Essayer OR - Gratuit
Salvaged artwork rebuilds a father’s legacy
Los Angeles Times
|August 14, 2025
Tami Outterbridge is rescuing her dad’s art after losing his house in the Eaton fire.
Before sunup on Jan. 8, as the Eaton fire roared across the San Gabriel Mountains, a blaze of texts and calls lit up my phone with a ferocity oftheir own.
I'm used to being a switchboard of sorts — as a journalist, inevitably, word travelsto and throughme. In those chaotic, early hours, as I haphazardly prepared my own go-bag in my North Pasadena home, I monitored the rising alarm: The major share, I noted, were froma cadre of artists, musicians and writers parsing the news, speculating that the Altadena home and studio of late artist-activist John Outterbridge’s family would have, most certainly, been in the path of those fast flames.
I grew up on the edges of Outterbridge’s remarkable orbit of influence in Southern California’s Black Arts Movement; the potential loss was a staggering thought to process. For now, we were in a vestibule of hope: It was rumor, not fact, Itold them and myself.
As an internationally acclaimed artist and educator, Outterbridge, who died in 2020, was one of those community lions, deeply rooted — ubiquitous, it seemed — always with a generous ear and hand to help. I met him taking art classes at the Watts Towers Arts Center, when it was still located in a whimsical, paint-bombed bungalow. It's where, as a child, I took my first lessons with "Mr. Tann" - the ceramicist Curtis Tann - also a key player in the movement, and then later sat with Outterbridge himself, watching his hands, observing his patient example.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition August 14, 2025 de Los Angeles Times.
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