeles. When I was in one place, it was as if the other had ceased to exist. I wrote and read and walked for miles along empty sidewalks dusted white with alkali. I explored, as Dunne had, the edges where the boulevards blurred into the surrounding desert, where Las Vegas dissolved into where it was going, what it was. One weekend, I went to Red Rock Canyon. Another, I hiked Sloan Canyon, where hundreds of petroglyphs dot rock faces, messages inscribed in a language no one can any longer under- What is truth anyway, especially in a city such as Las Vegas? It’s a question that occupies the center of the book. stand. That this will happen to us is inevitable; languages, like people, die. One day, these words will be petroglyphs, if they survive that long; the archaeologist or the extraterrestrial may gaze at this sentence without realizing it’s addressed to them. One day, in other words, everything I’m writing—not unlike Dunne’s book—will effectively disappear. And yet, if that is the weight, perhaps it is the counterweight as well. At Red Rock Canyon, I climbed a rising trail before a cliff face, marveling at the color of the stone. The name Las Vegas means “the meadows”; it describes the oasis that first drew travelers to stop here, on the way from California to Salt Lake. These canyons are the only landscapes here from which the Strip is invisible. Then you leave or turn a corner, and it reappears. Both weekends, after I had finished hiking, I found myself at one of Las Vegas’s ubiquitous shopping centers, eating lunch in a chain restaurant: sandwich and a cup of coffee, maybe a beer. Afterward, I went back to my little apartment near the university, made plans for the evening: sushi at a place in Chinatown where I went so frequently that the chef had come to know me. But that had been another decade, another lifetime. He wouldn’t know me anymore. After my festival panel was over, I set off on another kind of walk, first from the Fifth Street School north to Fremont Street, then east to Maryland, past the Container Park, with its enormous mechanical praying mantis, and Atomic Liquors, where I had once liked to drink. In part, I was tracking landmarks. In part, I was killing time. My flight back to Los Angeles wasn’t until late afternoon, and there was nowhere I had to be. From Fremont, I doubled back to Las Vegas Boulevard and undertook a long and meandering arc south. This was the Strip, although not yet; here, north of the Stratosphere and the unfinished Fontainebleau—a 68-story casino that had still not opened nearly 15 years after breaking ground—I saw gun shops and wedding chapels and sex stores and cannabis dispensaries. In the distance, the surreal projections of the Bellagio, the Aria, the Cosmopolitan, and Caesars Palace shone weakly beneath the raw brightness of the sky. “The summer heat burned into the cortex of the brain,” Dunne writes. “It was something tangible, hallucinogenic, dipping under a hundred degrees only after midnight, so hot outside that a heat headache seemed a permanent, terminal condition.” Summer had long since ended, but the effect was much the same. It felt like I was walking my way out of Las Vegas. Or walking Las Vegas out of me. On the Strip, the sidewalks filled with revelers and street hawkers and tourists, women dressed as showgirls posing for photographs, and always, always, Eagles fans in town for the game. No one was masked, but that was not my issue. I felt invisible behind my N95. Even in the middle of the action, I was on the outside. Like Dunne, I understood, as I always had, that this was not my place. Eventually, I made it to the taxi line at the MGM Grand, not far from my old neighborhood. I could see the planes take off in the near distance, next to the Luxor pyramid. At the airport, I waited for my flight to be called, reading Vegas. On the terminal sound system, Sheryl Crow’s “Leaving Las Vegas” played on what felt like repeat. It had been the last song I’d heard driving out of the city after my fellowship. Dunne, too, had left Las Vegas. He had lived and written and remained in his marriage for three decades before he died, in 2003, at 71, sitting at the dinner table with his wife. I suppose that’s as good a way to go as any other, although I don’t think like that. Between death and life, it’s not a question. Or maybe survival is a better word. “I can only say it was a bad season and then it was over,” Dunne writes. And: “It has been two years now since I last was in Las Vegas, and the things I remember about it have nothing to do with why I went, and less with why I left.” My own bad season continued through November, December, and into January. My son’s best friend was killed in a hit-and-run in Texas. My wife broke her elbow and needed surgery. For a time, it felt as if the universe were aligned against us, but that, too, I understood, was mere projection, another failed metaphor. The universe is not capricious; it is indifferent. It does not care about our fate. All we could do was wait it out, live through this, until, as Dunne had, we found a passage home. Q David L. Ulin is Alta Journal’s books editor. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 99

REINVENTION By HUNTER DROHOJOWSKA-PHILP The REAL WORLDS of H T I M S S ALEXI H ollywood is a city of reinvention, and it’s not just actors who change their names and origin stories. Artist Alexis Smith, née Patricia Anne Smith of Norwalk, California, assumed the spangly pseudonym of the 1940s movie star when she was 17. It was an innocent, even humorous, choice but one that foregrounded the direction of both her life and her art. “I think when you change your name…it’s a big statement to yourself that you want to be somebody else,” Smith once told me. “Ultimately, I think that’s what mine was.” Certainly, the act of changing her name freed Smith to invent visual stories, mining fresh meaning from old movies, books, and oddments of pop culture. Throughout her 50-year career of making collages, she has borrowed broadly from swap meet–sourced tableaux, texts, and theatrical installations. “My artwork is about the real world rather than the world of art,” she previously said to me. “It’s about tracing familiar underlying memories, stories and myths that make up our culture.” In many ways, Smith relies on the slippery nature of memory, a theme so widespread in literature, to seduce her audience. She has often used the writings of Thomas Mann, Jack Kerouac, and Raymond Chandler, but in a context of her own making. And now, over the past decade, her brain has been ravaged by Alzheimer’s. Living in a Craftsman-style cottage in Venice, with her husband of 34 years, artist Scott Grieger, she can no longer form sentences when speaking. Against this backdrop, the arrival of Alexis Smith: The American Way at the recently reopened La Jolla site of the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego is fortuitous, if not poignant. Smith’s conceptually oriented art has been shown widely, but not since her 1991 retrospective at the Whitney has there been an opportunity to see a complete overview of her work. MCASD owns 11 pieces by the artist, some of which are among the 50 brought together for the occasion. There are also two large public works in the Stuart Collection on the nearby UC San Diego campus. The show went up on September 15—three weeks after Smith’s 73rd birthday— and runs through February 5, 2023. INVENTING A MEDIUM A retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego provides the first chance in 30 years to see an overview of this seminal California artist’s collages. JOSHUA WHITE Alexis Smith’s conceptually oriented art often subverts themes of popular culture and literature. Opposite page: Smith’s wall painting Men Seldom Make Passes at Girls Who Wear Glasses (1985). Smith and I became friends and neighbors in the close-knit art scene of early-1980s Venice. I wrote reviews, essays, and articles © ALEXIS SMITH; COURTESY OF MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART SAN DIEGO ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 101
Smith’s mural Same Old Paradise (1987) is on display on the UC San Diego campus. Below: Your Name Here (1975). 102 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 about her work, particularly attracted to the ways she drew on collective memory, before I sensed the early signs of her dementia. Her comments in this story are of necessity in the past, things she told me, often for other publications, around the time when the works in question were created. In that way, this story itself is something of a collage—her preferred medium. Smith’s art evolved from an unconventional upbringing in a postwar Southern California still redolent of orange groves. Her father was both a psychiatrist and a superintendent at Metropolitan State Hospital, a psychiatric facility in Norwalk, and the family lived on the manicured grounds. Her father was 43 when she was born and ill-equipped to be a single parent when her mother died of cancer 11 years later. “I think that it was a huge accidental boon that I was raised by my father, because he didn’t know how to raise me as a girl,” she said. “I think it made me more brave and ambitious.” Having moved to nearby Whittier for junior high and high school, Smith had modest expectations of becoming a French teacher when she enrolled at UC Irvine in 1966, what she called “a fateful non-decision.” By happy accident, she discovered the Art Department, where her adolescent hobby of making collages of words and pictures was considered a form of art. “As soon as I fell into the art world, I ceased to exist in a vacuum,” she said. The newly developed program had a radical faculty, including artists Robert Irwin and Vija Celmins, and a flexible curriculum. “They gave me permission. They gave me encouragement,” she said. Irwin, a founder of the Light and Space movement, recalled, “Most students think they are going to learn to manipulate an existing medium. They don’t realize that if they have an interesting sensibility, they’re going to have to invent a medium.” For Smith, that medium began after college as hand-typed texts combined with photos or symbols that were presented as manuscripts to be read. For Clues and Souvenirs (1971), she typed out the plot of a Perry Mason episode but added a hand-drawn copy of a Dick Tracy comic and a Philip Marlowe quote that only frustrate solving the mystery. As art, such works were viewed as a continuation of Southern California’s often irreverent 1960s conceptual art movement, especially as exemplified by artists using language, like Ed Ruscha or John Baldessari. “I don’t think that I’m specifically interested in Southern California, but I’m a product of it. The place in my work is not so much here but everywhere,” Smith said. © ALEXIS SMITH; COURTESY OF GARTH GREENAN GALLERY
NOW OPEN: THE BIG ORANGE S © ALEXIS SMITH; COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO IN THE DIRECTOR’S CHAIR As the 1970s art world was being redefined by the women’s movement, Smith attended consciousness-raising groups, and her collages increasingly included stories about women who are torn between the demands of love and life, especially career. For example, the text of The Red Shoes (1975) is typed onto pink paper with added sequins and a color image of Alexis Smith, her actor namesake, dancing as fast as she can. That same year, the artist commissioned Your Name Here (1975), her own director’s chair with the name Alexis Smith on the backrest, wickedly taking charge of the stories she was retelling. Graduate school for Smith consisted of working for Frank Gehry in the mid-1970s as his “Girl Friday.” Being in what was then a modest architectural office helped her learn how to work with others, facilitating technical challenges from fabrication to lettering. “It had the most important influence of all…which is that they told people they would build things they had no idea how to build. None, zero, right?” she said with a laugh. “The secret is to say you can do it, even if you don’t know how to do it. Right? That’s like the magic key.” That key opened a door for Smith, and she dramatically increased the scale of her art. Her breakthrough installation, re-created for the MCASD retrospective, was Raymond Chandler’s L.A., shown in 1980 at Los Angeles’s Rosamund Felsen Gallery. A bale of actual hay signified the rural past. Gallery walls were stenciled with the 1940s L.A. skyline and neon signs that promised adventure. It was the journey of the aspiring starlet or the hopeful hustler, characters often doomed to tragic endings in Chandler’s dark and droll novels. Smith’s black-sandpaper collages referred to the passing highway. She added the evocative text of a chapter from his 1949 novel, The Little Sister, which includes this passage: “I smelled Los Angeles before I got to it. It smelled stale and old like a living room that has been closed too long. But the colored lights fooled you. The lights were wonderful. There ought to be a monument to the man who invented neon lights. Fifteen stories high, solid marble. There’s a boy who really made something out of nothing.” “Hollywood is a fantasy place that has a real locale—here, L.A., where I live. It’s also a place of the imagination.… It’s the quintessential American transformation myth—a nobody one day, and a somebody the next,” Smith explained to Richard Armstrong, then a curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, for her retrospective there three decades ago. In the ’80s, the idea of appropriation was a critical sensation, and a generation of women—Cindy Sherman, Barbara Kruger, Jenny Holzer— outhern California’s reputation as a rich center for contemporary art gets a boost this October with the opening of the Orange County Museum of Art at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts in Costa Mesa. Pritzker award–winning architect Thom Mayne’s gleaming, multilevel structure includes a park, a lightfilled atrium and galleries, and impressive stairs similar to those at New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. Mayne has called them “a social conduit,” saying, “We were interested in developing a very urban idea in a suburban environment.” The 53,000-square-foot building replaces what was previously known as the Newport Harbor Art Museum, shuttered in 2018. Director and CEO Heidi Zuckerman, who was appointed in January 2021 and is highly respected for her former role as director of the Aspen Art Museum, nods to local history with her opening show, 13 Women, a multigenerational presentation of art from the permanent collection that includes Vija Celmins, Mary Corse, and Mary Heilmann. The artists will rotate in over the course of the year and will also include Alexis Smith. The show title’s number 13 refers to the women who in 1962 founded the Balboa Pavilion Gallery, the precursor to both the Newport Harbor Art Museum and OCMA. That first venue had a reputation for cutting-edge shows, including the early work of multimedia artist Chris Burden, who spent some time as the gallery’s preparator. Zuckerman says, “My overall mission and vision for the institution is to look back to move forward. It wouldn’t be appropriate to open this building—60 years to the year that we first opened—without acknowledging the 13 visionary women who started the museum.” OCMA is dedicating another show to Fred Eversley, an artist whose minimalist resin sculptures made him a force within Southern California’s Light and Space movement. A monumental sculpture by Sanford Biggers was commissioned for the plaza and will be unveiled at the museum’s opening. In addition, the museum is bringing back its predecessor’s popular California Biennial, with works selected by Elizabeth Armstrong, an organizer of three earlier biennials, with Gilbert Vicario and Essence Harden. Zuckerman notes that the museum first hosted a biennial in 1984: “It was really important to me that when we open this big, beautiful, new building, we have these kind of markers of our history.” Zuckerman says her personal goal is for museums to be for everyone. This includes OCMA, where she scored a victory by securing, through sponsorship, free admission for its first decade. Q —H.D.-P. DUSTIN SNIPES Heidi Zuckerman, director and CEO of the Orange County Museum of Art. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 103
© ALEXIS SMITH; COURTESY OF MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART SAN DIEGO The Girl Can’t Help It (1985). were seen as critiquing the ways photographs and language represented hierarchy and power. While Smith’s art came from a similar perception, she was using actual stuff of the past to make her point. “I think I’m too sentimental and connected to people’s real passionate experience of life to be very interested in deconstruction,” she told Armstrong. Her studio encompassed Southern California swap meets and thrift stores, a rich trove of common history, from books and posters to household kitsch. “I’m someone who starts out in fine art and thinks it’s not as vital as the real world,” she said. “So I came up with a fine art that has the vitality of the real world.” Smith targeted the thorny issue of the ways women have been represented in fiction and film in her standout 1985 show Jane at Margo Leavin Gallery in L.A. It included pictures and quotes from a wide range of Janes, from Jane Austen to Jayne Mansfield. Smith, as always, kept the tone light but serious. Pinups and socialites, the repressed and the excessive, royalty and pretenders, all had been presented in some form of fiction, film, or fact. Anthony Graham, the associate curator who organized the MCASD exhibition, writes, “Smith’s critique is always more subtle and more severe, focusing not on the women but rather the men who underestimate them.” He cites a large piece from the museum’s own collection. Smith, an avid follower of college football who for many years had season passes to UCLA games, embraced double entendres in her wall painting of Marilyn Monroe wearing giant sunglasses that reflect football players, a varsity letter on the left, and a vision-exam chart on the right. Printed at the bottom of the lenses is the Dorothy Parker quip “Men seldom make passes at girls who wear glasses.” Graham writes that “Smith turns the phrase on its head, subverting the sexual gaze to make the men the object of desire.” Despite showing with Holly Solomon Gallery in New York City, Smith, as a woman working in L.A., had less visibility than her East Coast peers. That changed in 1987 when the Brooklyn Museum showed Same Old Paradise, a 22-by-62-foot mural of the landscape of her youth, sun-kissed oranges and wide horizons, with an open road rendered as temptation but also as a massive serpent. “I needed a metaphor for California and I went back to the Garden of Eden—a paradise of lush plants and opulence that harbors the extremes of good and evil, where ignorance is bliss,” she told Armstrong. Large collages 104 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 quote a sequence of passages from Kerouac’s On the Road, including “I was rushing through the world without a chance to see it.” That mural, now on the UC San Diego campus, fueled a twodecade parallel career doing substantial public art projects around the country, including The Snake Path (also at UC San Diego), which uses a serpentine theme as a twisting path leading to a library. “People who wind up doing a lot of public art have a sort of missionary quality, the civic spirit of people who would like to upgrade the environment,” Smith said. “For an artist, it’s a vehicle for doing something meaningful.” These huge and time-consuming ventures, which also include the Restaurant at the Getty Center and the terrazzo floors of the Los Angeles Convention Center, were completed at the expense of regular visibility in galleries. That has changed recently. Smith is now represented by Garth Greenan Gallery in New York and Parrasch Heijnen in L.A. And she’s being embraced by MCASD. The museum’s original 1916 Irving Gill residence has been renovated several times, and it most recently underwent a five-year project that added 30,000 square feet of gallery space with an orientation toward the Pacific. The upgrade was overseen by museum director Kathryn Kanjo, who explicitly wants upcoming exhibitions to highlight “trailblazing women artists from the recent past.” Like Smith. If much of today’s art is dedicated to personal identity as defined by gender, race, or ethnicity, Smith’s art has explored the construction of identity with all its complications and conflicts. Smith became a ventriloquist in seeking phrases from the past to comment on issues of the present. Despite the intentionally easy appeal, each work should be appreciated for the deep and sophisticated layers of meaning. “You have to read into each piece for yourself; there is no correct interpretation, no right answer,” she said. “The art is something that happens in your head.” Q Hunter Drohojowska-Philp is the author of Rebels in Paradise: The Los Angeles Art Scene and the 1960s and Full Bloom: The Art and Life of Georgia O’Keeffe. Her article about the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, “New Times, New Histories,” for Alta Journal, Fall 2021, was a 2022 Southern California Journalism Awards finalist in the Criticism of Art/Architecture/Design category.
POETRY By MICHAEL TORRES Michael Torres was born and brought up in Pomona, California, where he spent his adolescence as a graffiti artist. His debut collection, An Incomplete List of Names, was a National Poetry Series selection and was named one of NPR’s 2020 Books We Love. The idea of a “history” has such a heavy weight to it. I’m fascinated with the possibility of histories of something seemingly insignificant or even unworthy of having a history told. For a few years, house parties were very important to me. They could shape a person’s view of the world; they could offer opportunities and lessons. I’ve witnessed this. So much went on in that short period of time in my life. How could I not go back years later, in writing, and try to capture some of it? Q A Brief History of Pomona House Parties We stack packs of Bud Light in our arms, and in the backyard, minutes later, that’s us, creasing cans in our grip. Before sweat, spit, and the fights we start, we smell like Drakkar Noir, Curve, Cool Water, and a small vial of Calvin Klein CK One I bought at the dollar store earlier that day, that I thought was the real deal until further inspection when in faint cursive above the label it read: Inspired by. In the brief history of house parties, I’m inspired by Danny who launches himself into Jonny’s pool wearing all his clothes. I pass out on the homie’s couch from smoking a cigar like a cigarette, or I pass out in the backseat of Rudy’s car after being too down to chase tequila with beer more than twice, and within two minutes. Or I pass out high and on an empty stomach as I try to stand upright for a photo. There’s my body, captured in its collapse towards confetti. A billow of dust and fun. In the brief history of house parties, we watch in awe, the women ride mechanical bulls, then we boo the guys who want to try it until we realize we too could participate, and we turn everything into a competition. In the brief history of house parties Jonny yells, What did I do? to the woman he invited but forgot to dance with. Everyone watches her leave. Too many guys show up with muscle tees under their button-ups. Every pair of jeans ironed. And when too many guys show up, more women leave. Then more guys show up, investigating, prodding, asking, Where all the girls at? They proceed to drink all the beer we brought; they talk to us wrong, like they know us. No one knows us. Jonny, beyond buzzed, says something about his dad owning a Russian bayonet, and me and the homies know (or hope) those words are aimed at everyone drinking our beer. And Jonny’s dad does get the gun out in the brief history of house parties. And glass shatters over pavement like a perfectly misplaced syllable. No one thinks of brooms when the strobe lights are still swooping. The fogger pumps at full capacity, and makes a mystery out of our ordinary lives. Later, after the final page in the brief history of house parties, we’re at the Jack in the Box drive-thru. We ask for three orders of the Two Tacos; Stuffed Jalapeños. We yell about what we said and who swung first. We request ranch; a Big Cheeseburger. Napkins, yes, thanks. We hardly believe how it went down. We ask each other, where were you? We ask for extra ranch. More. Please. Thank you. In the postlude to this brief history of house parties, no one lets Danny inside their car because his jeans are still drenched and he smells like chlorine. We pull away and into a parking spot, and he pops out of the trunk like, Did you remember my Jumbo Jack on sourdough bread? Our laughter one part flail, one part apology. PHOTO BY GETTY IMAGES ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 105
ALTA PICKS Recommendations for the best of California and the West Our Binge List Looking for a quintessentially western show that isn’t necessarily, well, a western? As the weather starts to cool and the days get shorter, it feels like the perfect time to catch up on some buzzworthy fare. Ranging from heartfelt comedies to thought-provoking dramas, here are half a dozen shows to stream that open windows onto radically different, unforgettable worlds. HACKS Jean Smart and Hannah Einbinder bring to life the dynamic duo of Deborah Vance, a legendary Las Vegas comedian quickly falling out of the spotlight, and Ava, a young, unemployed comedy writer. Their intergenerational chemistry is captivating from episode one, when Ava lands in the desert heat and proceeds to insult, and impress, her new boss. Watch on HBO Max HBO MAX THE PEOPLE V. O.J. SIMPSON: AMERICAN CRIME STORY NETFLIX THE LINCOLN LAWYER After a year spent recovering from drug addiction, Los Angeles defense attorney Mickey Haller (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) inherits a law practice—one that he operates from the back seat of his Lincoln. This means that most of this legal drama, adapted from the Michael Connelly series, unfolds on the road, showcasing L.A. hot spots like the Viper Room as Haller hightails it out of trouble. Watch on Netflix 106 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 FX NETWORKS The 1995 “trial of the century” was re-created in 21st-century style, and this dramatization has the Emmys to show for it. Sarah Paulson, Sterling K. Brown, and Cuba Gooding Jr. star in this 10-episode limited series that recounts the landmark Los Angeles event in gripping detail, right down to the Juice’s freeway car chase. The show is riveting for those who remember exactly where they were when the verdict was announced—and also for those born years later. Watch on Hulu
GRACE AND FRANKIE After their senior husbands leave them for each other, hippie, Del Taco–loving Frankie (Lily Tomlin) and straitlaced Grace (Jane Fonda) end up unwilling roommates in a seaside house in San Diego’s La Jolla community. Their mismatched friendship yields a vibrator company for older women and spurs witty dialogue, in addition to sweet and weighty moments between the two acting pros, often set to the pair gazing out on the Pacific Ocean. Watch on Netflix AMC DARK WINDS New Mexico’s stunning plains serve as the backdrop to this western drama set in 1971. Zahn McClarnon and Kiowa Gordon play police officers Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee, unlikely partners (familiar to Tony Hillerman readers) brought together to solve crimes that occur on an outpost of the Navajo Nation where the characters come to terms with what justice means on Indigenous land. Watch on AMC+ NETFLIX HBO MAX INSECURE It’s a vibrant Los Angeles we don’t see on-screen often enough: middle-class and wealthy Black people whose experiences cannot be reduced to pain and trauma or hokey sitcom humor and platitudes. Instead, show creator (and star) Issa Rae celebrates the quotidian through the eyes of smart, complex, lovable women, while a West Coast realness plays out in conflicted dialogues between the main character (also named Issa) and her own image in the mirror. Watch on HBO Max —JESSICA BLOUGH, ELIZABETH CASILLAS, ANITA FELICELLI, AND AJAY ORONA ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 107
GATEWAY, LOS ANGELES Cities in the Sky THE DESIGN FOR A LOS ANGELES HIGH-RISE STACKED MULTIPLE BUILDINGS, VERTICALIZING NEIGHBORHOODS INTO A SINGLE STRUCTURE. IT WAS NOT BUILT, BUT IT CASTS A LONG SHADOW.
Rendering of the Gateway in Los Angeles by Gensler Architects, from 2016. The proposed building consists of a luxury apartment block supported by two residential towers that rest atop a hotel. LOFTY AMBITIONS By JOSEPH GIOVANNINI B ack in 2016, a unicorn landed on the counter of Los Angeles’s Department of Building and Safety, an unexpected, improbable, apparently fringe project that took new eyes to see. Architectural anomalies seldom make it past the door at the LADBS, but here was the 50-story Gateway, made up of stacked buildings with funky facades: twin 20-story residential towers rested on a big, 15-story hotel block, and they supported a block of luxury apartments above, itself surmounted by an architectural asteroid from a faraway galaxy. Usually, high-rise buildings are cautious, well-behaved point towers straight out of Euclid that rise in a single leap from base to top, their facades as pin-striped as the suits of the bankers who finance them. This was not that. Unusual circumstances produced this unusual submission. Designed by the Los Angeles office of Gensler Architects, it was one of several projects submitted by developers panicked by an impending legislative change that threatened to downzone, and devalue, their real estate in or near Downtown Los Angeles. The site of the unicorn, north of the Santa Monica and east of the Harbor Freeway, was loaded with potential, since the critical mass of a huge high-rise could redefine the area and create its own real estate value. Scrambling to get in under the wire, before the downzoning passed, developers hired architects to create “placeholder” designs meant to win entitlements (the right to build). Architects quickly put together projects, designing for density even if the likelihood of their being built as designed was sketchy. The upside of the real estate thought exercise was that circumstances lifted the onus of plausibility, encouraging speculation of an architectural sort in a building type usually straitjacketed by value engineering. If the Gateway was a broad-strokes idea, the details yet to be resolved, it was brilliant in concept, a breakthrough original enough to move the architectural needle in Los Angeles and even shift the paradigm of what a high-rise in the United States could be. It was larger than a building, edging toward urban design. Megabuildings have the potential to become self-contained cities: what Gensler was proposing was stacking and compressing three or four diverse urban blocks of Downtown Los Angeles into a building of buildings. The composite structure verticalized the idea of several largely horizontal Los Angeles neighborhoods, combining all their sociology and functions PHOTO BY GENSLER ARCHITECTS into a stack of mixed-income neighborhoods. Each building within the cluster expressed its own character, whether a hotel or market-rate housing or luxury digs. In the 1930s, modernist sculptors took a great leap forward when they started piercing a clay or bronze mass with a void, introducing the notion of space into the solid. Now, decades later, architects were proposing the same, breaking down a building into parts that introduced voids into monolithic blocks. The openings meant that light, air, and space traveled through the building and that the roofs of some sections became the ground for others: you could go outside on the 20th floor for sun, coffee, and a chat or a swim; birds could fly in for a breather. The ground rose into the sky, bringing the environment, not to mention the community and neighborhoods, into the body of the building. Southern California’s climate would encourage designs for indooroutdoor living that were already underway. Residential styles imported to L.A. from the East Coast at the turn of the last century didn’t acknowledge that winterdefensive houses had migrated to a Mediterranean climate, but eventually, architects got the memo, and Victorian piles sprouted generous verandas; Craftsman bungalows, sleeping porches. Starting with R.M. Schindler and Richard Neutra, modernists introduced the idea of indoor-outdoor living. A hundred years later, at the counter of L.A.’s building department, Gensler’s unicorn was doing the same, opening the closed form of the high-rise imported from back East with multiple rooftop terraces that embraced the out-of-doors. As unusual as the Gateway might have seemed to incredulous inspectors in L.A., the time had come, or was coming, for the new paradigm: Segmented sky cities, proposed and built, had already been surfacing elsewhere in other practices, mostly outside the United States. So why not here? FLOATING MEGASTRUCTURES In Hong Kong in 2012, the New York firm Kohn Pedersen Fox had already developed the idea in a packed urban center, though for environmental rather than zoning reasons. In one of the densest agglomerations on earth, the developer of Hysan Place, an office building and shopping center, wanted to build a sustainable form that would flow cooling breezes through the body of the building to air-condition the surrounding urban canyon, where walls of buildings immobilized the tropical air. KPF architects Robert Whitlock and Wil- ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 109
INTERLACE, SINGAPORE A new type of high-rise contains multiple urban areas—parks, schools, offices, residences, entertainment, retail— within its stacked sections, resembling a city in the sky. To date, most of these structures are being built outside the United States. 18 ROBINSON, SINGAPORE
RAPHAEL OLIVIER HYSAN PLACE, HONG KONG liam Louie, with Bruce Fisher, pulled the 36-story, 716,000-square-foot mixed-use structure apart, segmenting it into a shopping center at the base with separate, stacked office blocks above. The individual blocks created sky gardens. Whitlock followed up his Hong Kong success in Singapore on Robinson Road, where he cleaved the base of an elegantly faceted crystalline glass tower with a gash of landscape on rising terraces that created a spiraling oasis of greenery 10 stories up into the 30-story office building. The architect chamfered the base of the tower according to the arc of the sun to maximize daylight reaching the roof terraces. The resulting mid-rise park gave employees access to outdoor spaces and reduced the heat-island effect, in which hard surfaces like concrete and dark glass absorb radiation from the sun. Opening the usually closed skyscraper form imported into the body of the building Singapore’s character as a garden city. “It’s important for employees to have access to outdoor spaces—they’re no longer working in their father’s office building,” says Whitlock. “Developers are pushing for wellness ratings, and that means breaking the extruded box so that each use gets its own ground floor and an outdoor connection.” He adds that as buildings get taller, breaking form structurally helps offset increased wind loads. “I’m seeing a lot of porosity in taller buildings of large-scale projects,” says William Pedersen, a founding director of KPF. “There’s a growing acceptance among both developers and tenants for allowing nature to penetrate into the building. Tenants like it, and developers find offices with outdoor space highly marketable. There’s more potential for a building to become a city within a city. The development bodes well for the tall building.” In 2011, KPF took the idea to an extreme in a concept proposal for a super-tall complex of stacked towers, Tokyo Grand Design. The architects basically split the bulk of a single massive tower into skinnier towers standing atop one another in three vertiginously tall piles that were themselves connected by landscaped bridges. Separations and displacements of each vertical block allowed sun, air, and view into the voids. Terraces populated even the upper reaches, but at the base, the towers transformed into an alluvial fan of greenery, creating a vast urban park serving the whole building and the surrounding neighborhood. Southeast Asia has been receptive to sky cities. More than 50 years ago, Japanese architects conceived megastructures to float above cities, but no one thought these imaginative shock-and-awe provocations would ever be built. Proposals smaller than the Tokyo Grand Design have actually been built, and rather than hovering over cities like the megastructures of a previous generation, they are rooted in the street grids of existing urban fabric, and they involve conventional rather than exotic construction and engineering. The brilliant New York architect Paul Rudolph, who died in 1997, did build what in retrospect might be considered forerunners of the current crop of segmented buildings, all outside the United States. An admirer of Frank Lloyd Wright, who broke the box horizontally to work the building into the landscape, Rudolph instead broke the vertical box to bring the building into the sky and the out-of-doors into the tower. In several Singapore projects, built and unbuilt, he fanned and terraced low-rise buildings out from the base of a tower (as at the Concourse on Beach Road), or he perforated the building’s skin into threedimensional honeycombs of terraces (as at the Colonnade). In the 1979 project Marina Centre, a virtuoso design, he bridged open spaces with apartment blocks and separat- FIFTEEN FIFTEEN, VANCOUVER BINYAN STUDIOS ed towers from one another and from their bases, multiplying outdoor decks. The American master never built his 1990 Gatot Subroto condominium complex of eight towers in Jakarta, which featured three-story blocks pinwheeling outward, each block leaving void decks between it and the next (the outdoor sky gardens added up to more than the footprint of the whole site). But 17 years later in Singapore, Ole Scheeren, a German architect with offices in Beijing, Hong Kong, Berlin, and Bangkok, proved Rudolph’s Jakarta proposal practicable at the Interlace, a vast complex of 31 apartment blocks containing more than 1,000 units. Each six-story block is elevated, some atop others, liberating the ground or rooftops beneath for outdoor space. Scheeren spun the blocks off the orthogonal in dynamic hexagonal patterns that shape large-scale open courtyards at many levels. Applying the idea of segmentation to a PHOTOS BY TIM GRIFFITH ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 111
HYPERBUILDING, BANGKOK OMA New sky cities owe a conceptual debt to Rem Koolhaas’s Hyperbuilding in Bangkok, from 1996 (above). This one-kilometer-tall megastructure redefined notions about what is possible when stacking structures, creating self-contained urban neighborhoods while leaving ground below for parks and nature preserves. KING POWER MAHANAKHON, BANGKOK WILSON TUNGTHUNYA; COOKFOX ARCHITECTS 112 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 ONE SOUTH FIRST, BROOKLYN
point tower in Bangkok in 2016, Scheeren pixelated parts of the tubular, 78-story, mixed-use structure, King Power Mahanakhon. Cubes pop into or out of an otherwise regular high-rise tube in staccato rhythms. Last year, the City of Vancouver approved construction of Scheeren’s Fifteen Fifteen, a 42-floor, omnidirectional condominium tower with apartments projecting like cannons out from the body of the building, their roofs forming the terraces for the apartments above. MUSEUM PLAZA, LOUISVILLE BUILDINGS OF BUILDINGS MUSEUM PLAZA/PR NEWSWIRE MIRADOR, MADRID Scheeren is a graduate of what might be called the Rem Koolhaas Academy of Young Turks, and several other alumni have pursued a strategy of stacking buildings. In a graphic application of the idea to the Mirador, a huge, 21-story residential building completed in 2005 in Madrid, Jacob van Rijs and Winy Maas of the Dutch firm MVRDV textured and color-coded a massive, conventional apartment block, distinguishing numerous different “neighborhoods” within an architectural collage that attacked the modernist idea of standardization. The architects then stacked separate blocks atop the block, leaving a large semipublic outdoor space between them. In 2005, Joshua Prince-Ramus of Rex, a Koolhaas grad based in New York, proposed the spectacular riverside Museum Plaza in Louisville, Kentucky, a stack of six towers and blocks that all look like the Seagram Building, by Mies van der Rohe, buttressed by a truss set on the oblique. In 2012, Bjarke Ingels of Big—based primarily in Copenhagen and New York— proposed an even more startling vision of stacked buildings in Seoul, configured like a monumental three-dimensional tic-tactoe board, a city in the sky. These projects owe a major conceptual debt to Koolhaas’s Hyperbuilding, a self-contained, one-kilometer-tall megastructure imagined in 1996 as a “test” for the next urban step for a city of 120,000 on a site in Bangkok. Eliminating the commute that has choked flat urban grids, he proposed that an entire vertical city—residential, medical, retail, educational, and cultural spaces, all connected with cable cars, gondolas, and high- and low-speed elevators running on a diagonal—be built within its armature of columnar towers. Entire buildings hung from habitable, soccerfield-size platforms that acted as parks with 12-kilometer-long promenades. Hyperbuilding remains an extreme statement of the idea of “stacking” or “piling” structures while creating ground in the sky and saving ground below for nature preserves. In Hyperbuilding, Koolhaas pushed the idea of a building of buildings to its improbable but logical extreme, and it has served as a model or inspiration for less-complex, real-world projects at a smaller scale. In Jersey City, scaling down and simplifying the vision in 2006, Koolhaas’s firm, OMA, stacked four autonomous blocks, each with a different program—apartments, hotel, artist-studio residences, gallery space— into a 52-story tower called 111 First Street. Giving each tower its own program and outdoor terrace broke the surrounding monotony of single-use towers with no outdoor space. Gensler may have presented its unicorn to the Los Angeles building department in 2016, but it was the New York firm Cookfox Architects that actually broke ground on its version of a unicorn, One South First, the next year in Brooklyn. It’s obvious now that the design was more than a sacrificial placeholder. Anyone traveling along FDR Drive in Manhattan will spot an unusual conjoined pair of thin buildings across the East River in trendy Williamsburg. A very tall hole segments a mixed-use, 480,000-square-foot, 42-story megastructure, which combines apartments, offices, and retail in a three-part complex set on a three-story commercial podium. The city that invented the notion of a towering skyline, New York challenged its own Manhattan paradigm with a multipart building that is unique, green, elegant, and inclusive (20 percent of its residential space is reserved for affordable apartments) and that has the critical mass of a small city. Roof-decks are landscaped and usable, and the building’s a good neighbor, designed to complement a much-loved historic monument, the adaptively reused Domino Sugar refinery next door. Gensler’s unicorn may be funkier, but New York beat Los Angeles to the punch. Plan checkers at the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety might have blinked when they opened their computers to see the Gateway. But population statisticians predict that 68 percent of humanity will occupy cities by 2050, and sky cities may well populate our not-toodistant future. Prospecting for land in the sky makes sense as cities densify and technology and growing concentrations of capital allow and even encourage it. The beneficial irony of stacking buildings is that segmenting buildings as they climb proliferates the potential for open space and greenery, contributing to their sustainability. There is the humanistic dividend, too, of breaking down the scale of a Manhattanized world of monolithic, one-style skyscrapers into neighborhoods that allow people to escape elevators into a more pedestrian environment. The downzoning that scared developers in Los Angeles did not come to pass, so Gensler’s unicorn will not be built. But it still stands, along with a few others that have sneaked into our skylines, as a paradigm shift that pokes big, constructive, sunny, green holes in the high-rise as we know it. The sky is the new limit. Q Joseph Giovannini is a New York– and Los Angeles–based architect and critic. His most recent book, Architecture Unbound: A Century of the Disruptive Avant-Garde, was published by Rizzoli last November. JTB PHOTO ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 113

FICTION By DANIEL A. OLIVAS • Illustrations by VICTOR JUHASZ My Chicano Heart N ACHO SIGHS AND THEN EMITS A WHISTLE OF exasperation through his teeth. He can’t bring himself to look at his wife, Maricris, because he suspects that he will start to weep, and Nacho knows that he is an ugly cry. So Nacho forces his eyes to focus on the balustrade that runs along the perimeter of their porch. And this makes him wonder about the men—for surely only men did that type of work in 1927, the year their house was built—who shaped and sanded and painted the balusters and handrail. Had the women or men in their lives taken their hearts, too—in the same way Maricris had taken his—and had they fought with all of their essence to retrieve for themselves that most crucial of human organs? Nacho’s thoughts wander further afield and he considers the state of their balustrade: it is sturdy and well crafted, but it could use a good sanding and a fresh coat of paint. But then Nacho’s initial thought returns. He sighs, finally surrenders, and turns his eyes to his beautiful wife. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 115
“Maricris,” he whispers. “Por favor, give me back my heart. You have had it for 10 years.” Maricris sits back in the porch swing that Nacho installed for his wife’s 35th birthday five years earlier. Maricris cradles her mug of hot Nescafé—thick with half-and-half and three tablespoons of brown sugar—as if it were a baby chick or hamster or live grenade. And then she spits out an emphatic “No!” with her red lips forming such a perfect that Nacho falls in love all over again. And then Maricris lets out a hearty “Ha!” because she sees that her husband has fallen for her once more. She then sips the hot coffee and savors both the rich flavor of her favorite beverage and her undeniable power over this man. Nacho realizes that his wife is more beautiful at that moment than at any other moment including their wedding day. And the inevitable moistness starts to well up in Nacho’s big, brown eyes—eyes he inherited from his mother and that resemble so many of the big, brown eyes of the Mexicans from Jalisco—and he blinks but the tears have turned Maricris into an expressionist painting and Nacho surrenders and allows the tears to drop freely from his big, brown, Jalisco eyes. And then Maricris says it again, but this time in her own whisper: “No.” N acho knows that he has no one to blame but himself. The day before they married, Maricris had asked him for his heart. Nacho could have said no, stood on principle—asserted his independence as an adult—and that would have been that. But no. Nacho could not deny this woman anything. So, as they lay in bed that long, luxurious day before their wedding, Nacho opened up his chest as Maricris greedily looked on, her mouth almost watering. He gingerly lifted his beating heart from its home and plopped it into Maricris’s open palms. Nacho remembers Maricris’s grunt of delight while she beheld his heart as it undulated and wriggled in Maricris’s beautiful, brown hands. She then scurried out of bed, in her naked splendor, and plopped Nacho’s heart into a small, hand-carved, wooden box that sat on her dresser, a box Nacho had never noticed before. From his vantage point, Nacho could not see the box’s top, which was adorned with a replica of a José Guadalupe Posada woodcut of nine rollicking skeletons riding old-time bicycles over a lone—and now doubly dead—skeleton wearing armor. But over the years, Nacho would become quite familiar with the Posada calacas, memorizing each particular horrific grin of the vainglorious skeletons, and he would feel deep remorse for that lone skeleton whose life had been extinguished yet again even in death. Nacho remembers in exquisite detail how Maricris then closed the box with a loud snap and scurried back into bed. She meticulously wiped Nacho’s thick, warm blood from her hands onto her immaculate, white sheets, then snuggled into her man and gently examined with her fingertips the fleshy edges of the gaping hole on Nacho’s chest that slowly closed until only a violently pink line ran like a deserted road from Nacho’s throat down to his navel. Nacho could have said no, and Maricris would not have his heart today. But Nacho had little control when it came to Maricris’s desires. And, of course, Nacho could see that Maricris knew this about her man, which only made Nacho love her more. F or 22 days after they married, Maricris kept Nacho’s heart in that small, hand-carved, wooden box that sat on her dresser. Then one afternoon at 3:03 p.m., Maricris wandered into what was once her bedroom but was now theirs and happened upon Nacho standing before the dresser, arms akimbo, motionless, staring at the closed wooden box that held his beating 116 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 heart. Maricris crept behind her husband and looked over his shoulder and down toward the box. Finally, after 12 long seconds, Maricris shouted: “Boo!” Nacho did not start. Indeed, he did not react in any manner whatsoever. But his heart jumped so hard that it jostled loose the little brass latch on the box’s lid and almost leapt from its splintery home. The next day, Maricris drove to the hardware store and returned 23 minutes later. Nacho watched from the dining room table as Maricris cleared the floor of their guest closet and set up a new, 12-pound Stalwart Digital Safe that had been called a “best value” by a woman who hosted the Security Nerd blog and who proclaimed: “For its price point, this is one of the best home safe options on the market. It has safety features such as an automatic lock after 3 incorrect entries on the keypad during any one-hour period and the LED keypad gives an added layer of security. Plus, you can even make customizable codes for guests. There is also an override key if you forget your code or if the battery runs out.” After Maricris opened the safe and set the security lock, she marched to the bedroom and returned with the wooden box. Nacho could hear his heart beating woefully as Maricris set the box inside the safe, closed and locked it. “There,” said Maricris. “No more temptation.” N acho sometimes imagined that their life together was like a stage play with their dialogue written by an anonymous playwright and rehearsed over the course of six weeks until they were ready to act out their roles for an unseen audience. One occurrence felt particularly like a scene from a theatrical work in progress: (Scene: Present day. MARICRIS and NACHO sit at their breakfast table lingering over a lazy Sunday brunch. They are very old-school so they each read a section of the Los Angeles Times, both lost in the printed words. After two beats, NACHO breaks the silence.) NACHO: (newspaper up to his face, reading) Mi amor… (MARICRIS grunts, absorbed in reading her section of the newspaper) NACHO: (lowers newspaper, looks at MARICRIS) Mi amor… MARICRIS: (not moving newspaper from her face) Sí, mi vida, sí…I am listening… NACHO: (skeptically, but pushing on) It says here, mi amor… MARICRIS: (not moving newspaper from her face) Sí, mi vida, sí… NACHO: It says here that a new study shows that married men live longer than unmarried men. MARICRIS: It only feels longer, mi vida. NACHO: (lifts newspaper back to his face, ignores MARICRIS’s joke, and continues reading to his beloved wife) And a 2009 study reported that men who married more educated women also enjoyed a lower death rate than men who married less educated women. MARICRIS: (putting newspaper down to look at NACHO) Gracias a Dios that I got that master’s degree. NACHO: (putting down newspaper) Sí, mi amor. (beat) ¿Mi amor? MARICRIS: (lifting newspaper up in a vain attempt to end the conversation and continue reading in peace) Sí, mi vida… NACHO: (beat) May I have my heart back? MARICRIS: (not moving newspaper from her face, calmly, with little emotion) No. NACHO: (imagining the perfect that his wife’s mouth just


formed) But why not? MARICRIS: (putting newspaper down) Why should I? You gave it to me. NACHO: I miss it. MARICRIS: You do? NACHO: Sí. Very much. MARICRIS: But you knew what you were getting into when you fell in love with me. NACHO: I did? MARICRIS: No hay rosa sin espinas. NACHO: (considers his beloved wife’s observation for a beat) Ni modo. I ask again: May I have my heart back? MARICRIS: (beat) OK. NACHO: (surprised, elated) OK? You will give me back my heart? MARICRIS: I didn’t say that. Listen to my words. NACHO: (crestfallen, confused) What? MARICRIS: I will let you visit your heart, once a week. NACHO: (seeing an opportunity) Oh? MARICRIS: (suspicious of her beloved) But they will be supervised visits. NACHO: Supervised? By whom? MARICRIS: By me, of course. By me. (MARICRIS stares at NACHO with these last words. After three beats, NACHO grows uncomfortable, clears his throat, lifts the newspaper to his face to block MARICRIS’s gaze) NACHO: (resigned) Sí, mi amor. That will be fine. MARICRIS: (lifting newspaper up to her face) And I will look into a PhD program. Maybe I can add a few more years to your life. (End of scene, curtain) T he supervised visitations with his heart proved to be more difficult for Nacho than he had expected. At first, he derived great comfort—and maybe a little relief—from their new weekly ritual. Maricris and Nacho would finish their Friday night traditional dinner of chilaquiles that Nacho took great pride in cooking, using his late father’s recipe. And then after one or two cups of Nescafé and perhaps flan, tamales dulces, or tres leches cake, Nacho would clear the table while Maricris went to the guest closet, unlocked the safe (the keypad’s beeping sound would inevitably make Nacho’s scalp tingle in anticipation), and brought the wooden box to the now-cleared dining room table. And inevitably, Nacho would reach over to the latch, but Maricris would gently pat her husband’s hand away with a soft ah, ah, ah (as she would to her child if she had one), and proceed to open the box herself. And Nacho would sit back, sigh, and take in the view of his beating, veined, ruddy heart. After three minutes of visitation in which the sounds of the married couple’s breathing fell into a call-and-response rhythm with the lub-dub, lub-dub, lub-dub of Nacho’s heart, Maricris would close the box, fasten its latch, and take it back to the safe. With four beeps of the keypad as Maricris locked away Nacho’s heart, the ritual would end. After six weeks of these supervised visits with his heart, Nacho grew restless. The comfort and relief he had once felt were replaced by trepidation and extreme dread. He needed to develop a plan to rescue his heart once and for all. Unbeknownst to Maricris, Nacho had tried several potential combinations on the safe’s keypad, but to no avail. He went through the usual numbers: their birthdays, wedding anniversary, the date of their first date, but they all resulted in an unpleasant buzz emitted by the keypad that mocked Nacho and sounded like it yelped Loser! each time he tried and failed. But then Nacho’s luck changes. In the middle of one summer night, Nacho extricates himself from his beautiful wife—who snores softly and soundly—puts on a robe, and pads downstairs to try his hand again at the safe’s keypad. He opens the guest closet and aims his Rayovac flashlight at the safe. And what he sees makes him jump. What? This can’t be. The safe’s door is ajar! Maricris must have failed to push it closed after the last supervised visitation two days before. Nacho squats and slowly opens the safe. And there it sits: the wooden box! Inside it, the gentle lub-dub, lub-dub, lub-dub of Nacho’s heart begins to quicken. Nacho lifts the box from the safe and slowly opens it. Oh, joy! His heart beats faster and louder and then Nacho lets out a little Ha! but then realizes that he needs to be stealthy, so he closes the box, shuts the safe, and stands. Nacho steps warily from the closet, closes it with a soft click, and hugs the box to his chest. What next? In the garage, Nacho keeps an ancient pair of Levi’s, a Lila Downs T-shirt, and battered Chuck Taylors that he wears for yard work. He listens to the soft snoring of his beautiful Maricris upstairs, hesitates, but then creeps through the kitchen to the back door, which leads to their garage. Nacho enters the garage but leaves the light off since the moon is riotously bright and fills the garage with a translucent, undulating glow through the row of rectangular windows that line the top of the garage door. He tenderly sets the box down on the workbench and opens a plastic bin that holds his clothes and shoes. Nacho strips off his perspiration-drenched pajamas and robe, and he stands for a moment, nude, in the moonlight. He reaches up with his right hand to the long scar that runs from his throat to his navel, and he gently fingers the ridged road of flesh. And Nacho smiles. After a few moments, he dresses, lifts the box from the workbench, and opens the side door of the garage, which leads to the side yard. It is a warm Los Angeles night—almost 80 degrees—and the moon is even more dazzling than Nacho expects. He closes his eyes, breathes deeply, steels himself. You can do this, he says to himself. You can do this. Nacho walks through the side yard and makes it to the sidewalk in front of their house. He looks to his left, then to his right, and then to his left again. He makes a decision to go left because it seems like the appropriate direction. Nacho first takes one step, then another, and finally he finds himself trotting, and then after a few moments, he is running, faster and faster and faster, clutching the beating box to his chest. And with each step, his heart beats harder and louder. As Nacho runs along the deserted sidewalk, the moon glows brighter and brighter and his heart beats louder and louder until Nacho can no longer distinguish his heart from his breathing from the magnificent glow of the moon. And as he runs, Nacho feels moisture on his face. Is it raining? No, the sky is clear, not a cloud to be seen. No, it is not rain that covers his face, but tears that are pouring from Nacho’s eyes, tears so big they could be dollops of honey or hand balm or hot blood from a gaping wound. Tears so big that Nacho can no longer see anything but a blur. And as he runs down the sidewalk clutching the beating box tightly to his chest, Nacho no longer knows what he feels and no longer knows what he is doing and no longer understands anything at all. After 28 minutes of running through neighborhoods he no longer recognizes, Nacho finally lets out a loud “Oh!” and then stops running, staggers to a standstill, out of breath, his heart beating hard within the wooden box. And Nacho again lets out a loud “Oh!” He looks up at the moon that now appears larger than it has ever been, and he feels as though the moon will swallow him up in all its lurid magnificence. It is, indeed, the most stunning, frightening moon he has ever witnessed. And in the silence of the night—a silence punctuated only by his beating heart and heavy breathing—Nacho sighs, shivers, and finally whispers: “Oh.” Q Daniel A. Olivas is a lawyer, a playwright, and the author of 10 books, including How to Date a Flying Mexican: New and Collected Stories. ISSUE 21 • ALTA JOURNAL • 119
TRAILBLAZER THE NEXT WEST SEX ED Securing Reproductive Care I had to learn everything the hard way,” Nicole Martin says of growing up near Albuquerque, New Mexico, and being taught what she calls a “fear-based,” abstinence-focused sex education curriculum. Martin, who’s Navajo and Laguna Pueblo, attended college in Colorado for Native American and Indigenous studies and gender and women’s studies. She figured she could use her degree to teach “what public school didn’t teach me,” she says. After graduation, she volunteered for environmental justice and Native liberation groups, which led her to Indigenous Women Rising, an organization focused on equitable and safe healthcare. The group’s cofounder, Rachael Lorenzo, was looking for help to launch an abortion services fund. Martin signed up in 2018, and at the end of her first day, she approached Lorenzo. “I told Rachael, ‘This is who I am.… If you want to start sex education, I’m down,’ ” she says. Martin, who is 31, now leads IWR’s sex education curriculum, which she has taught to middle schoolers in Albuquerque. She also supports the growth of IWR’s abortion fund, which has helped nearly 1,000 people across 37 states access not just abortions but also the necessary transportation, childcare, and hotel accommodations. After being nominated to cochair an organization called Respect New Mexico Women, Martin helped spearhead the successful repeal of three statutes that criminalized abortion care. She never shies from an argument with white male state senators who push back. Even now that the U.S. Supreme Court has overturned Roe v. Wade, she says, “New Mexico will always be a safe place for people to seek abortion care.” Roe v. Wade, Martin says, “has only protected the few,” and Indigenous, Black, and LGBTQ communities often “struggle to find great healthcare.” She has long striven to give her community access to lifesaving reproductive care. Today, she adds, “we’re willing to take on any risks that come with that.” Q —JESSICA KLEIN 120 • ALTA JOURNAL • ISSUE 21 PHOTO BY ERIC DRAPER
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ALTATUDE “Understanding that people are easily manipulated is step one. Step two is internalizing that ‘people’ includes you.” “Look at this—even lightning takes out more people than we do!” CROWDEN SATZ ALI SOLOMON ELLIS ROSEN NAVIED MAHDAVIAN “Hi hungry, I’m Dad!” And so began Gus Wembly’s first and last Bring Your Daughter to Work Day. “That’s it? You want to read faster?” ANDREW DICUS LARS KENSETH $15.00 ISBN 978-1-7350758-2-2 51500> 9 781735 075822