Mission Statement
Our mission is to promote, produce, and sponsor events and activities that encourage the appreciation, study and performance of the arts.
Festival History
Since the
first painting was created here in 1878, the exquisite natural
beauty of Laguna Beach has been a magnet for artists. Artists
flourished in the small village, supporting themselves through
sales to tourists who flocked to the beach for vacation. By
the early 1900s, the village had gained a reputation as an art
colony, and in 1918, with the entire population numbering only
300 residents, the community established the Laguna Art Association
to promote and support the fine arts.
In
the mid-1920s, the Art Association turned the town's old community
center into a small one-room gallery. The gallery’s popularity
led to the artists’ raising money for a larger permanent
home, which they eventually secured at the corner of North Coast
Boulevard and Cliff Drive, the present-day site of the Laguna
Art Museum.
The small
seaside village took great pride in its cultural establishment,
which attracted visitors from all around. However, when the
Great Depression swept the land, tourists had little money to
spend and Laguna's residents struggled. As a means to draw much-needed
business back to the art colony, the Art Association struck
on the idea of a summer art festival, to be held the week following
the1932 Los Angeles Olympics in hopes that visitors would travel
south to Laguna Beach before journeying home.
The
whole town pitched in to make the 1932 festival a resounding
success, in effect transforming Laguna Beach into one enormous
art gallery for the week. The festival featured art exhibitions,
community plays, outdoor pageants, a parade, street market,
spectacle of lights, costume ball, and tours of artists’
studios and local residents’ gardens. Artists set up booths
sponsored by individual society matrons, and downtown stores
displayed the artists’ work in their front windows. It
was the birth of the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts, where artists
could showcase their talent and make a profit.
A smash
hit at the festival was the Living Pictures show created by
artist and vaudevillian Lolita Perine. She dressed local residents
in costume and seated them behind a makeshift frame. These paintings
that came to life fascinated viewers of all ages.
In 1935
Roy Ropp, a local construction worker, realtor and amateur artist,
expanded Perine’s concept and developed the performance
into its present-day format. Ropp renamed the new and improved
event "The Spirit of the Masters," and continued to
design and produce it with resounding success until 1941. In
1936, the production was renamed yet again, for the last time,
the "Pageant of the Masters."
Between
1933 and 1940, the Festival of Arts and Pageant of the Masters
moved from one location to another each summer. In 1938, 70
community groups formed a committee to establish a permanent
home, and selected the present site of the Festival and Pageant
for a future community central park.
On July
30, 1941, the first Festival of Arts and Pageant of the Masters
held on the site marked the park’s opening to the public.
News stories claimed the spectacle was a magical creation and
word traveled fast that it was a "must see." The show
closed on August 8, 1941, a great success for the artists and
residents.
The site
served as Laguna Beach's community park for many years. From
the 1940s to the 1960s the park was used year-round for a variety
of events, including the community Easter Egg Hunt, carnivals,
the Goat Show, and the Scottish Festival. In the ’60s,
with the Festival’s continuing success and popularity,
the event was expanded to six weeks, and the temporary wooden
artist booths that were installed each summer were replaced
with permanent structures.
From
its humble beginnings as a means of promoting and sustaining
the fine arts in Laguna Beach, the Festival of Arts has matured
into a world-renowned cultural institution drawing visitors
from far and wide. The Festival - with its premier attraction,
the Pageant of the Masters - has shared its success, awarding
millions of dollars over the years in the form of scholarships
to art students and grants to art and cultural organizations,
and hosting cultural events on the grounds throughout the year.
The Festival of Arts and the City of Laguna Beach have grown
up together, becoming inseparable in the eyes of residents and
of the many patrons who return year after year to enjoy the
world-class art of the Festival and unique tableaux vivants
of the Pageant.
An attempt
in 2000 to move the Festival and Pageant away from Laguna Beach
was met with swift and widespread resistance. Happily the will
of the membership, artists and patrons prevailed, and the 70-year
old tradition shall remain squarely where it belongs - nestled
in the seaside hills of Laguna Beach - for the enjoyment of
generations to come.
The Festival
of Arts gratefully acknowledges the extensive input of lifelong
Laguna Beach resident Belinda Blacketer, of the Laguna Beach
Historical Society, in the preparation of this article.
TOP
|