A CALIFORNIA TRADITION

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Ray Roberts

Gallery McCollum Proudly Presents

“A California Tradition” Three Genrations of California Painters Opening Night, August 9th, 6-9pm


Michael Logan 1984


Gallery McCollum Proudly Presents

“A California Tradition”

Vanessa Rothe

Three Genrations of California Painters

Opening Night, August 9th, 6-9pm Exhibition runs thru September 7th, 2014 at Gallery McCollum 206 N. Pacific Coast Highway Laguna Beach CA 92651 www.gallerymccollum.com Karen Tobin at the Gallery 949-275-8255


John Ken Budicin Auster


Patrick Tobin 1975

About The Exhibition This fine art exhibition seeks to portray a dozen of the top landscape artists in California and will span over three generations of work painted in California. The gallery will display both smaller plein air, on location studies along with large museum quality studio works. The artists range from two Historical California painters such as Joseph Kleitsch and William Wendt, to three ‘Mid Century’ California artists from the 1950’s-1980’s that kept up the realistic style, artistic movement and tradition during a time of modernism and abstraction, Michael Logan, William Ogden and Patrick Tobin, and will continue forward to exhibit ten well known contemporary local California painters. Living Artists Include: Ken Auster, John Burton, Peggi Kroll-Roberts, Robin Hall, Jeff Horn, Debra Huse, Michael Logan, Michael Obermeyer, William Ogden, Ray Roberts, Vanessa Rothe, Jeff Sewell, Kevin Short. Historical Include: Joseph Kleitsch, Patrick Tobin and William Wendt. A special viewing of a newly available and rarely seen Joseph Kleitsch from 1923 purchased recently from a private collector, will be available and on view grace of Steven Stern Fine Art on opening night only at the gallery. Guests will be able to view two more Private works: An early 1900’s private collection work by William Wendt, on loan for the opening night only from the Peckham family from Laguna Beach ( not available for sale), which has not been seen by the public in over 50 years, and a Michael Logan of William Ogden painting in plein air on loan from the Rothe family of Laguna Beach. More exciting availble works are a rarely seen on the market William Ogden of “Pearl Street Beach”, and an early work of “Historical Crystal Cove” by Michael Logan created before this historic California area was remodeled. Both will be on view to the public after being privately owned for 30 years and both works are available for purchase. Many of the contemporary artists will be in attendance opening night to chat with collectors about the history of painting in California and how it has influenced their work, the difference between their studies and studio works, and their choice of color and brushstroke. Gallery McCollum celebrates its 20th year Anniversary this summer with this celebration of California fine art. Opening Night, Saturday, August 9th, 2014 6-9pm at Gallery McCollum 206 N Pacific Coast Highway, Laguna Beach CA 92651 Show will run thru September 7th, 2014 www.gallerymccollum.com Phone:(949)275-8255 Curated by: Vanessa Rothe and Karen Tobin (Gallery Owner) and special thanks to Steven Stern Fine Art


Michael Logan Painting of William Ogden Painting “En plein air� 1985 Private Rothe Family Collection


Three Generations of California Artists: Early 1900’s Painters Joseph Kleitsch William Wendt

Mid Century 1970’s and 80’s Painters Michael Logan William Ogden Patrick Tobin

Contemporary Painters Ken Auster John Burton Peggi Kroll Roberts Robin Hall Jeff Horn Debra Huse Michael Obermeyer Ray Roberts Vanessa Rothe Jeff Sewell Kevin Short


Early 1900’s Hisorical Artist


Joseph Kleitsch

“Geraniums in Bloom” Circa 1923

Grace of Steven Stern Fine Arts

18x21”

Oil on Canvas

Born in Banad, Hungary on June 6, 1882, Kleitsch began painting at the age of seven. He later pursued art training in Budapest, Munich and Paris. He immigrated to the United States in 1912 and two years later, on July 22, 1914, he married Edna Gregatis of Chicago, Illinois with whom he would have his only child, Eugene. Influenced by his visits to the famous museums of Europe, Kleitsch continued with his love of portrait and figuritive painting after relocating to California. There he rose to the challenge of capturing his new environment’s brilliant light and diverse landscape. Kleitsch fell in love with the rustic artist village of Laguna Beach, moving there in 1920. Notable works depicted the town’s eucalyptus lined streets, the crashing waves of the Pacific coastline and the nearby Mission San Juan Capistrano. Kleitsch became a significant resident of the Laguna Beach Artists Colony. Arthur Millier of the Los Angeles Times in 1922 was quoted saying of Kleitsch “he was a born colorist; he seemed to play on canvas with the abandon of a gypsy violinist”. On November 16, 1931, at the age of forty-nine, Kleitsch passed away. Two years after his death, Kleitsch’s widow opened the Joseph Kleitsch Fine Arts Gallery in Laguna Beach. His works are now found at high end auctions and thru fine art dealers such as Steve Stern Fine Arts.


Early 1900’s Hisorical Artist


William Wendt

“Woodland Symphony” Private Collection Peckham Family, Laguna Beach, 24x28” Oil on Canvas William Wendt (1865-1946) was an American landscape painter. Wendt was born on February 20, 1865 in Bentzen, Germany. In 1880, at the age of fifteen, Wendt immigrated to the United States and worked in Chicago as a staff artist where he painted formula pictures. In his free time the young Wendt displayed a love for easel painting and began to develop a personal style of painting. In 1894 and 1896, Wendt traveled and painted with his friend George Gardner Symons visting England and California, and later traveled to the East Coast, Germany and France. He married the sculptress Julia Bracken in 1906, and he and his bride then made the decision to move to California. Traveling to the hard to reach areas of the California countryside for inspiration, Wendt painted canvases graced with trees, rolling hills, blue skies and farmhouses. His earlier works have been termed tranquil and lyrical while his later works evolved to show bold and broad brushstrokes with rich greens and browns. Highly regarded in California and nationally, he earned the title of “The Dean of Southern California Artists”. In 1911, William Wendt became the first president of the California Art Club, along with his wife Julia Bracken Wendt, he served as its president for six years, and he also held memberships at: the American Federation of Arts, the Chicago Society of Artists, Laguna Beach Art Association, National Academy and the National Arts Club of New York. He exhibited and sold his works successfully for thirty years at major galleries in California, Chicago, Boston and New York. He won numerous awards during his career and was well respected. He died in Laguna Beach California on December 29, 1946. Wendt had built his studio in Laguna Beach, California and a street in town still bears his name: Wendt Terrace. His works can be found in the following museums: Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Brigham Young University Museum of Art; San Diego Museum of Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, Dallas Museum of Art, Laguna Art Museum and the Irvine Museum.


Mid CenturyCalifornia Artist


Michael Logan

“Historical Crystal Cove” 1984

30x36”

Oil on Canvas

Michael Logan has been painting for over 50 years. At a young age he found a love for drawing and would soon attend the Coronado School of Fine Art. But, it was his move to a small seaside town at age 18 that would shape his life as an oil painter. Laguna Beach was a flourishing art colony at the time. The mild climate and spectacular scenery had attracted the likes of Granville Redmond, William Wendt and Edgar Payne. These and other important artists became known as the Southern California Impressionists, painting in the Plein Air style and it was these artists that would have the greatest influence on him. Michaels love for painting, especially for painting on location would take him on a lifelong journey. For the next five decades he would paint throughout Mexico, South America and Europe, capturing bright colored fishing ports in Spain, ancient vineyards in Italy, and the lush countryside of France. Today, the love of painting nature is his inspiration. “I love to paint outdoors where the natural light and elements bring an immediacy to the work, to keep the work loose but accurate. There is an intimacy in being one with nature; feeling the warmth of a breeze, the icy spray of a wave, the smell of freshly cut hay.” Michael is as comfortable at home in his studio where vibrant florals and still life grace the walls. The smells of oil paint and turpentine are ever lingering. Michael’s paintings are deliberate and confident. His paintings capture a moment in time, his strong brushwork and beautiful clean color tell the story. Michael has exhibited in numerous galleries and museums and his collectors span the United States. His present and past affiliations include Oil Painters of America, California Art Club, Plein Air Painters of America and Laguna Plein Air Painters.


Mid Century California Artist


William Ogden

“Pearl Street, Laguna Beach” 1982

24x36”

Oil on Canvas

Since the early sixties, Ogden’s original nouveau style has inspired Southern California. Often referred to as one of the most influential and imitated artists of all time, this icon, called the “Godfather of surf realism dominated the surf community creating promotional ads for Hobie Surfboards, Jantzen Inc., and being regularly featured in every prominent surfing publication, including a four year consecutive run of back covers for Surfer Magazine. From earning money shining shoes in front of a gambling hall as an eight-year-old, to being moved up a grade in school and selling his work during his art class, to exhibiting in fine art galleries Ogden has become an important name in the arts in California. Ogden always has a sense of oneness with the universe and nature in his work and reveals a sensitivity, a humility, that seems quite admirable considering all the trials he has faced. He works both from life and from his imagination and explains how it takes years of life experiences to make his work in addition to his craft. He learns from paintng fom Nature how the light works, how the values work and then uses either nature, or his imagination for subject. “Working from imagination, from life, and my experiences runs my machine. It keeps me going. This is what I want people to see and know, that I did not come up with this overnight. It developed through my whole lifetime. If younger artists see that, then they will see the reason they should keep going and keep trying and work more from life, imagination, and from experience.”Young people today are totally cool with my art. It’s almost even retro. They dig it, because it’s still a part of their lives. It’s timeless. They can still relate to it.”


Mid Century California Artist


Patrick Tobin

“Casitas” Circa 1972

15x20”

Oil on Canvas

Patrick Donovan Tobin was bron in Los Angeles, Ca in the summer of 1950. His parents, renowned cartoonist Don Tobin and child actress Helen Stone, moved the family to Montreaux Switzerland. Patrick was first exposed to an international lifestyle and the world of art in Europe, then to the art colony of Laguna Beach. There was quite a clan of celebrated artists and cartoonists in Laguna Beach during his childhood and he grew up influenced by this group of men, his father, the Interlandi brothers, Virgil Partch, John Dempsey and Ed Nofziger. Patrick says he always knew he would be a painter. “My dad knew more about painiting than anyone I know. So I was brought up with it...for some reason I never questioned what I was going to be.” By 1974 he was living and surfing in southern Mexico, spending most of his time exploring the wild coastline and remote villages and the coastline and tawny hills of Southern California. Patrick was inspired to paint landscapes, working outdoors in the old plein air tradition. In the ensuing 30 years, he had continued to paint througout the country of Mexico, where his works were collectoed by the Governer of Guerro and Sr. Ernesto Zedillo, President of the Republic of Mexico. He also traveled throughout Europe, particularly south of France attracted by the light of the plein air painters. He painted in Hawaii and back to California developing his distinctive style. In his later work is a stately quality. His fascination with vivid, contrasting colors that marked his mid career palette has re-evolved along with the successful and enduring element from his earlier earth toned palette. Patrick Tobin’s paintings simply don’t stand still. With his fresh color, his works touch on expressionism but stay rooted in plein air and realism and with a strong command of composition, he remains a unique amoung the artists of his time.


Contemporary California Artists


Ken Auster

“Barber Shop Talk”

11x11”

Oil on Canvas

For it was in his formative years in Long Beach, California, where Ken grew up with his feet deeply planted in the surfing culture, that he first learned to express his art talent. Caught up in the ground swell of the 1960s surfing culture, Ken not only plunged into the sport of surfing but into the art and graphics of surfing as well. While working his way towards a Bachelor in Fine Arts degree from Long Beach State University, Ken built one of the world’s most prominent silkscreen and T-shirt companies, creating now-legendary surfing art that adorned surfers from Belmont Shores to Hawaii to Mexico. His surfing images, silk-screened as original prints on paper, became the “fine art” of this beach culture, and today, represent the classic surf art of the past century. At the heart of Ken’s work was always the awareness of the fine line between man-made and nature. In the mid-1990s, Ken moved to a more serious art level. Throwing himself into the splendor of “plein air” (on location) painting, Ken discovered the richness and broad colors of the city life he long avoided. As he will tell you, he rejoiced in this newfound ability to paint anything and everything – cafes, train stations, airports, street scenes, and of course, the beach. The transition from surf art to serious impressionism was natural for Ken – his passion and obsession to reach a new understanding between himself and the oil painting medium took on a new intensity of discovery. “I simply want to achieve the ultimate communication on the canvas – to say more with less,” Ken says. His deft use of color. His economies of brush strokes. His simple, yet beautifully structured compositions. As one famous critic described – “each painting captures a moment in time charged with a hint of narrative drama. And each is rendered with such vibrant immediacy that a single glance excites other senses as well.”Ken’s passion for painting is shared with hundreds of students who each year travel from around the world to attend his workshops in Laguna Beach and Carmel. With his wife, Paulette Martinson, they have a thriving art world centered at their studio and gallery in picturesque Laguna Canyon. In a relatively short time since this transition to plein air painting, Ken Auster has moved to the forefront of American contemporary impressionists. He consistently walks away with gold medals and first place awards at juried exhibits. His work is collected by some of the most respected corporations and patrons.


John Burton

“Alta Lake”

16x20”

Oil on Canvas

John Burton is an award- winning oil painter best known for his stirring and vivid depictions of the transitory beauty of our ever-changing world. He is at once tangibly influenced by the Western and Russian painters of the early twentieth century, and entirely unique in his remarkable ability to capture the profound spirituality and majesty of his surroundings. Burton has traveled and painted around the globe, always maintaining his home and artistic center in the American West. Burton’s deep American roots permeate the rich, natural character of his art, and inform his work’s reverent tone. He has been written up in many fine art magazines including being asked to do a live demonstration in front of six hundred guests at the plein air convention in 2014. He is one of Carmel’s most celebrated artists and an important artist in America today. Honored member of the California Art Club, Laguna Plein Air Painters and Realism Without Borders.


Peggy Kroll Roberts

“Sharing the Shade”

6x9”

Oil on Canvas

Award winning artist, Peggi Kroll-Roberts, was trained at Arizona State University and the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA. Peggi studies with John Asaro, Ned Jacobs, and Laura Robb. Peggi worked as a fashion and advertising illustrator before making the transition into fine art. Using intense color and value to accentuate her subject, she moved into fine art with a bold palette, a love for small paintings and a very loose style that achieves a lot with a few very energetic brush strokes. She prefers to suggest reality than render it. Inspired by her children she paints beach scenes and other aspects of their lives. She also breaks away from the conventional still life by painting scenes of cosmetics and the occasional coffee cup or slab of butter finding beauty in very simple things. Peggi’s work gives us a new appreciation of our own daily life. Her work has been wrtiten up in numerous fine art magazines, she has received many fine art awards at exhibitions and has participated in important art exhibitions such as the Maynard Dixon Invitational and the Laguna Plein Air Invitational. She is a Master member of the American impressionist Society, member of the California Art Club and Laguna Plein Air Painters Association.


Robin Hall

“Chasing the Light”

12x28”

Oil on Canvas

Born in Santa Monica California, Robin’s Mother was an exhibiting artist by the time Robin reached the age of 6 and inspired her to “follow your inner voice”. As a young adolescent, Robin was exposed to art as a way of her everyday life. Paintings in the home and a library full of artist books, gallery and museum trips all were a subliminal inspiration to Hall’s path to painting. After a short career in tennis and the sale of her restaurant catering business, Robin picked up a brush. In the beginning, it was just a curiosity in exploring the medium of oil, but soon found a true desire to go father and she passionately pursued painting full time. Hall’s work shifted from her early paintings depicting the open fields of Orange County, filled with raw color and hard edges, to her work now, of light and how it affects the surfaces it touches. Missions with their rough surfaces, beaches, fields with towering trees as well as a simple still life, all lend themselves to tell the story of saturated light. Robin’s work has been exhibited in Museums, Universities and galleries throughout the U.S. She maintains a working studio in Capistrano Beach, CA. She has been written up in various fine art magazines and is an award winning artist. Member of the California Art Club and Signature member of Laguna Plein Air Painters Association,


Jeff Horn

“ Trail to Lake Ediza”

20x30”

Oil on Canvas

Jeff Horn is a professor emeritus of Drawing and Painting from Irvine Valley College in Irvine California. He exhibits his outdoor landscape paintings at The Laguna Festival of the Arts each summer and at his home studio annually in Costa Mesa, California. Jeff has received several honors for landscape painting. He enjoys painting from nature while out of doors and he actively supports several land conservancy efforts in California with his paintings. Some current efforts include: The Catalina Island Conservancy and The Sierra Foothills Conservancy. “I prefer to paint directly from nature and I love being outdoors where I can see, hear, feel, smell and even taste the scene around me. For me, the painting is a translation of nature and my experience of it.” His paintings are part of the permanent collection of the Laguna Beach Festival of the Arts, and Laguna Canyon Foundation and the Pacific Club in Newport Beach. His works are reverred by many California artists and his seascapes and coastline scenes have attracted many high end collectors and admirers. Jeff is a Signature Member of the California Art Club and a Signature Member of the Laguna Plein Air Painters Association.


Debra Huse

“Evening Light”

11x14”

Oil on Canvas

Debra Huse is a contemporary colorist and impressionist. She uses rich color and bold fluid strokes to capture the light and drama in her plein air and studio paintings. Debra began formal painting when she was ten even stretching her own canvases in private lessons. At age 11, she was awarded a scholarship and attended college courses at the prestigious John Herron School of Art in Indianapolis, IN. Huse currently has a studio in a Newport Beach Boatyard and has a passion for painting old fishing boats and sailing ships. Debra has owned an important gallery in Baldboa Island Newport Beach for over 10 years exhibiting many of the Nations top plein air and landscape aritsts. She participates in the Sonoma Plein Air Invitational, the Laguna Plein Air Invitational and is an award winning artist recently winning the Plein Air magazine award in 2014 at the Laguna Plein Air. Huse enjoys working in oils and is a Signature Member of the American Society of Marine Artists, the American Impressionist Society, Laguna Plein Air Painters, Realism Without Borders, and the Pastel Society of America. “Debra Huse takes a loving look at the quintessential California lifestyle: the beaches, boats, gardens, and people, all partaking of the “good life” in the Golden State. An astute observer of everyday life, Debra presents her subjects immersed in the unique light and warmth of coastal Southern California. A true “plein air” painter, her paintings are direct and honest views of what is all around her.” -Jean Stern, Art Historian, Author and Lecturer


Michael Obermeyer

“Portugese Point”

11x14 ”

Oil on Canvas

A native of Southern California, Michael Obermeyer received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Illustration at California State University, Long Beach. A twenty year career in illustration included works for Disney Studios, the Anaheim Angels, McDonnell Douglas, Coldwell Banker, and the United States Air Force. Because of his illustration background, he is equally comfortable with the landscape and the figure. Many of his paintings are in the U.S. Air Force Historical Art Collection in the Smithsonian Institute and the Pentagon. He has won the “Collector’s Choice Award”, “The Crystal Cove Foundation Award”, “The Plein Air Magazine Award” and the “Southwest Art Quick Draw Award” at the Laguna Beach Invitational Plein Air Competition as well as the “Award of Excellence” at the Plein Air Southwest Salon and the Gold Medal at the Carmel Art Festival. Collectors include the Marriott Hotels and Resorts, The Irvine Company, Hoag Hospital, California State Parks and many corporate as well as private commissions. Michael is a member of the Oil Painters of America, The Society of Illustrators, and a Signature Member of the California Art Club and the Laguna Plein Air Painters Association. Currently, his paintings are showing at galleries in Carmel, Sonoma, and Laguna Beach, where he is also a regular exhibitor at the Festival of Arts. He maintains his studio in Laguna Beach, California.


Ray Roberts

“Thundering Surf ”

20x24”

Oil on Canvas

Born in 1954, Ray grew up in an Orange County, California with orange groves, before the days of freeways and sprawling housing developments. It has given him an enduring affection for the untamed, undeveloped California of his youth. In 1969, after the early death of his father and mother’s ill-health, Ray was sent to Orme School, a beautiful, ranch-style boarding school in the Arizona desert. Its strong fine arts program helped Ray to discover his artistic talent. He then attended the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, where he studied under John Asaro. He has also studied under Dan McCaw, Len Chmiel, Ned Jacob, and Mark Daily, among others. Art Center is where Ray also met his wife, impressionist painter Peggi Kroll. While dating, the two of them would go out nightclubbing, to sketch rather than dance! It has been a successful partnership ever since. Ray and Peggi now live on a 20 acre ranch in Angels Camp, an old California gold rush town, surrounded by the oak-studded hills. Like many successful artists before him, Ray first pursued a career as an illustrator, establishing a studio in Los Angeles and then Scottsdale, Arizona. He got up the courage to switch to fine art in 1992 and has never looked back. Ray has won numerous awards in plein air and fine art competitions and is respected by the top artists winning “artists choice” awards at many exhibitions. He is a signature member of the California Art Club, The American Impressionist Society, Oil Painters of America, and Laguna Plein Air Painters Association,


Vanessa Rothe

“Les Bateaux de St Tropez”

12x16”

Oil on Canvas

Vanessa Françoise Rothe grew up in the artists colony of Laguna Beach, CA, the daughter of a well known clothing designer Detlev Rothe. She received fine art scholarships to study at the University of San Diego, Laguna College of Art and Design, and has had classical training with private instructor/workshops in the Ateliers of France and Italy as well as with professional artists. Vanessa travels the world to paint from life and works in mostly an Alla Prima style. She is currently studying the figure at Laguna College of Art and Design to broaden her subjects. Vanessa is humbly honored to exhibit alongside some of the Nations top painters and has had multiple solo exhibitions at Wendt Gallery in Laguna Beach. She proudly participates in National group exhibitions including the “Artists for a New Century” at The Bennington Center for the Arts, the “Annual American Impressionist Society Exhibition”, Realism Wihtout Borders Exhibitions, and the Richard Schmid Fine Art Auction. She teaches workshops thruout the year in oils and watercolors and has recently taught at the Plein Air Convention 2013. Vanessa currently exhibits at Gallery McCollum in Laguna Beach. A Signature member of the American Impressionist society, she is also proud to be an artist member/co- founder of Realism Without Borders, California Art Club and Laguna Plein Air Painters Assoc, and has begun curating for various other new exhibitions worldwide. Vanessa is the California Editor of the Nationally acclaimed art collector magazine Fine Art Connoisseur as well as a contributing writer for Plein Air magazine and Fine Art Today. Vanessa is the Author of a new series of art books produced by Walter Foster Publishing, “An Art School Approach to Oils” sold at Barnes and Noble.


Jeff Sewell

“New Morning”

20x24”

Oil on Canvas

Born and raised in Newpot Beach Ca, Jeff Sewell is a native to Orange County of over 43 years. For over four decades Jeff has appreciated this area of great diversity eventually finding even deeper connection with Orange County when painting “ En plein air”. Influenced like many of the southern California artists, by the “Early California Impressionists”,Jeff also feeels a strong connection to the revival of outdoor painting by current artists Jeff Horn, Gleen Dean Michael Sity and Michael Obermeyer to name a few. Growing up in Orange County has attached Jeff deeply to the ocean life style “My dream days start withe a surf in the morning and then spending the day with my feet in the sand painting seascapes and beach scenes.” Jeff has been invited to be an artist at the Laguna Plein Air Painters Association winning “Collectors Choice at the 2011 event. He has taken part and won awards at the Borrego springs Invitational and is part of the So Cal Plein Air Painters Association and events as well. He has painted in the San Clemente Plein Air and receieved honorable mention. Jeff recently wone the Laguna Canyon Foundation Award at the LPAPA Invitational last year October 2013.


Kevin Short

“Fastest Time”

20x24”

Oil on Canvas

Kevin a Short is an Internationally collected painter whose works are exhibited in museums around the world. The prestigeous Carnegie Art Museum recently honored Kevin’s work with a retrospective of his paintings that explore light and glare. The Irvine Museum in California is currently featuring one of Kevin’s paintings in the landmark exhibition :100 Years Of Plein Air Painting. Jean Stern, curator of the Irvine Muesum, heralded Kevin as a “Gutsy Colorist”. Kevin’s bold approach to capturing life’s moments has put him at the forefront of the modern impressionist movement. After winning numerous prestigious awards, best of shows, and awards of excellence; Kevin was the subject of the documentary “Documenting the Vibe”. He has been the featured artist for many national publications and journals, including the cover of the Los Angeles Times, and the cover of the Surfer’s Journal. Southwest Art Magazine has featured him and his work; proclaiming Kevin’s one man exhibitions as “Best of the West”. In addition to being featured in many books. Kevin’s book “TRESTLES” has exemplified how artists can draw attention to land use and preservation.


A California Tradition

William Ogden

Opening Night, August 9th, 6-9pm at Gallery McCollum 206 N. Pacific Coast Highway Laguna Beach CA 92651 www.gallerymccollum.com Karen Tobin at the Gallery 949-275-8255 Š Gallery McCollum Laguna Beach CA, 2014


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