Summer 2015

Page 1

Santa Barbara M A G A Z I N E

SantaB­­­­­arbara 40th

MAGAZINE

COLLECTOR’S ISSUE

ANNIVERSARY

SUMMER 2015

$5.99 DISPLAY UNTIL 9/ 1/ 15

SUMMER 2015

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THE MODERN MEDITERRANEAN ICONS + WEEKENDERS SURF + SKATE ESTATES + GARDENS MUSIC + CULTURE

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1985-2015 THIRTY YEARS OF EXCELLENCE IN JEWELRY DESIGN

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László Moholy-Nagy, Z VII (detail), 1926. Oil on canvas. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., Gift of Richard S. Zeisler, 2007.112.1.

PAINTINGS OF MOHOLY- NAGY THE SHAPE OF T HINGS TO COME THE

Santa Barbara Museum of Art

July 5 – September 27, 2015

This exhibition was made possible through the generous support of Cecille Pulitzer, SBMA Women’s Board, an anonymous donor, Marcia and John Mike Cohen, Dead Artists Society, Susan Bowey, Gregg Wilson and John Maienza, The David Bermant Foundation, and The Moholy-Nagy Foundation.

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SUMMER 2015

FEATURES

PHOTOGRAPH: CARLOS ERIC LOPEZ

126 MUSIC FROM THE 805 TO THE WORLD AND BACK From our beaches to the valleys,

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Santa Barbara is home to some of the most notable names in the music industry. BY JOSEPH WOODARD

136 GARDENS OF EDEN A glimpse behind

of surfing and skateboarding collide in the stoke of riding the wave. BY KEITH HAMM

154 LE WEEKEND It’s a fashionable family affair as bright young things gather for some American Riviera R+R. BY GINA TOLLESON PHOTOGRAPHED BY CARLOS ERIC LOPEZ

the hedges of some of the iconic estates built by Santa Barbara’s legendary architects and landscape designers. BY GINA Z. TERLINDEN

166 BEAUTIFUL MINDS Santa Barbara is

146 COMING FULL CIRCLE How the beginnings

where fantasies come to life and creative icons come to live. BY KATHERINE STEWART

STYLED BY JAMIE SCHNEIDER

ON OUR COVER Lindsey Wixson wearing Max Mara Elegante. Photographed by Dewey Nicks. Production by Jan Juhas at Creative Chaos. Hair by Esther Langham. Makeup by Lisa Houghton.

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SUMMER 2015

94 We’re obsessed with DLG

Lighting, SABIN’s minimalism, and custom benches at Porch H E A LT H + B E A U T Y

9 9 Johnny G’s latest fitness venture, yoga with wellness expert Terra Gold, and summer glow with essential oils

CONTENTS

1 0 7 László Moholy-Nagy at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art; ones to watch Stephanie Washburn and Chad Ress, and war photographer Nik Wheeler

LETTER FROM THE EDITORIAL DIRECTOR

STYLE

5 2 A note from Jennifer Hale

6 3 Renaissance woman Lisa

surf culture imagery, the Funk Zone’s newest restaurant, and more

Eisner’s eclectic foray into jewelry

8 4 Giving Back: Charles and Ali

1 1 5 Pioneers’ lay of the land

6 6 Four decades of retro to

Banks’s Cultivate wines

1 1 8 Bits + Bites: Le Picnic’s savoir fare, cheers with Kolikof caviar, and more

CONTRIBUTORS

5 4 The staff behind the pages of

Santa Barbara Magazine

contemporary chic

HOME + GARDEN

8 9 Nora and Michael Hurley’s

FOOD + WINE

5 6 Photographer Carlos Eric

W H AT ’ S N O W

Lopez and stylist Jamie Schneider conspire with the cool kids

7 7 Strolling the shops and vibe

sea-inspired spread

B AC K PAG E

in Summerland, Joni Sternbach’s

92 Beach cottage blues

1 8 4 #weliveinparadise

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PHOTOGRAPH: MEGAN SOREL

C U LT U R E

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1985-2015 THIRTY YEARS OF EXCELLENCE IN JEWELRY DESIGN

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P R E S I D E N T/ P U B L I S H E R E D I TO R I A L D I R E C TO R

Jennifer Hale

SantaBarbara

MAGAZINE

E X E C U T I V E E D I TO R

Gina Tolleson A R T D I R E C TO R

Alisa Bales Baur M A N A G I N G E D I TO R

Gina Z. Terlinden E D I TO R I A L A S S I S TA N T

Charlotte Bryant

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Rob DaFoe Amelia Fleetwood Keith Hamm Jennifer Blaise Kramer Dawn Moore L.D. Porter Gabe Saglie Katherine Stewart Joan Tapper C O N T R I B U T I N G P H OTO G R A P H E R S

Blue Caleel David Cameron Leela Cyd Andrew Durham Tierney Gearon Michael Haber Brian Hodges Elizabeth Messina Nancy Neil Dewey Nicks Victoria Pearson Lisa Romerein Randall Slavin Coral von Zumwalt

Vintage Bakelite Jewelry

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Calypso St. Barth George Hudson Grace Intermix James Perse Kendall Conrad Little Alex’s Malia Mills Mate Gallery Merci To Go Montecito Barbers Montecito Natural One Hour Martinizing Pressed Juicery Read n’ Post Rori’s Artisanal Creamery Space N.K. Apothecary Toy Crazy Vons

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CHAIRMAN 1 9 9 9 - 20 0 3

Robert N. Smith

SantaBarbara

ÂŽ

MAGAZINE

CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

Nicholas Hale A D V E R T I S I N G D I R E C TO R

Sarah McCormick A DV E R T I S I N G P R O D U C T I O N M A N AG E R

Nicole Pettingill CONTROLLER

Adele Hagar

Š201 5 BY S M I TH PU B LI S H I N G G R O U P, LLC .

All rights reserved. No part of this periodical may be reproduced in any form or by any means without prior written consent from Santa Barbara Magazine. TO O U R R E A D E R S

Santa Barbara Magazine invites you to share with us your reactions to our latest stories. Letters are not for publication, but please include your address in case we need to contact you. By mail: Reader Response Department, Santa Barbara Magazine, 2064 Alameda Padre Serra, Ste. 120, Santa Barbara, CA 93103; by e-mail: editorial@sbmag.com. S U B S C R I PTI O N S

Subscribe by e-mail: sbrcs@ magserv.com, call 888-592-0026, or visit sbmag.com. Domestic rates are $24 for one year; for orders outside the United States, add $20 postage. Single copies are available at newsstands and other magazine outlets throughout the United States.

1213 Coast Village Road Santa Barbara | California 93108 www.GasparJewelers.com 805 | 969 | 6362

A DV E R T I S E R S

For inquiries, contact advertising director Sarah McCormick at 805-965-5999 ext. 131.

S U M M E R 20 1 5

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LETTER FROM THE EDITORIAL DIRECTOR

FORTY YEARS OF SANTA BARBARA IS HARD TO CAPTURE IN ONE CELEBRATORY ISSUE. It’s too hard

to sum up what makes this town great—we struggle with it every issue, not just this anniversary. How do you bottle all of Santa Barbara’s magic into one place? How can you translate what makes this place perfect? It’s near impossible…but yet, we still try. It is probably because we (the editors) are all deeply in love with this place—it’s a sort of love that stays with you, haunting for years to come. Personally, I fell for it more than two decades ago and my love of our town has only grown deeper. The first time I smelled the jasmine and orange blossom-scented air, I was hooked. That the city’s architecture and style matched the flora and fauna was only an added bonus. Luckily, being a young teen, my father and mother fell for it even harder and were bound and determined to make it our home one day. My Midwestern youth was wonderful but was no match for the promised land of this fantastical place. Countless pleas from me and my brother to move west were finally met. I have no regrets changing high schools half way through to come here, as I made so many wonderful friends on the shores of Hope Ranch Beach during my first golden summer (and countless friends since). As I grew older, my appreciation for our city deepened in a more mature way. I saw new things every day with open and wiser eyes. The simple things like the farmers markets, the healthy living mantra worked into every aspect of daily routines, and the incredible educational and cultural institutions are just a few examples. In fact, while travelling abroad recently, I met a woman who told me that she had known someone who had hired a team to find the best place to live in America. They spent a year researching every great spot in our country and the end result was that Santa Barbara was the best place for their client to make a life. I couldn’t agree more. Our family didn’t discover it through a team of experts but through destiny…and both paths lead to our version of paradise. Back to the dilemma of how to capture all this magic in one special issue—it’s impossible. So instead, we chose to focus on many aspects that make this town mythical. There are the creative citizens (“Beautiful Minds,” page 166) that add so much to the fabric of our shores; the burgeoning cultural, arts, and music scene (“Music from the 805,” page 126); the top-notch wineries dotting our valleys (“Layers of the Land,” page 115); the sporting culture—surfing, skating, hiking, sailing, and more—(“Coming Full Circle,” page 146), and our often-imitated style of red tile roofs, adobe walls, not to mention the exquisite gardens that sprawl out from Montecito’s fabled estates (“Gardens of Eden,” page 136). All of this and so much more add up to one spectacular spot. It is home, and what a home it is. Thank you for letting Santa Barbara Magazine be a part of this community for the last four decades, it is a true honor.

JENNIFER HALE

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Introducing

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redefining I N D O O R S

& OUT

HOME F UR NISHINGS

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CONTRIBUTORS | STAFF GINA TOLLESON EXECUTIVE EDITOR since 2005 Lifestyle editor, 2001-2005 “I have the unique opportunity to be able to reach out and meet the people who inspire me on a daily basis. In this issue, I couldn’t be more influenced by Lisa Eisner’s career span—editor, publisher, photographer, style icon, and now jewelry designer.” S.B. MUST DOs Nabbing blueberry muffins fresh out of the oven from Garden Market in Carpinteria. • Corner booths for pupus and mai tais at Chuck’s of Hawaii. • Surf and turf weekends—Saturday with my boys at Serena Point then Sunday polo games with my goddaughter, Begonia.

ALISA BAUR ART DIRECTOR since 2000 “I’ve always enjoyed meeting new and interesting people on photo shoots, then returning to my little lair at the office to design the pages of the magazine. It’s a good mix.” S.B. MUST DOs Beach walks from Butterfly to Summerland with my corgi, Willa. • Taking out-of-town guests to see the splendor of Lotusland. • Bird watching from my hilltop deck.

GINA Z. TERLINDEN MANAGING EDITOR since 2006 “I love getting to keep my finger on the pulse of what’s happening in the food and wine industries in this town. We’re so lucky to live among such talented artisanal food makers and esteemed vintners.” S.B. MUST DOs Family staycations at the Bacara Resort & Spa—my “happy place.” • Weekends in the Santa Ynez Valley during harvest—my kids love helping Dad stomp grapes at his winery. • Going for a long run at Hendry’s Beach and the Douglas Family Preserve.

CHARLOTTE BRYANT EDITORIAL ASSISTANT since 2014 “I am always amazed by the quality and variety of artwork I get to enjoy. Whether it’s on-set for a house feature or previewing a show at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, it’s fascinating to chat with people about their collection.” S.B. MUST DOs Scoring quirky vintage finds at Punch Intérieurs. • Grabbing a bottle of local Pinot with some friends for a double feature at West Winds Drive-In. • Strolling down Linden/memory lane with a scoop of ice cream from Rainbow—I’ve been going there since I was a kid.

NICOLE PETTINGILL ADVERTISING PRODUCTION MANAGER since 2013 “I love Santa Barbara for the outdoor playground that it is. It doesn’t matter where you are or what the weather is like, there is always beautiful scenery to take in.” S.B. MUST DOs Packing a snack and biking with my kids to Goleta Beach for some play time. • Dinners out with girlfriends, most recently to the Outpost at the Goodland Hotel. • Walking around the grounds at the Santa Barbara Botanic Gardens and browsing the gift shop. ADVERTISING DIRECTOR since 2008 “I love being a part of Santa Barbara Magazine because each issue celebrates this special place that I have always been lucky to call home.” S.B. MUST DOs Butterfly Beach walks to find heart-shaped rocks to add to our front porch collection. • Perusing for treasures at Lewis & Clark. • Enjoying Old Spanish Days Fiesta festivities with my daughter, Harper, and our family.

ADELE HAGAR

CONTROLLER since 2006 “Every morning on my way to our office on the Riviera, I pass the view of the ocean and the islands— a unique and beautiful sight to see.” S.B. MUST DOs The Old Mission Santa Barbara has always been a favorite place of mine—my brothers used to play hide and seek in the ruins. • For authentic Korean sushi, I go up the coast to Umami Ya Sushi in Lompoc. • Shopping at the Talowick Candle Factory in Solvang.

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M A K E U P BY TO M I KO TA F T

SARAH MCCORMICK

S U M M E R 20 1 5

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BEHIND THE SCENES

LOCATION LIFE

CARLOS ERIC LOPEZ, photographer, currently attending Brooks Institute KNOWN FOR Starting as an agent at Next Model Management, Lopez made his way to being an editor at Condé Nast for Teen Vogue. With an eye for scouting talent and giving creative direction, Lopez decided it was the world of fashion photography that truly called his name. LOOK FOR Through his close relationships with industry insiders, celebrities, artists, models, and his many muses, Lopez’s photographs and videos provide an exclusive peek into a life of art, style, and siblings in our fashion feature “Le Weekend” (page 154). S.B. GO-TOS Cruisin’ through the American Riviera with my top down.

• Hiking with my friend Patsy and her two Jack Russell terriers, Jack and Daisy. • Having my mop chopped with my dude Shea at Montecito Barbers.

JAMIE SCHNEIDER, stylist KNOWN FOR Dressing “It Girls” Nicole Richie, Eva Mendes, Ashley Benson, Abigail Breslin, and more. LOOK FOR A secret fashion project this fall. S.B. GO-TOS Staying at the San Ysidro Ranch. • Sunning at the Coral Ca-

sino. • Vintage finds at Peregrine Galleries.

Erin and Sara Foster end a long day of shooting with Carlos. RIGHT: Stylist Jamie Schneider on set in Montecito. ABOVE :

“Inspired by Vittorio De Sica’s 1970 Italian cinema Garden of the Finzi-Continis, it only made sense to gather friends/ bright young things from all over to celebrate Santa Barbara Magazine’s 40th anniversary issue in this romanticized editorial weekend in our local paradise.” —CARLOS ERIC LOPEZ

DEWEY NICKS

PHOTOGRAPH: DEWEY NICKS, LACEY TERRELL

This photographer and director snapped the modern yet iconic cover of our 40th anniversary collector’s issue with Lindsey Wixson wearing Max Mara.

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a l h o o la

Summerland California

SUMMERLAND BEACH CAFE BONITA

MONTECITO URBAN FARMS THE INN ON SUMMERHILL

SUMMERLAND WINERY WAXING POETIC

THE NUGGET

LILLIE AV ENUE

CANTWELLS MARKET

JUST FOLK

BONITA BEACH

PINE TRADER BOTANIK

THE SACRED SPACE FIRE DEPARTMENT

HWY 101

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QUEEN of her OWN TRIBE

PHOTOGRAPH: LAUREN DUKOFF

Photographer, filmmaker, publisher, and now jeweler, LISA EISNER lands creative inspiration in our lush gardens

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CLOCKWISE FROM FAR

“I published the Shriners book in 2004. My grandfather was one and I love when adults dress up and pretend, especially guys,” says Eisner; a handmade simbircite butterfly necklace exclusively for Tom Ford’s Spring/ Summer 2015 collection; wearing her bird ring in a layered glam moment; bronze and turquoise necklace, lisaeisnerjewelry.com.

LEFT:

I

f I could pick my spirit animal, it would be Lisa Eisner. Like an exotic bird, Eisner’s eclectic feathers fly high in a cacophony of color, originality, and distinct, utterly electric savoir-faire. Herewith, the artist shares her love affair with Santa Barbara, the magic of Beatrice Wood fairy dust, trinkets for Tom Ford, and late night lanes with Bob Dylan after a show at the Bowl. I understand there was love in the stars for you in the 805? When

I first started dating Eric, my husband of 30 years, I was working in New York and he invited me to join him in Los Angeles. He took me to the Biltmore for the weekend and I will never forget swimming in the Coral Casino pool. I think it’s the best swimming pool in the world. And we fell in love that weekend, so Santa Barbara is super special for me. You had a long relationship with Beatrice Wood, it must have been a magical time. Some friends and I would drive up to Ojai and have

lunch with Beatrice a couple times a year. We got to eat on her lusterware fish plates, listen to her tales of men, and just watch her and check out all the rings on each finger and all the bracelets and necklaces and wallow in her colored sari. We would roam through her house and garden and studio and look at her newest projects and smell the scent of the almond groves and orange groves…. It was heaven on earth. I treasure a necklace I still have that she made of 64

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ceramic beads in all her glazes with one antique Indian piece as the pendant. And, all the great Beatrice Wood fairy dust all over it! Your current inspirations? I was lucky enough to befriend Tony

Duquette when I first moved to Los Angeles, and he continues to be an inspiration. I recently went back to his home, Dawn Ridge—it just

LISA’S S.B. GARDEN GO-TOs Lotusland, 805-969-9990, lotusland.org. Ganna Walska was like Duquette in her theatrical original mind. Art Luna, my friend and landscape designer, takes me to Seaside Gardens, 805-684-6601, seaside-gardens.com, in Carpinteria for proteas and exotics plants, and Gazebo Flowers & Plants, 805-969-4367, gazeboflowers.net, in Montecito that has all the great begonias. Another wonderful garden is Casa Del Herrero, 805-5655653, casadelherrero.com, I love that old George Washington Smith house.

P H OTO G R A P H S : FA R L E F T, C O U R T E S Y O F L I S A E I S N E R ; B R O N Z E A N D T U R Q U O I S E N E C K L AC E , C O U R T E S Y O F C M AG A Z I N E

STYLE

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P H OTO G R A P H S : FA R L E F T, C O U R T E S Y O F L I S A E I S N E R ; B R O N Z E A N D T U R Q U O I S E N E C K L AC E , C O U R T E S Y O F C M AG A Z I N E

blew me away again. No one had his mind and crazy imagination. He was such a great artist—he would take beautiful expensive antiques and throw them in a blender with everyday common Home Depot fencing or car hubcaps and make some crazy screen or some sculpture for his garden. He was old Hollywood movies come to life. He always would wear amazing ethnic robes and big jade archer rings. His wife,

“I never wear one piece of jewelry…that would make me feel so naked.” Beegle, was so beautiful and chic, there is and never will be anyone like him. And his jewelry…. Forget about it! He would create jewelry like he was the king of his own tribe. I would volunteer to jump into a volcano for him—of course, decked out in all his adornment! They would have to carry me up the mountain I would have so much on. Must haves for summer in your closet?

I’m a vintage girl, so lots of vintage couture, sundresses, Mexican Oaxacan embroidered dresses (I have them in every color), some Tom Ford little black dresses, and lots of caftans. A piece of jewelry that is the epitome of you and why? Well, it could be so many.

For sure some of my original Duquette pieces—very big and heavy and tribal. But I love my Tina Chow pieces, and also Art Smith. I would like to be a combo of all three of those: Tony Duquette’s ethnic/ Hollywood, Tina Chow’s clean beautiful crystals, and Art Smith’s African American, big sculptural pieces. I never wear one piece of jewelry…that would make me feel so naked. What would a collection inspired by Santa Barbara look like? My Santa Barbara

collection would be influenced by Ganna Walska and Beatrice Wood. Very nature inspired, over-the-top. Beatrice always wore her saris and ethnic Indian jewelry, so I would mix that in. And color—pink something, turquoise, maybe some wood pieces with jewels embedded. –GINA TOLLESON

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STYLE

BACK to the FUTURE

FOUR DECADES OF S.B. STYLE—LOOKING CURRENT WITH RETRO ON THE RUNWAY

LOUIS VUITTON

’60s

CHANEL

MOD MOVERS + SHAKERS CLOCKWISE FROM TOP:

Sunglasses, $300, Prada; Cali Dreaming top and bottom, $99 each, Angel; Valentino cuff, $645, Saint Laurent glitter-finished boots, $1,145, and Emilio Pucci pants, $1,395, Net-aPorter; Jimi Hendrix Experience Poster, 1967; tote, $1,218, Corto Moltedo.

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Jewelry • Accessories • Apparel • Gifts 3823 Santa Claus Lane, Carpinteria, CA 93013

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STYLE ANNA SUI

ALBERTA FERRETTI

GROOVY BOHEMIANS

’70s CLOCKWISE FROM TOP MIDDLE:

Twine & Twig necklace, $120, Bonita; Wave wood bangle, $260, Kendall Conrad; Tom Ford sunglasses, $395, Occhiali; Jimmy Choo sandal, $695, and J Brand jeans, $218, Saks Fifth Avenue; Cali Dreaming top and bottom, $99 each, Rowan; Mountain Drive book, $14.95, Amazon; Gladys Tamez Daphne hat, $495, House of Honey.

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STYLE

TUBULAR NEON PUNK

’80s

SAINT LAURENT

AU JOUR LE JOUR

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Funk Zone pop art mural; Elizabeth & James collar necklace, $275, Saks Fifth Avenue; vintage Santa Barbara soap opera cast poster; Emilio Pucci Luisa printed rash guard, $315, Net-a-Porter; I Love the 80’s skateboard, $173.95, Zazzle; Moschino skirt, $1,197, Opening Ceremony; Christian Louboutin pumps, $695, Net-a-Porter.

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Exquisite Footwear From Italy & Beyond

Los Olivos

2928 San Marcos Avenue 805.688.1071 San Luis Obispo

714 Higuera Street 805.545.ROMP

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STYLE MARNI

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP

’90s

RIGHT: Tote, $2,100, Fendi; ring, price upon request, Muse Metalsmiths; Alexander McQueen pants, $2,195, Net-a-Porter; Pendleton bikini, $125, Roxy; Katy Perry; Penelope Chilvers boots, $205.99, 6pm .com; Current/Elliott flannel, $100, Wendy Foster Sportswear.

PLAIDS MIXED BAG

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MADE IN THE USAUSA MADE IN THE

ORGANIC COTTON ORGANIC COTTON

RECYCLED COTTON RECYCLED COTTON

11 11 West Canon Perdido Street - Santa Barbara, CA CA93101 West Canon Perdido Street - Santa Barbara, 93101 ph:ph: 805-962-1133 805-962-1133 www.americancolorsclothing.com www.americancolorsclothing.com MADE IN THE USAUSA MADE IN THE

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El Fureidis Estate • Resting on 10+ Acres in the Heart of Montecito

Offered at $17,900,000

Lambert Road World Class Polo Field, Equestrian Facility, or Estate Site Offered at $21,000,000 • 61 Acres

Sand Point Showcase Home • Offered at $12,850,000

Emily Kellenberger MONTECITO • SANTA BARBARA 805.252.2773 | emily@villagesite.com

emilykellenberger.com | License #01397913

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Jim Bloom Untitled 18 Mixed media 19.5”x 23”

captivating

Unique American Folk and Outsider Art Susan Baerwald and Marcy Carsey 2346 Lillie Avenue PO Box 578 Summerland, CA 93067 (805) 969-7118 T www.justfolk.com (805) 969-1042 F

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AVA I L A B L E T H R O U G H D A N Z I G E R G A L L E R Y.

Santa Barbaran Will Adler’s Summerland.

SEASIDE VIBES Our quaint hillside village of Summerland captures the spirit of the season

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WHAT’S NOW SUMMERLAND

With a stunning location overlooking , the friendly little the Pacific beach town of Summerland has evolved from a turn-of-the-century spiritualists’ colony into a lively locale for a day of shopping, noshing, and relaxation. An array of residences hug the hillside, while a leisurely stroll along Lillie Avenue, the main thoroughfare, reveals clapboard cottages and contemporary spaces that house clothing boutiques, art and antique emporiums, inspiring home and garden decor, chic salons, fitness studios, and spas (even a grooming spot for your four-legged pals). In this community, the emphasis is on women’s and men’s apparel and accessories that are attuned to the Santa Barbara lifestyle—from beachwear to casual elegance—and on furnishings that fit the American Riviera’s penchant for indooroutdoor living. The mind-body connection gets its share of attention, too, with training facilities for sports and health enthusiasts and serene spots for meditation and beauty treatments. Meals? There are myriad choices, beginning with a hearty breakfast or brunch; burgers, deli fare, or more for lunch; and convivial gathering spots for drinks and dinner with friends. If the urge to linger longer takes hold, that’s not a problem. You’ll find inns that make it possible to stretch those delightful Summerland hours into several days or more. –JOAN TAPPER

McLEOD PARROT MENAGERIE

MALIBU MARKET & DESIGN

SUMMERLAND BEACH CAFE

PHOTOGRAPHS BY MEGAN SOREL

BONITA Owner Rita Villa

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HOME & GARDEN Beach Shack 2262 Ortega Hill Rd., 805-969-5217. Botanik 2329 Lillie Ave., 805565-3831, botanikinc.com. House 849 2246 Lillie Ave., 805-565-2849, house849.com. Jodie Willard Photo Gallery 2264 Lillie Ave., Ste. B, 805698-6988, jodiewillard.com. Just Folk 2346 Lillie Ave., 805969-7118, justfolk.com. Kitchell Custom Homes 2476 Lillie Ave., 805-696-1531, kitchellcustomhomes.com. Malibu Market & Design 2173 Ortega Hill Rd., 805-565-9902, malibumarketdesign.com.

PINE TRADER ANTIQUES

“SUMMERLAND IS A BEAUTIFUL, SMALL COASTAL TOWN. WHEN TRAVELING, IT MAKES FOR A NICE STOP TO WANDER AND FIND UNIQUE AND FUN STORES. BOTANIK IS A GREAT PLACE TO STOP AND GAIN INSPIRATION FOR YOUR HOME AND/ OR GARDEN.” —MOLLY HUTTO, BOTANIK

Mary Suding Antiques 2240 Lillie Ave., 805-969-4324, marysudingantiques.com. McLeod Parrot Menagerie 2430 Lillie Ave., 805-969-1944, sbbird.org. Montecito Urban Farms 2352 Lillie Ave., 805-617-3338, montecitourbanfarms.com. Pine Trader Antiques 2345 Lillie Ave., 805-845-2618, pinetrader.com. The Sacred Space 2594 Lillie Ave., 805-565-5535, thesacredspace.com. Summerhill Antiques 2280 Lillie Ave., 805-969-3366, summerhill-antiques.com. Summerland Antique Collective 2192 Ortega Hill Rd., 805-565-3189, summerland antiquecollective.com. Summerland Oriental Rugs 2350 Lillie Ave., 805-565-7998. Your Pals Pet Hospital 2420 Lillie Ave., 805-695-8387, yourpals.net.

CLOTHING, HEALTH, AND BEAUTY The Beach Club Athletics 2270 Lillie Ave., 805-570-5665, beachclubathletics.net. Blooming Nails 2246 Lillie Ave., 805-698-0586. Bonita 2330 Lillie Ave., 805-565-3848, bonita summerland.com.

BOTANIK

BEACH SHACK S A N TA B A R B A R A

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WHAT’S NOW

SUMMERLAND ANTIQUE COLLECTIVE

STACKY’S SEASIDE

SUMMERLAND

Bonita Beach 2325 Lillie Ave., 805-565-4848. Cashmir Beauty Lounge 2410 Lillie Ave., 805-969-2322. The Bikini Factory 2275 Ortega Hill Rd., Ste. B, 805-969-2887, bikinifactory.com. Indian Summers 2275 Ortega Hill Rd., 805-969-1162, indian summersboutique.com. Evolation Yoga 108 Pierpont Ave., 805-770-3436, evolation yogasb.com. Platinum Fitness Summerland 2448 Lillie Ave., 805-9691570, platinumfitness summerland.com.

“JUST FOLK HAS BECOME KNOWN AS A COMPREHENSIVE SOURCE FOR SOME OF THE FINEST EXAMPLES OF HISTORICAL AMERICAN FOLK AND CONTEMPORARY SELF-TAUGHT ART IN THE WORLD.” —DEIRDRE GERRY,

Salon Olivier 2500 Lillie Ave., 805-770-2300, salonolivier.com. Shear Design 2275 Ortega Hill Rd., 805-969-6414, sheardesignbeautysalon.com. Waxing Poetic 2350 Lillie Ave., 805-770-2847, waxing poetic.com.

CURATOR/GENERAL MANAGER, JUST FOLK

EAT & DRINK

TINKER’S BURGERS

Cantwell’s Summerland Market 2580 Lillie Ave., 805-969-5893, cantwellsmarket.com. The Nugget 2318 Lillie Ave., 805-969-6135. Sandpiper Liquors 2262 Ortega Hill Rd., 805-695-0838. Stacky’s Seaside 2315 Lillie Ave., 805-969-9908. Summerland Beach Cafe 2294 Lillie Ave., 805-969-1019, summerlandbeachcafe.com.

THE NUGGET

Summerland Winery 2330 Lillie Ave., 805-565-9463, summerlandwine.com. Tinker’s Burgers 2275 Ortega Hill Rd., 805-969-1970.

STAY The Inn on Summer Hill 2520 Lillie Ave., 805-969-9998, innonsummerhill.com. Summerland Inn 2161 Ortega Hill Rd., 805-969-5225, summerlandinnca.com. n

STACKY’S SEASIDE

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THE SACRED SPACE

Owner Jack Herschorn

WAXING POETIC

JUST FOLK

“SUMMERLAND RETAINS A TRUE VILLAGE FEEL WITH FRIENDLY PEOPLE, NOTABLE COTTAGES AND HOMES, AND LOCALLY OWNED RESTAURANTS HERSCHORN, AND SHOPS.” —JACK THE SACRED SPACE

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WHAT’S NOW

LIFE THROUGH THE LENS For the last decade, Joni Sternbach has traveled the world creating tintype portraits—images produced by creating a direct positive on a thin sheet of metal coated with a dark lacquer or enamel for photographic emulsion—of surfers using the 19th-century wet-plate collodion process to create Surf Site Tin Type ($45, Damiani, available at Chaucer’s Bookstore, 805-682-6787, chaucersbooks .com). Working with a large-format camera and using handpoured plates that she prepares and develops on location, Sternbach profiles a fascinating range of influential surfers on some of the world’s most beloved beaches, all with a patina of romance, adventure, and artistry. –CHARLOTTE BRYANT

TOP TO BOTTOM: Sternbach’s 2014 Hendry’s Beach, three unique tintypes, 10 x 8 in. each; the book, with text by photo critic Lyle Rexer, curator April M. Watson, and surfers/ filmmakers Chris Malloy and Johnny Abegg.

JONI STERNBACH jonisternbach.com.

ONE TO WATCH BE SEEN

Hanging bulbs, brick walls, and works from Santa Barbara artist Sean Anderson adorn the Funk Zone’s newest addition, Nuance. The hip bistro on lower State Street features a locally sourced menu and acute attention to detail. “Growing up in Santa Barbara has fostered a sense of community, family, culture, and commitment to sustainability from an early age that inspired my passion,” says head chef Courtney Ladin. Indeed, the only (welcome) deviation from local custom seems to be the fact that the kitchen stays open until midnight on Friday and Saturday nights. –C.B.

Santa Barbara MAGAZINE

PHOTOGRAPH: NUANCE, NICK PRESNIAKOV

NUANCE 119 State St., Santa Barbara, 805-845-0989, nuancesb.com.

SantaBarbara

POLO MAGAZINE presents...

POLO 2015 S A N TA B A R B A R A P O L O & R A C Q U E T C L U B

Stomping divots, sipping champagne, and socializing under blue skies at the 1 and 3 pm matches Sundays at the SANTA BARBARA POLO & RACQUET CLUB, 805-684-6683, sbpolo.com. –C.B.

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Over the Hill

and artisans in the 1970s, the harbor warehouse district had cheap rent and was ripe for squatting. In 1972, Ruth S. Schaffner, who was interacting with artists such as Marcel Duchamps, Salvador Dalí, and Mark Rothko, notably opened an enormous gallery—years ahead of Los Angeles— in the heart of the Funk Zone and was the first major contemporary art dealer and gallery owner to see Santa Barbara as an important center for the arts outside of Los Angeles. Forty years later, visitors to Santa Barbara’s bohemian destination, the Funk Zone, funkzone.net, (often compared to Cannery Row), wind their way through a multitude of popular wineries, breweries, eateries, and galleries in the span of just a few blocks. While gentrification has inevitably changed the landscape of one of the only areas amnestied from Santa Barbara’s prevailing Spanish style, the neighborhood retains a sprinkle of artists, quirky murals, layers of history and charm—and, naturally, an official logo. –C.B. LITTERED WITH ARTISTS

SUMMER LOVE Whether your seaside accessory of choice is the perfect multipurpose throw ($245), a set of beach racquets (from $63), or a special-edition skateboard ($696), ArteMare’s sustainably sourced hardwoods and handmade textiles inspired by the Italian region of Puglia are sure to become weekend essentials. –C.B. ARTEMARE artemare.co.

Horn dominoes, $60, and paulownia wood bodyboard in collaboration with Jon Wegener ($575, available by special order only).

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WHAT’S NOW | GIVING BACK

Uncork Benevolence

A LABEL LOOKING AT THE WORLD THROUGH ROSÉ-COLORED GLASSES

Ali and Charles Banks; their Cultivate label.

LEFT TO RIGHT:

GET INVOLVED BEACH CLEAN-UP Do a good deed for the environment and help keep our beaches clean this summer by volunteering at SANTA BARBARA CHANNELKEEPER’s WEST BEACH CLEANUP on July 19 from 10 am to noon. Cleaning supplies and drinks are provided, but create less waste by bringing your own bucket for trash collection. For more information, call 805-563-3377 ext. 4 or e-mail penny@sbck.org. 84

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STORY TIME Volunteer for two to four hours per week with the SANTA BARBARA PUBLIC LIBRARY’s ADULT LITERACY PROGRAM to help adults improve their basic reading and communication skills. Times are flexible with morning, afternoon, evening, and weekend shifts available. One free training workshop and an application are required. For more information, call 805564-5619 or e-mail literacy@santabarbaraca.gov. –TALIA GIORDANO

PHOTOGRAPHS: ALI AND CHARLES BANKS, BRAD COHEN

Together with winemaker Nat Gunter and creative director Derek Galkin, Charles and Ali Banks are cultivating change through the local liquid currency, wine. Their label, Cultivate, launched in 2011 and has sourced juices from vineyards all over the world. Their model donates the first 10 cents of every dollar to a variety of nonprofit organizations working in everything from education to basic human needs in communities across the country. Their goal? Give customers the power to express their values through wine’s greatest power—its ability to bring people together. “Americans have rediscovered the family table, and a bottle of wine has a role to play in that,” says Gunther. Atlanta natives with a home in Montecito, the Banks developed what they call “connected capitalism” as a more consistent way to give back, proving that while a business certainly must turn a profit, it can also be a powerful agent in solving various global issues in a way that governments never could. “The Terrior portfolio, terroirselections.com, is an extension of how Charles and Ali see the world and form friendships,” explains Galkin. “Cultivate is the opportunity to have an extension of our worldview.” Look for a new Pinot Noir from Gunter and Jamey Whetstone sourced from Sonoma and Monterey this September. –C.B. CULTIVATE cultivatewines.com.

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THE LIFE AQUATIC Capri meets Summerland at Nora and Michael Hurley’s seaside spread

PHOTOGRAPHS BY MEGAN SOREL

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In the living room, pillows covered in vintage Halston and Pucci scarves and velvet from Kevin O’Brien. A silvered art nouveau mirror hangs above the Gustavian settee. 89

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HOME+GARDEN

W

allpaper in a bathroom is not particularly unusual. Flocked wallpaper, on the other hand, reveals…an obsession perhaps? “I went crazy with wallpaper!” confides Nora McNeely Hurley. “I took remnants and have different papers on each surface.” Upon crossing the threshold of the modernist home she shares with her musician husband Michael and their two dogs, a cacophony of swirling blues and shimmering silvers wash over visitors as if the ocean itself—only yards away—has crashed into the living room and spilled into every nook and cranny, leaving behind shells and sea glass in every hue. And wallpaper on every wall. Both Hurleys hail from Minnesota, and Nora’s childhood spent between an island in White Bear Lake and California’s Pebble Beach makes the watery theme no surprise. That Midwestern traditional (read: preppy) upbringing runs deep and infused her work as an event planner and interior designer with exuberant touches of Sister Parish meets The Mod Squad. Then in 2011, she was diagnosed with Ménière’s disease and now grapples with the loss of her hearing and extreme vertigo. A tough blow for a woman married to a musician and deeply engaged with the performing arts. “It’s been a journey,” she says, “but I wanted to turn that stress into creative energy, so the hunt for a new house was on!” That lemons-into-lemonade spirit bubbles—literally—throughout the interiors. Inspired by all things oceanic, the color palette of turquoise, azure, sea foam, and silvery gray blurs the line between crashing waves outside and furry footstools inside. Serious, the Hurleys are not. In the guest bath, a finial of egret feathers sprouts like a fluffy fountain from the top of a vintage lamp. Or the white wood Buddha who is bejeweled from head to toe because “that’s how he likes it!” Furnishing the entire space from Internet finds while nestled into the sleeping porch of her Minnesota family home meant few pieces from their previous home made the move. “Let me interject here. Probably 95 percent of what is here was bought on One Kings Lane,” says Michael with a sense of amused wonder. But serious treasures do live along side hammerwielding Viking gods. Tony Duquette whirligigs made of sea urchins and starfish sit astride a fireplace with Chinese dolphin andirons. An early 19th-century table handpainted with mermaids hovers in the reflection of a silver-leaf art nouveau mirror. And the piece that trumps it all—a small table displaying hundreds of tiny seashells collected during walks on the beach with her mother. “It’s my favorite thing,” says Nora. “I’m going to make everything around me beautiful. That will be my life,” says a framed Elsie de Wolfe quote. “Only,” as Nora adds, “in a Technicolor way!” –DAWN MOORE

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CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: A Tony Duquette shell-festooned finial atop a Chinoiserie pedestal; in the spirit of garden sculptures found at the Marjorie McNeely Conservatory (named for Nora’s mother), a female nude found at Carpinteria’s Eye of the Day; Nora had her home looped with Bluetooth and is working with the Granada to install technology that allows the hearing impaired to enjoy the audio arts.

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The Hurleys walk down their private path to enjoy a pod of passing dolphins; a patio break; a collection of vintage objets from Indigo Seas on a backdrop of Old Planks wallpaper.

PHOTOGRAPHS: MEGAN SOREL

LEFT TO RIGHT:

Inspired by all things oceanic, the color palette of turquoise, azure, sea foam, and silvery gray blurs the line between crashing waves outside and furry footstools inside. “Initially, I was thinking if Dorothy Draper had a Big Sur retreat,” says Nora. “And so we named it Shore Club!” A silver Mystery Fish flies over Sven Rohleder’s Tapeten der 70er Indra paper; Vogue—from Tapeten der 70er—adds drama behind vintage desk and chair with a Jonathan Adler pillow and hand sculpture In the Peace.

LEFT TO RIGHT:

ABOVE: Whimsical navy and white umbrellas from Santa Barbara Umbrella hover over gargantuan clamshells and chunks of aqua and turquoise glass.

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HOME+GARDEN DESIGN TRENDS

“Inspired by the smells and sounds of the nearby ocean, this weekend cottage is both relaxed and refined, colorful and soothing.” —TA M A R A KAYE - H O N E Y

A seaside home designed by Tamara Kaye-Honey of House of Honey.

Hanging oyster lamp, $1,095, Lissa Liggett; Palomino cowhide, $595, Forsyth; In the Spirit of Capri!, $45, Upstairs at Pierre Lafond.

BEACH BUNGALOW

Beach Vacation, $995, Hudson Grace; Cocoa Beach hammock, $169.99, Novica; Riva Del Mar stones, $35/ square foot, Tile Co.; Aura chair, $2,498, Cabana Home; sea fan coral vase, $804, E. Madison. 92

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HOME+GARDEN

The brainchild of real-estate developer Jim Rickard (a fifth-generation Santa Barbaran and descendant of the De La Guerra family), DLG Lighting Co. brings beautifully custom-designed outdoor mounted fixtures to customers in a facile way all while celebrating our town’s lush history and character. “As a developer, I found it impossible to find quality off-the-shelf lighting,” says Rickard. “The only source seemed to be custom, which is often tedious and time consuming. I saw a market for high-quality lighting without the time and work required by the custom process.” Rickard met notable Santa Barbara architect Britt Jewett in 2008 while collaborating on a project. Impressed by Jewett’s “refined aesthetic and eye for balancing proportions,” Rickard dove into creating a collection that’s “unique in that it’s architecturally designed and has a look specific to us.” Each of the 20-plus classically inspired designs (from $795) utilizes top-quality iron and glass and can be made in a variety of finishes and sizes. “I find inspiration in the traditional details of hand-wrought iron,” says Jewett. “They intuitively convey a handmade character to our designs.” Look out for future collaborations with additional designers and new items as DLG builds on its aesthetic. –GINA Z. TERLINDEN DLG LIGHTING CO. 805-770-7400, dlglighting.com.

PHOTOGRAPH: CASA DE LA GUERRA, KIM REIERSON

DISTINGUISHED DESIGN

ABOVE: A sketch of the De La Guerra pendant. RIGHT: DowntownSanta Barbara’s Casa de la Guerra.

We’re Obsessed with...

Santa Barbara-born furniture designer Sabin Ousey and House of Honey, 805-969-7444, houseofhoney.com, have teamed up to bring SABIN’s Spanish colonial, art deco, and midcenturyinspired pieces to Montecito. “My furniture is crafted with a California flair,” says Ousey, “as well as a subtle nod to the Spanish revival architecture of my native Santa Barbara.” –G.Z.T.

The Topanga chair, $3,050.

ONE TO WATCH Colin Quintal’s recently launched BENCH, 805-2461248, benchsb.com, is the former home builder’s newest business. He custom makes each piece (from $1,100)—for use indoors or out—with hand-poured concrete bases topped with exotic tropical hardwoods such as sapele, purpleheart, and mahogany. Says Quintal: “Clean lines and the simple mix of materials let each element shine on its own.” Available at Porch, 805-684-0300, porchsb.com. –G.Z.T.

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The Double Slab 1, $2,800.

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SHIFTING FOCUS

PHOTOGRAPH: BLUE CALEEL

Fitness guru Johnny G’s latest, yoga on tap, and shine this summer with essential oils

Lynne Harris Sutherland at The Sacred Space in Summerland.

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HEALTH+BEAUTY

Get on Board

J

LEFT TO RIGHT: System

creator Johnny G; an In-Trinity board ($1,195).

ohnny Goldberg and John Baudhuin began manufacturing and commercially distributing the eponymous calorie-burning, butt-kicking Spinner bike and the Spinning program in 1992. When that was at the height of its success in 2000, Johnny G and his wife Jodi moved to Santa Barbara seeking refuge from the chaos of their life in Los Angeles. While the inspiration for his latest fitness enterprise training on a flat floor for a lifetime,” he says, “In-Trinity is the first time was born on a riverbank in Brazil, an active lifestyle in Santa we’re elevated, accessing movements never possible before.” Individual Barbara—including surfing with his daughter, road biking boards include a set of sticks and straps as well as access to the online through the mountains, and taking walks at Butterfly Beach with his wife—has been a constant “IN-TRINITY IS A NEW PARADIGM. IT BREATHES NEW LIFE INTO source of inspiration. (He also created TRADITIONAL PRACTICES LIKE YOGA, PILATES, AND MARTIAL ARTS.” Kranking—for working the upper body—here in 2008.) Developed in orientation program. The first boutique In-Trinity Center is opening in Johnny G’s own backyard in Montecito, In-Trinity is a raised California at the end of this year. –CHARLOTTE BRYANT fitness board that allows a new range of training movements to build strength, balance, and flexibility. “People have been IN-TRINITY johnnygmethod.com.

RESTORATIVE READING The recently published Yoga Therapy

and Integrative Medicine: Where Ancient Science Meets Modern Medicine (Basic Health, $24.95) by Larry Payne, Terra Gold, and Eden Goldman incorporates the teachings of various traditions to educate everyone—from the general public to medical professionals—on alternative treatment methods and the application of yoga therapy as a complimentary treatment approach. –C.B.

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Counter Balance Terra Gold is a licensed acupuncturist, clinically trained nutritionist, certified yoga therapist, overall wellness analyst, and mother of 2-year-old son River. She also represents Manduka yoga mats, is a Lululemon ambassador, and models for Prana and Marika clothing lines. With a curriculum vitae so overwhelming, it’s no wonder that Gold has dedicated herself to the study of the spiritual, mental, and physical practice/discipline of yoga—one of the oldest sciences in existence today. Since recently moving to Santa Barbara, Gold has been building her private practice and teaching therapeutic flow classes at Yoga Soup, 805-9658811, yogasoup.com. –C.B.

PHOTOGRAPH: BLUE CALEEL

TERRA GOLD terragreengold.com.

Terra Gold at Loon Point. Yoga attire from the White Collection by Lolë.

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HEALTH+BEAUTY

Essential Oils

Seasonal skin care gets a warm-weather update with long-lasting and lavish beauty oils

Tom Ford Neroli Portofino body oil, $70, Nordstrom; Lustro body oil, $68, beautycounter.com; Moroccanoil shimmering body oil, $48, Nordstrom.

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Soleil Toujours Après Soleil exotic shimmer body oil, $56, Net-a-Porter. ABOVE: Nourishing oil cleanser, $64, tata harperskincare.com. LEFT:

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Detail of László Moholy-Nagy’s Leuk 5, 1946, oil and pencil on canvas, 30 1/4 x 38 in., Smithsonian American Art Museum.

MODERN MASTERS

A curated guide to the season’s multifaceted cultural offerings S A N TA B A R B A R A

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CULTURE

Wholly Moholy THE FLIRTATION BETWEEN ART AND TECHNOLOGY continues today, despite continued predictions that painting as an art form will succumb in technology’s wake. Hungarian artist László Moholy-Nagy (1895-1946)—whose innovative use of technology to manipulate light and space presaged the work of contemporary artists like Robert Irwin—also prophesized painting’s demise, yet continued to make paintings throughout his life. “The Paintings of Moholy-Nagy: The Shape of Things to Come” at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art from July 5 through September 27, skillfully examines this apparent conundrum. Guest curated by art historian Joyce Tsai and overseen by the museum’s chief curator Eik Kahng, the show postulates that Moholy’s paintings—often integrating “new” materials like Formica and Plexiglas—enabled him to depict artistic concepts that technology was unable to achieve during his lifetime. In the scholarly catalogue accompanying the exhibition, Kahng deems Moholy’s approach “a very functional alternative for an artistic mind so far ahead of existing technology.” Renowned Santa Barbara industrial designer Alex Rasmussen, nealfeay.com, is lending his talents to the exhibition’s installation with custom-made anodized aluminum “interventions” (partitions, benches, and other items) inspired by Moholy’s own artistic experimentation with aluminum. No doubt Moholy would have approved. –L.D. PORTER SANTA BARBARA MUSEUM OF ART 1130 State St., Santa Barbara, 805-963-4364, sbmuseart.org. Maholy-Nagy’s Untitled (Space Modulator), 1946, oil on Plexiglas, 14 1/2 x 8 1/2 in., McMaster Museum of Art, McMaster University.

ART OF WAR THE POWER OF PHOTOGRAPHY to portray the human condition is never more apparent than in wartime, when a single image can galvanize public opinion and provoke political action. The Vietnam War generated its share of indelible images, many taken by noted photojournalist NIK WHEELER, whose work is especially pertinent this year as the world commemorates the 40th anniversary of the fall of Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City), which ended the war and prompted the largest helicopter evacuation in history. Wheeler, on assignment from Newsweek to document the war’s final days, was one of the last members of the press evacuated from the American embassy before Saigon fell; his iconic photographs graphically portray the confusion, fear, and desperation of that penultimate event. After Vietnam, Wheeler continued as a combat photographer covering conflicts in the Middle East for Newsweek and Time before moving to Santa Barbara, where he currently focuses on travel photography and has published several books, including The Most Beautiful Villages and Towns of California (2007, Thames & Hudson) with Santa Barbara Magazine contributing writer Joan Tapper. His work has been exhibited at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Harvard University, and UC Los Angeles’s Fowler Museum. Wheeler also leads photographic tours throughout Indochina. –L.D.P. NIK WHEELER nikwheeler.com.

LEFT: The day before the fall of Saigon, a U.S. Marine perches precariously on the wall of the American embassy, trying to stop two Vietnamese men from entering the embassy compound during final hours of the evacuation (April 29, 1975). CENTER: Young Vietnamese villagers watch U.S. Army armored personnel carriers drive though their town. RIGHT: Dashing photojournalist Nik Wheeler in combat gear covers military operations during the Vietnam War (late 1960s).

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CULTURE ONES TO WATCH

Stephanie Washburn + Chad Ress

A

s a genre, landscape art has had its ups and downs; it ranked well behind portrait and history painting until the 19th century. Such hierarchical distinctions seem irrelevant in an era of digitized images and conceptual art, yet even contemporary artists approach landscape with at least an inkling—conscious or unconscious—of its storied past. For married artists Stephanie Washburn and Chad Ress, who share studios in Ojai and Ventura, the history of landscape underlies their art making in unique and different ways. Washburn describes her body of work, The Yielding—combining drawing, photography, and video—as conflating the landscape genre with portrait, media spectacle, and architecture. Her digital print Fire at Sea is a reference to a painting by J.M.W. ABOVE: Washburn’s Fire At Sea 2, 2015, digital C-print, 32 x 55 in. Washburn is represented by Mark Moore Gallery, markmooregallery.com. LEFT: From Ress, boulders being placed in New Hogan Lake, Valley Springs, California. Ress is represented by Massif Management, massifmanagement.com.

Turner, the British artist credited with elevating the status of landscape painting. A graduate of Wesleyan University, Washburn is currently a lecturer at UC Santa Barbara, where she received her MFA. Her work is included in several public collections, including LACMA, The Frederick R. Weisman Foundation Collection, and MOCA San Diego. In his landscape photography series America Recovered, Ress documents projects funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), echoing the New Deal-era Farm Security Administration’s photography project that produced iconic images by noted photographers Walker Evans and Dorthea Lange (both of whom Ress credits with inspiring his interest in photography). Accepted at Photo Santa Fe and awarded distinction by The Forward Thinking Museum, America Recovered was also published in Time magazine’s Lightbox and Harper’s Magazine. –L.D.P. CHAD RESS chadress.com. STEPHANIE WASHBURN swashburn.com.

FACT OR FICTION Released in January, She’s Gone (Heart Rock Press, $16), is page-turning fiction with roots in a local reality. Joye Emmens’s latest novel opens in 1969 during an uncontrolled oil spill from an offshore platform in Santa Barbara—based on an actual event that was the catalyst for the creation of Earth Day and the beginning of the environmental movement—that sets the stage for a coming-of-age novel with the backdrop of counterculture 1960s America that explores social and political issues still relevant today. –CHARLOTTE BRYANT

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LAYERS of the

LAND

PHOTOGRAPH: LISA ROMEREIN

The true pioneers of the wine industry in Santa Barbara County

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hen naval lieutenant RICHARD SANFORD returned home from the Vietnam War in 1968, immersion into agriculture meant starting over with a clean slate. “It was a curious situation,” he says. “We were rejected by the very culture that sent us to war, and my response was to delve into nature and the environment.” In 1971, buoyed by investors and business partner/botanist Michael Benedict—and driven by memories of a stellar Burgundy sipped a few years earlier— Sanford purchased land in the western stretches of the Santa Ynez Valley. It was “a spiritual experience,” he recalls. But it also marked a major step forward, it turns out, in Santa Barbara’s own foray into making world-class wine. When he founded Sanford & Benedict Vineyard, Sanford knew that the east-west traverse of the Santa Ynez Mountains was unique. The marine air it funneled inland might suit Burgundian grapes like Pinot Noir and Chardonnay well. But, limited topographical know-how aside, this was really an era of speculation and plenty of trial and error. Sanford bought his first Pinot Noir vines from what was Santa Barbara County’s first commercial vineyard—an experimental plot planted in 1964 in the Tepusquet region of the Santa Maria Valley by UC Davis viticulturists Uriel Nielsen and Bill DeMattei. The only other local wine endeavor was Santa Barbara Winery—the area’s first winery since Prohibition—which PIERRE LAFOND had founded in downtown Santa Barbara in 1962. “We were buying grapes from San Luis Obispo and making sherry and black muscat,” Lafond remembers. But it was when those Tepusquet vines began to mature in the early 1970s that Santa Barbara’s wine pioneers had the tools they needed to start experimenting—and to start making history. In 1970, Central Valley grower LOUIE LUCAS , along with Al Gagnon and Dale Hampton, established the 800-acre Tepusquet Vineyard. “We were the leading edge,” he admits, “and any time you go to an area that doesn’t have fruit, there’s risk.” Within five years, however, the caliber of his Chardonnay was luring big-name Northern California buyers like Beringer, ZD, and Robert Mondavi. In 1971, as Sanford’s project began, Lafond himself bought land nearby, and the first crop from his eponymous vineyard sprung in 1975. “A California ag counselor told me to plant grapes that were popular at the time,” he says, which led to some early mistakes. Warm-weather grapes planted in this cool region—Cabernet Sauvignon, most notably—were eventually pulled. The Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, though, flourished for decades to come. The next year, tire magnate LEONARD FIRESTONE and his son, BROOKS , established their ranch further inland in the Santa Ynez Valley, where a hotter clime allowed Bordeaux grapes like Cabernet and Merlot to shine. They were consulted by legendary winemaker André Tchelistcheff, and guided by thorough weather studies. “Regardless, you just don’t know until you try it,” says Brooks, “and we definitely took a chance.” Riesling would go on to become the Firestone label’s most awarded wine, though early Pinot plantings needed to be pulled some 15 years later. In 1973, farming brothers STEPHEN AND BOB MILLER established in Santa Maria what became one of the county’s most storied vineyards, Bien Nacido. “We were inspired by a Bank of America report that said you could never grow enough grapes in California to satisfy consumers,” Steve Miller recalls. To this day, the Bien Nacido name denotes wine grape pedigree. But even the Millers ended up pulling out grapes like Merlot. Santa Barbara’s first commercial Sauvignon Blanc vineyard was established in 1975, when UC Davis food sciences grad FRED BRANDER ventured inland, toward Los Olivos, where warm weather favored Bordeaux grapes. “There was no prototype back then, so we were trying out a lot of things,” he recalls, though his wines were already winning gold medals by 1978. The area’s first Syrah grapes went in the ground in 1977 at Zaca Mesa Winery along Foxen Canyon Road, when Cal State Fresno enology grad KEN BROWN moved to town. Syrah’s promise was clear to him. “But it was really the promise of Sanford’s young-vine Pinots in 1975 and 1976 that captivated me,” he remembers. By the late 1970s, after a decade of pioneering, the stage was finally set. The ’80s welcomed fresh vintner talent— Rick Longoria, Fess Parker, Daniel Gainey, Au Bon Climat’s Jim Clendenen, Qupé’s Bob Lindquist, The Ojai Vineyard’s Adam Tolmach, the Hitching Post’s Frank Ostini and Gray Hartley, and Foxen’s Dick Doré and Bill Wathen. The Santa Barbara County Vintners Association was founded in 1983. Today, most of the early players remain, the industry is booming, and—with dozens of grape varieties thriving— diversity is Santa Barbara’s calling card. Brooks Firestone calls it an “American success story.” And as a new wave of young entrepreneurs rolls in, the same attitude of innovation prevails. “We have all the raw materials,” says winemaker BRYAN BABCOCK , whose family bought land in the Sta. Rita Hills in 1978. “Now we must push the envelope, take everything to the next dimension, and stay open-minded to our ultimate potential.” –GABE SAGLIE

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The Sanfords’ Rancho El Jabalí Vineyard; Fred Brander; Richard and Thekla Sanford tasting wine in the 1980s; the couple now; Louis Lucas and Royce Lewellyn at Valley View Vineyard; Bryan Babcock in 1998; Ken Brown; Louis Lucas in 1971; Pierre Lafond and vineyard workers in 1978. Photographs of Fred Brander and Ken Brown by Mark Robert Halper.

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT:

Today, most of the early players remain, the industry is booming, and—with dozens of grape varieties thriving— diversity is Santa Barbara’s calling card.

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FOOD+WINE | BITS&BITES

Gourmet in the Garden

When longtime friends Ariane Aumont (an Ojai-based private chef) and Taiana Geifer—a high-end fashion designer and event producer—finally found themselves living in the same town after Geifer settled on the West Coast after seven years of living between Santa Barbara and New York, their innate interests brought them together. The result: Le Picnic—a “boutique garden party meets Mediterranean cocktail hour meets elegant picnic,” says Geifer. During the past few years, as Aumont’s clientele was expanding, “she started getting larger jobs and it became clear she needed a partner,” says Geifer. “After our first job together, we knew we would be an excellent team.” Now, the duo’s boutique catering company is known for custom picnic baskets stuffed with delicacies such as smoked zucchini dip with pomegranate molasses and mint, pickled vegetables, manchego with apple-sage membrillo, black mission fig and olive tapenade, and lavash and za’tar flat bread as well as their private custom-curated alfresco affairs and public events such as a demonstration of pairing locally grown herbs in your home-cooked meals. –GINA Z. TERLINDEN LE PICNIC hellolepicnic.com.

SUMMER MENU

Oro Blanco grapefruit, cold-pressed cucumber juice, and vanilla bean Paloma cocktail with pink Himalayan salt Kumamoto oyster with pickled cucumber gelée, caviar lime, and fennel Grapefruit, avocado, and pea tendril salad with crispy shallots and sumac dressing Turmeric and dried lime-marinated calamari fried in coconut oil with fresh herbs, lemon pickled onion, and minted yogurt Grilled prawns with tamarind-mint chutney, masala-spiced heirloom carrot purée, and purple carrot and fines herbes salad “Bouquet” of rose water-cardamom-coconut-pistachio, orange blossom-tangelo, lemon-verbena-coconut, and sage-pineapple popsicles

BURST OF THE SEA Caviar—the salt-cured roe (fish eggs) of sturgeon—has been consumed as a delicacy for more than 700 years. It’s delectable on its own, atop briny oysters or smoked salmon, or served on blinis with a dollop of crème fraîche. One company known for its sophisticated selection of caviars and smoked salmon is Kolikof, founded in 2012 by Jim Miller. “My mother’s family, the Kolikof family, is of Russian descent and lived in the Caspian Sea city of Baku, considered by historians and gourmands as the center of the ancient caviar world,” he says. “Today, we continue the tradition of my ancestors by traveling the world to source the finest and best-tasting sustainable caviars and smoked salmons.” Kolikof’s most popular caviar is the belugalike Imperial Kaluga (from $75/30 grams, pictured)—a sustainable hybrid with large, glossy light golden green to dark gray grains that have nutty, buttery, and salty flavors—sought after by chefs all over the world, including Nobu Matsuhisa, though the four other varieties are enjoyed by discerning connoisseurs as well. According to Miller, caviar is “best served thoroughly chilled on a mother of pearl spoon” to avoid tainting the exquisite taste. For your next surf-themed party, consider Kolikof’s caviar in the surf bar—four types of caviar are laid upon an ornately designed surfboard along with vintage champagne bottles while professionals are on hand to answer any questions about the delicacy. –G.Z.T. KOLIKOF kolikof.com.

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P H OTO G R A P H S : L E P I C N I C , A M B E R G R E S S ; KO L I KO F, P E T E R G R I G S B Y

• • • • • •

A summer salad with grapefruit, avocado, and pea tendrils.

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Mixology 101 Still—Elevate Your Ethanol is sure to satisfy your summer soiree needs with its variety of mixing tools, glassware, and other accessories. Owner/former bartender Jeremy Bohrer and his girlfriend, Sayward, opened a storefront with hopes to help people—from beginning mixers to commercial users—“make a better drink and have more fun while they do it,” he says. Items such as handcrafted Dr. Mark’s Muddlers ($49.99) made out of exotic woods share the shelves with imported Alessi cocktail shakers ($129.99, pictured). “We recently sold a set of rare Fostoria Crystal coupes from the 1930s,” he says. “We also have the famous Nick and Nora glasses that are taking the cocktail world by storm.” –KELLY LIN

P H OTO G R A P H S : L E P I C N I C , A M B E R G R E S S ; KO L I KO F, P E T E R G R I G S B Y

STILL—ELEVATE YOUR ETHANOL 37 E. Ortega St., Santa Barbara, 805-883-1080, elevateyourethanol.com.

RUBY’S SISTER 1 1/2 ounces gin 3 /4 ounce Shrub & Co. grapefruit shrub 1 /2 ounce Campari 1 /4 ounce sweet vermouth Splash of lemon juice Dashes of bitter Ice Pour all items into a shaker. Mix well and strain into your glass of choice. Serves one.

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BITS&BITES

PATIO PICNIC

One of Ojai’s latest boutiques to open: Tipple & Ramble, Suné Goldsteen’s selfdesigned emporium that showcases artisanal food products, dining decor, and barware inside the store along with a wine tasting patio out back, where shoppers can order small bites, salads, cheese and charcuterie boards, and

A sip at Tipple & Ramble.

more. “I have a background in design, and have always been interested in the intersection between design, food, wine—I wanted to create a space that celebrated all of these things,” says Goldsteen. “I came across this little Spanish-style building, and I thought it was the perfect place to try out this hybrid concept that showcases food and entertaining-related retail and also has an outdoor patio where we could serve wine and have events.” Items sourced from all over the globe include Moroccan pillows and textiles (from $225), linens from France (from $28), Portland-based Pok Pok Som drinking vinegars ($15), and of course, locally made Four Leaf Woodshop items (from $12). “The ethos behind what we stock is that they should be made with a sense of integrity and also have a joie de vivre,” says Goldsteen. Look online for summertime pop-up dinners and wine tasting events. –G.Z.T. TIPPLE & RAMBLE 315 N. Montgomery St., Ojai, 805-319-9496, tippleandramble.com.

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represents the passion, energy and commitment of gifted winemakers, chefs, artisans and restauranteurs from around the world. Join us in the magic of a life well lived. Visit terroirlife.com to begin the adventure.

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40TH ANN I

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N IVERSARY!

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MUSIC FROM THE 805 TO THE WORLD AND BACK Santa Barbara’s

own musical legacy and pop music real estate may be stronger and broader

PHOTOGRAPHS: JAKE BAILEY / AUGUST

than many realize

b y J OS E F WO O DA R D

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Katy Perry

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David Crosby

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While other American cities are famous music centers and have been duly noted and saluted as such—from Los Angeles and New York City to New Orleans, Nashville, and Memphis as well as trendier hot spots (i.e. the indie-landia of Portland and Seattle)—Santa Barbara, the scenic wonderland between L.A. and San Francisco, has carved out its own impressive place in the world of global musical culture, if in syncopated and singular ways.

PHOTOGRAPH: ART STREIBER

A

part from the established musical figures spotlighted here, musical angles abound in this blessed city. We’ve had close, nearly neighborly encounters with genuine pop royalty: For years, Santa Barbara County was a destination landing zone for Michael Jackson at his controversial Neverland Ranch as well as a launching pad for the young aspiring Goletabred singer Katy Hudson—better known to the world as Katy Perry. The New Noise Music Festival and Conference, a seaside up-and-comer event in the SXSW mold, has so far set up its tent for five years running, and we have, in the Santa Barbara-seeded and now globe-trotting Gardens & Villa, a strong contender in the indie rock landscape. In other cultural corners, Peter Noone of Herman’s Hermits fame has been a longtime Montecitan, and the S.B.-born, 1990s hit-maker band Dishwalla’s “Counting Blue Cars” (with its hook “Tell me all your thoughts on God/I’d really like to meet her”) still radiates the airwaves. Here, we take a selective, guided tour through the map and history of music notables who have called Santa Barbara home. From the “remember when” file, some recall seeing the shaggily eloquent guitar-wielding surfer dude/UC Santa Barbara student making the rounds of local venues, including SOhO and the intimate but ever-hip restaurant Roy, in the late ’90s, cooking up an enticing admix of folk, rap lite, Hendrix-y ripples, and sandy, bubbly toes-iness. Before very long, the former film student Jack Johnson ruled his own corner of the music world in his benevolent way as a new kind of pop star, riding a wave of unpretentious and easy-does-it spirit of his own devising. Now, when the Hawaii-born (and still partly based) worldtouring star—with nine megaseller albums to his name—

plays in his So-Cal hometown, he settles in for a doubleheader of sold-out nights at the Santa Barbara Bowl. Restaurateur Roy Gandy, of Roy fame, can usually be seen milling about the throngs. Recalling his fast, uncalculated rise to the top, Johnson says, with typical understatement, “I was doing surf films, so I had a pretty good job already. I wasn’t really looking for something new, but it just sort of happened. I rolled with it.” Surfing and music—and the sense of rolling with things as they come—are joined at the center of Johnson’s being. “Riding waves—it’s a rhythmic thing,” he comments. “If the wave would stay still, you’d get all your speed from the rhythm of going up and down. You go up and gravity pulls you down, and you use the force of the bottom turn to go back up. Since the wave is moving constantly, you have to learn to roll with it. Songwriting is the same way. If you just go with the constant rhythm of lyrics, you just have the same formula every time. It seems like if you let yourself go and try different things and roll with your mind as it goes, it helps.” There may be no official Santa Barbara song to speak of, no local equivalent of Randy Newman’s “I Love L.A.” or Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York,” but one reasonable candidate might be the wistful folk-rock “Walk on the Ocean,” one of the greatest hits by the best-known band outta’ Santa Barbara, Toad the Wet Sprocket. Named after a fictional band from Monty Python’s Flying Circus, this alt-rock band of local boys—lead singer Glen Phillips, Todd Nichols, Dean Dinning, and Randy Guss— who graduated from San Marcos High School in the late ’80s and played beloved joints like Pat’s Grass Shack in Goleta before being signed by Columbia Records in the early ’90s, scored biggest with the pop tart “All I Want,”

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Kenny Loggins

but “Walk on the Ocean” may be the best, most timeless and most 805-ish classic in the songbook. After breaking up in 1998 and then making up in recent years (including birthing their eighth album New Constellation), Toad’s saga continues into the sprocketed future. David Crosby—the hirsute “C” of CSN (with Stephen Stills and Graham Nash) and CPR (with Jeff Pevar and James Raymond, his son) known for solo efforts, duets with his pal Nash, and general folk-rock legendry—may be considered Santa Barbara’s rock prodigal son of sorts. Crosby has hailed from Santa Ynez for several years now, after a long and winding spell away from the county. “I was raised there and I love it,” he once said just before moving back to the area. “I know every street, every tree, and every beach. It’s my stomping grounds.” He grew up in the 805, got kicked out of schools, and played at the old Noctambulist folk club (near the Lobero Theatre), where he says, “I washed dishes for which they would let me get up and sing with a guy named Tony Townsend who played there. He was a guitar player, singer-

folkie guy. He would let me sing harmony with him. That was my initial thing.” Landing in Los Angeles, he played with The Byrds and helped forge a new folk-rock sound. He is known for coming to the aid of numerous causes and refusing to simply rest on laurels up through his first new album of originals in 20 years, Croz, in 2014 at age 72—unveiled, incidentally, at the Lobero, with the ancestral memory of the Noctambulist lurking in the wings. Famed Memphis-born saxman Charles Lloyd has been the jazz world’s token local celebrity for 25-plus years, and on an almost annual basis, appears at the Lobero Theatre, an easy 15-minute drive from his house (or less, the way he drives). But Lloyd—whose style draws on influences of John Coltrane, pop music, and a range of worldly sounds—took a circuitous route to his idyllic hilltop property, not far from the Vedanta Temple. It was the temple, in fact, which partly drew the spiritually attuned musician down the coast from Big Sur. He had repaired and retreated there during the ’70s after ascending to uncommonly great heights (for a jazz group) with his legendary 1960s quartet—featuring young

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P H OTO G R A P H : M A R K S E L I G E R / M A N AG E M E N T + A R T I S T S + SY N D I C AT I O N ; O P P O S I T E , M A R K S T U PA R Y K / G E T T Y I M AG E S

Jackson Browne

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PHOTOGRAPH: ART STREIBER; OPPOSITE: LARRY DALE GORDON

Bernie Taupin

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Jack Johnson

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piano wizard Keith Jarrett—and then shocked everyone by jumping off the fame/public limelight bus in 1970. Now 77—and toasted around the world as part of a fading generation of a jazz golden era—Lloyd is enjoying status as a jazz senior statesman with an ever-youthful spirit and a road home to Santa Barbara’s trails, pools, and easy proximity to coveted eatery La Super-Rica. Hanging out and nursing a beer between acts in one of the city’s most prized panoramic vista points—the Scranton Overlook atop of the Santa Barbara Bowl—could be considered a toasting gesture to the man behind the unfolding vision. That would be former bowl executive director Sam Scranton, the musician-manager/venue-maker who spearheaded the drive to make the bowl—originally a WPA project with a long, uneven history as a concert venue—into one of America’s greatest outdoor music “rooms,” not to mention one of Santa Barbara’s cultural treasures, a thing of pride and joy (yes, Stevie Ray Vaughan played there). Others were involved, of course, including an active fund-raising board and the all-important booking efforts and clout of Santa Barbaran Moss Jacobs, now a promoter powerhouse with the mighty Nederlander Concerts. Acts including Radiohead, The Eagles, Sting, The Arcade Fire, Davie Bowie,

archetype-maker for the folk-rock singer-songwriter cosmos, creator of the haunting ditty “These Days” (he wrote his oft-covered masterpiece at age 16), “Running on Empty,” saying a prayer for the pretender, avid activism through music and the power of fame, and—for proud, trivia-keeping Santa Barbarans at least—Hollister Ranch. (Browne bought a healthy piece of the big, relatively unspoiled acreage north of Santa Barbara back in the 1970s.) Browne has frequented the bowl since it was the County Bowl, still slips into the Lobero—announced and otherwise—and has lent energies to countless benefits here, including last October’s Sanctuary Centers benefit at the Arlington, when the part-time Santa Barbaran surfed through a 50-year songbook spanning his classics to tunes from his latest album, Standing in the Breach. One of Santa Barbara County’s most illustrious, culture-defining, and also, by nature, half-hidden legends in the world of song is Bernie Taupin. He is not known for his public appearances or performance powers but more so as Elton John’s right-hand lyricist for four decades, penner of countless words on the lips and minds of multitudes. Drawn to the Santa Ynez Valley by his love of spaces and horses (as have past valley residents Cream drummer Ginger Baker and The Tonight Show band domo Doc Severinsen), Taupin—an American West aficionado who once copped the nickname the “Brown Dirt Cowboy”—lived out his dream of owning and running a ranch, the Roundup Valley Ranch (bought in 1992, put up for sale in 2014). Meanwhile, he continued working with Sir Elton John, both long-distance and in real time in the Roundup’s recording studio and elsewhere, right up through the latest, critically kudo-ed John-Taupin song set, The Diving Board. In his little corner of the valley, Taupin has been our premiere local/global lyricsmithing legend. The abiding “dude” Jeff Bridges has successfully added musician and lovably gruff-toned singer to his artistic life plan. He may have partly tapped into that certain musical something in the water here. As an actor, Bridges—whose long flirtation with Oscar nominations came to award night fruition with his Oscar for his role as a washed-up and then renewed musician in Crazy Heart (2009)—cites the film as a catalyst to spur him on to pursue his teenage dream of becoming a recording, touring musician. “I probably would still be doing my music without that [film],” he says, “but that was really a wonderful shot in the arm. It really got the music thing going for me.” As for relocating to Santa Barbara from Los Angeles, he has said, “We got shook out with that earthquake, the Northridge quake. We landed very well up here. It’s just a wonderful community to be a part of. So great.” n

Jeff Bridges has successfully added touring/recording musician and lovably gruff-toned singer to his artistic life plan. He may have partly tapped into that certain musical something in the water here. and Stevie Wonder that normally fill much larger venues have heeded the special call to this jewel of a spot. Kenny Loggins—the veteran genre-switchup gymnast in the folk-rock, soft-rock, blue-eyed soul, and other hyphenate idioms—has been a mainstay of the Santa Barbarameets-the world music population for decades. Not one to dodge the spotlight or the street corner, he shows up all about town, from a Loggins and Messina reunion tour gig at the bowl to casual end-of-the-year shows at SOhO to the televised Christmastime fund-raiser marathons for The Unity Shoppe. He and pal Michael McDonald (also an on-and-off-again Santa Barbaran over the years) cowrote “What a Fool Believes” and “This Is It,” two of the deeper cuts in the long Loggins hit jukebox, which also features the likes of “Danny’s Song,” “Celebrate Me Home,” “Footloose,” and “Whenever I Call You Friend.” By now, Loggins could be drifting into the sunset, sustained by his bevy of hits, but the creative muse keeps tugging. When he played at the Chumash Casino & Resort not long ago, he “opened” for himself with his new country trio Blue Sky Riders. Chalk it up to another musical chapter in the Loggins saga. Mention Jackson Browne and multiple associations swim into the mind: A seminal L.A. troubadour and 134

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P H OTO G R A P H : M A R K S E L I G E R / M A N AG E M E N T + A R T I S T S + SY N D I C AT I O N

Jeff Bridges

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GARDENS

by GINA Z. TERLINDEN

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photographs by LISA ROMEREIN

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of EDEN A century in the making, the grand estates and expansive gardens built by Santa Barbara’s most noted architects and landscape designers

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L A S T E JAS This 26-acre fabled Montecito estate—a veritable horticultural treasure—evokes the 16th-century Italian Villa Caprarola with its nearly century-old boxwood hedges centered by agaves (a nod to Santa Barbara flora) set in planters around a reflecting pool. OPPOSITE: A study of symmetry, the triple-arched veranda of this Renaissance-style estate dating back to 1917 overlooks cascading terraces, pools, and vibrant lawns that lead down to a lotus pond with its own triple-arched pavilion.

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I L B R O L I NO Planted by influential landscape designer Florence Yoch, a topiary garden of eugenia and boxwood clipped into avian shapes fills out the sandstone and gravel motor court that leads to the historic 1923 George Washington Smithdesigned Italianate villa—its name means “enclosed by hedges”—that includes interior features designed by pioneering female architect Lutah Maria Riggs.

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P H O T O G R A P H S B Y L U C A T R O VAT O

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V I LL A SAL AD I NO Designer John Saladino’s love of classical architectural elements, such as columns, come to play in many of his homes. This Roman column that dates to 50 BC pulls the eye out toward the western edge of the garden, for which Saladino handselected each individual plant for its hue. OPPOSITE: Eighteenthcentury Spanish gates topped by Venetian statues of Moses and St. Jerome greet visitors to Saladino’s 12-acre estate, built in 1930.

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S OL ANA Perched on more than 12 hilltop acres, a statue of Winged Victory sits in front of a panorama that takes the eye from Montecito to Santa Barbara. This Classical Roman villa was designed by architect Francis Underhill and built in 1915. PAGES 136 AND 137: To mirror the grandeur of the home, formal plantings share the expansive gardens with 7,000 original eucalyptus trees, 200 fruit trees, a cutting garden planted with 500 rose bushes, a lily pond, allĂŠe of palm trees, and more. n

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COMING FULL

by KEITH HAMM

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P H OTO G R A P H S : L E F T, J I M O ’ M A H O N E Y; R I G H T, T H O M A S S E R VA I S

Santa Barbara’s surfing and skateboarding roots run deep, and today there’s more stoke than ever

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P H OTO G R A P H S : L E F T, J I M O ’ M A H O N E Y; R I G H T, T H O M A S S E R VA I S

L CIRCLE

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THE CONCURRENCIES OF SURFING AND SKATEBOARDING

began when some bored Southern California surfer grumbling about flat seas jerry-rigged a surfboard simulator from a roller skate and a board. Though evidence of such tinkering dates to the 1940s, it’s safe to say that countless men now well into their 60s resolutely believe that they single-handedly invented the skateboard in the 1950s. What we do know is that surfing and skateboarding went hand in hand, especially in beach towns like Santa Barbara, where smooth downtown sidewalks lead to warmish waves at Leadbetter Point. Skateboards were still rudimentary deathtraps when their spiritually refined birth mother— the surfboard—guided Southern California’s early surfers to spots north of famed Malibu. Renny Yater was among them, and in 1959, he opened Yater Surfboards. Since then, he’s built a reputation as a master surfboard shaper, and, now in his 80s, Yater still puts in workweeks at his shop off Milpas Street, alongside his son, Lauran. Skateboarding didn’t come into its own until the early 1970s with the arrival of the fast and grippy urethane wheel. Shortly thereafter, skate parks cropped up across the United States— including Santa Barbara’s Golf N’ Fun near La Cumbre Plaza and Sparks in Goleta—and skateboarding expanded from sidewalk soul surfers to bowl riders, downhill daredevils, and vast numbers of young women. Riding the wave in 1976, George Powell founded Powell Corporation on the industrial east side and introduced the Quicksilver slalom board with Sims Skateboards founder Tom Sims. Their brief partnership put Powell on the map, and in 1978, he teamed up with pro skater Stacy Peralta. As the Powell•Peralta Bones Brigade skate team dominated the 1980s, surfboard shaper Al Merrick became one of the industry’s dominant figures, having built on accolades earned while shaping for 1977 world champ Shaun Tomson (a South African now living in Montecito). Today, Merrick’s Channel Island Surfboards, headquartered in Carpinteria, is the planet’s biggest manufacturer under a single brand and the board sponsor for giants Tom Curren, Santa Barbaran Bobby Martinez, and Ventura’s Dane Reynolds, among others). At the same time, surfboard innovations prompted more aggressive wave riding. During that heyday, skaters were generally dirtier and more anti-authority than their wetsuit-clad counterparts, but the cultures did continue to share the common goal of eating, breathing, and sleeping sideways through life—literally and figuratively. Unfortunately, the number of female practitioners had dropped dramatically since the love fest of the previous decade. These days, it’s tough to tally just how many trends have come full circle within the surf and skate cultures. In terms of equipment, check the lineup during any good weekend at Rincon and you’ll find all sorts of wave-sliding crafts—from stubby soft-top twin fins to 11-foot pintails and everything in between (along with surf mats, body boards, stand-up paddle boards, and hand planes for bodysurfing). Meanwhile, students skate around Isla Vista on throwback banana boards, street urchins ride precisely tuned maple decks and titanium trucks, and fanatics of downhilling exceed 50 miles per hour on proprietary urethane. In both cultures, a do-it-yourself ethos is also hot once again, with feral skateboarders building renegade spots with salvaged bags of cement as surfers stock their biodiesel rigs—Ojai’s Malloy brothers come to mind—with homemade sunblock for sojourns to uncrowded waves. The most conspicuous return to ancestral form, though, is that on any given wave, or at any given skate park, you can find the fairer sex thriving. “It’s really cool to see women and young girls pushing the limits in both skating and surfing,” says Santa Barbara’s Lakey Peterson, 20, who grew up skating and now surfs at the highest professional level. “It’s all going in such a good direction.” n

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A pioneer of skateboarding’s mid-1970s explosion, Don “Waldo” Autry pivots past vertical in a concrete spillway below Mt. Baldy. This widely published photo was clicked by Jim O’Mahoney, now the curator of the Santa Barbara Surfing Museum and 2015 recipient of the Skateboarding Hall of Fame’s Icon Award; part-time Santa Barbara resident and 11-time world champion Kelly Slater, 43, is widely considered the best all-around surfer in history.

PREVIOUS PAGES, LEFT TO RIGHT:

P H OTO G R A P H S : TO P R I G H T, S T E V E B I S S E L L ; B OT TO M L E F T, JIM O’MAHONEY; BOTTOM RIGHT: GLEN E. FRIEDMAN

Before the urethane-wheel revolution of the early 1970s, TOM SIMS and Chuck Barfoot—New Jersey natives renting an adobe hut on Mountain Drive—built boards from old waterskis, clay rollerskate wheels, and a grippy topcoat of resin laced with Hammonds Beach sand. Sims foresaw the coming wave, launching Sims Skateboards with a team of the region’s best guys and girls who tested prototype equipment in dry reservoirs at an abandoned Montecito estate. Innovations in board design are credited to Barfoot as the company grew into one of the era’s biggest. Sims passed away in Santa Barbara in 2012. Barfoot, based in La Conchita, builds skateboards and snowboards.

Santa Barbara-based artist and activist PEGGY OKI (pictured below)—then a Santa Monica surfer girl skating with the now-legendary Z-Boys team—claimed the tall trophy at the inaugural Santa Barbara City Championships on May 18, 1975. Coincidentally, a crowd favorite at that contest was a 10-year-old local named TOMMY CURREN (pictured top left), who has since become one of surfing’s most revered and influential living legends. (And just five years ago, Curren’s daughter, Lee-Ann, was a shortlist contender for the women’s world title.)

1970s standout Robin Alaway.

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Haskell’s Beach local Bill Palmisano (pictured shirtless center right) founded SANTA BARBARA SKATEBOARDS in 1975, hand-shaping decks with marine plywood, epoxy, and fiberglass in a redwood warehouse near the airport. Also pictured: SBS team riders and other finalists at the 1977 Semana Nautica summer sports festival. Not pictured: Newly appointed team rider Kim Mearig, who soon graduated to surfing and, in 1983, won the women’s world title.

In September 1978, George Powell (above right)—a Stanford-trained engineer whose masters project was a breakaway surfboard fin—joined forces with world-champ skater Stacy Peralta (above left). In the ’80s, their small company, POWELL•PERALTA SKATEBOARDS, expanded into one of the industry’s most influential, manufacturing pro decks and Bones wheels right here in Santa Barbara, where the factory still hums today. Among other innovators, Powell•Peralta’s Bones Brigade skate team hatched a fledgling Tony Hawk, now the world’s most recognizable skater. After a rough patch in the 1990s, Powell•Peralta reemerged with more iconic skateboard art from Santa Barbara-native Vernon Courtlandt Johnson and a feature-length 2012 documentary directed by Peralta, entitled Bones Brigade: An Autobiography.

Scott Power hits the lip of the pool behind the WILDERNESS SURFBOARDS shop, circa 2001. Digging with shovels and picks (and without a building permit), a handful of skateboarders created a concrete playground at a lower east side hideaway haunted by the creative genius of wave-rider George Greenough (pictured above right). A Montecito-born eccentric now living in Australia, Greenough handcrafted waterproof camera housings, pioneered surfboard and fin design, and cofounded Wilderness Surfboards with Michael Cundith in 1966. Bob Duncan came aboard in 1970 and still builds Wilderness boards at a new location. In 2008, the shop and pool were buried by the widening of Highway 101.

ABOVE:

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Cofounder of Santa Barbara Montessori School, JIM FITZPATRICK built his first skateboard in 1957 and grew up surfing Topanga Beach, mentored by the legendary Miki Dora and Surf Guide magazine editor Bill Cleary. Fitzpatrick worked in promotions at Powell•Peralta and helped launch the International Association of Skateboard Companies, which set up a grassroots campaign to build public skate parks. In 1997, armed with thousands of supportive letters, he lobbied state legislators. “It was classic Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,” Fitzpatrick remembers. Shortly thereafter, lawmakers passed a bill that opened the floodgates for skate park construction, including Santa Barbara’s Skaters Point.

A handful of Santa Barbara’s finest enjoy a rare get-together on the bluff above backside Rincon. OPPOSITE, LEFT TO RIGHT: Surf-brand fashion designer SHAWN STUSSY, former Santa Barbara Country Surf Club president ANDY NEUMANN, Surf Happens surf school founder CHRIS KEET, surfboard shaper RENNY YATER, 1983 women’s world champion KIM MEARIG, and 1988 world amateur champion CHRIS BROWN. While CONNER COFFIN (pictured middle left), 21, expresses the Curren-esque style of the classically trained, kid brother PARKER COFFIN (pictured far left), 19, displays the precise artistry of a master technician. Both are described as humble and great fans of good food, which they actively seek out while lapping the planet on surf trips. Check out their Young Wise Tails blog. The growing crowd surrounding Skater’s Point didn’t know it at the time, but Saturday, September 10, 2005, marked a cool moment in Santa Barbara’s long and deeply woven history of surfing and skateboarding. That’s when local LAKEY PETERSON, 10 at the time, took first place in the 10 to 15-year-old girls division at the city’s annual skate contest. She did it again in 2006. These days, the 20-year-old Peterson (pictured near left)—who rode waves when she was 5 and picked up skateboarding at 8—is touring with the best competitive surfers on the planet. Last year, she finished the season ranked sixth in the world. P H OTO G R A P H S : O P P O S I T E FA R L E F T, J I M K N I G H T ; G E O R G E G R E E N O U G H , S T E V E B I S S E L L ; G R O U P P O R T R A I T, B R A N D E N A R R OYA N ; J I M F I T Z PAT R I C K , BRUCE BERNSTEIN.

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PHOTOGRAPH BY STEVE BISSELL

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In their 1963 Surfing Guide to Southern California, coauthors Bill Cleary and David Stern wrote that “the 15 miles of coastline between Point Conception and Gaviota is...closed to the public...and the 24-hour guard at the entrance gate is deputized to arrest trespassers. We have listed the surfing spots anyway, in the event the current situation should change.” Half a century later, the “situation” remains essentially unchanged.

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le WEEKEND From budding talents to society scions, these BRIGHT YOUNG SIBLINGS come to Santa Barbara to live the sartorial dream

p h bo yt o G g rIaNp A h s TbO y LCLAERSLOONS E E sZ b ys t C y lAe R d LbO y ST E KR I C LO P E Z pR h oI C t o gLrOa P ph

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styled by JAMIE SCHNEIDER

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ERIN AND SARA FOSTER IN MICHAEL KORS. JEWELRY BY ARIK KASTAN.

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ERIN FOSTER, 32, comedian, writer, actress SARA FOSTER, 34, model, actress Erin’s disarming wit and her YouTube videos acting out scenarios with Ryan Gosling as his crazy ex-girlfriend. Sara’s selfdeprecating guffaw and roles on 90210, HBO’s Entourage, and hitting Maxim’s Hot List.

KNOWN FOR

WHATS NOW Parodying reality television on their VH1 comedy series Barely Famous. WHAT’S NEXT Tune in to season two. As creators and coproducers, the daughters of music producer legend David Foster continue to try (tongue-in-cheek) to navigate their careers and dating lives while maintaining perfect public images.

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“We understand how lucky we are to have grown up in paradise—not a lot of people can say that. We’re very fortunate to call this place home.”

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TYLER BENKO, 20 BRENNAN BENKO, 19 CHANNING PEAKE, 20 musicians, False Puppets KNOWN FOR Growing up in Santa Barbara, Benko brothers’ family Chicken Ranch commercials, Peake’s artful greatgrandfather namesake legacy, and a modernized indie/hard rock signature sound. WHAT’S NOW Gearing up to release their album Gibraltar in June, along with a music video for the single “Elliot.” WHAT’S NEXT Performing on the Vans Warped Tour this summer.

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LUCKY BLUE SMITH, 16, musician, model, Instagram influencer with sisters (left to right) PYPER, 18 DAISY, 19 STARLIE, 21, models and musicians KNOWN FOR All-in-the-family talent and blonde ambition, Lucky’s fresh face taking on global proportions, and Ellen DeGeneres’s obsession du jour.

H&M, Levi’s, and Tom Ford campaigns.

WHAT’S NOW

Countless magazine covers and their surf-rock band The Atomics.

WHAT’S NEXT

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PYPER IN IRO AND ISABEL MARANT. LUCKY BLUE IN TOPMAN AND ACNE STUDIOS. DAISY IN ISABEL MARANT. STARLIE IN IRO AND ISABEL MARANT. PAGE 155: PYPER IN ISABEL MARANT. LUCKY BLUE IN TOPMAN AND ACNE STUDIOS.

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WILL TISCH, 27, entrepreneur KNOWN FOR Field-side presence at his family’s New York Giants games and bicoastal chill.

Artist Louie Eisner and the love of his life, Grace Silk.

WHAT’S NOW

WHAT’S NEXT Diving in to his next professional adventure in NYC.

“I love Santa Barbara. It will always be home to me, a place to come back to, unwind, and hangout with my wonderful mother.”

HILARY TISCH, 31, jeweler KNOWN FOR

Discovering hidden gems.

WHAT’S NOW

Raf Simons and Hemmerle.

Dreaming up a new clothing collection, Dôen, with Santa Barbara sisters Margaret and Katherine Kleveland, get excited.

WHAT’S NEXT

HAPPINESS IN S.B. IS Oreo milkshakes at the Coral Casino, Santa Barbara Middle School, and Peregrine Galleries.

HILARY IN THE ROW, SANDALS BY VALENTINO. JEWELRY HER OWN. WILL IN CLOTHING FROM SAKS FIFTH AVENUE. PAGE 154: HILARY IN THOM BROWNE, SANDALS BY CELINE. WILL IN CLOTHING FROM SAKS FIFTH AVENUE.

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CARTER THICKE, 17, actor, with brothers TIAGO, 8, and LUCA, 9 KNOWN FOR The wise-cracking son of sitcom staple Alan Thicke and editrix Gina Tolleson, baby bro of crooner Robin, Padaro Lane lifer. WHAT’S NOW Season two of Unusually Thicke, a scripted reality series where his multiple sarcasms steal the show. WHAT’S NEXT

CARTER IN MILLER’S OATH. LUCA AND TIAGO IN STELLA MCCARTNEY.

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Indie movies, hockey tourneys, and joining USC’S class of 2019.

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AUGUST GETTY, 21, fashion designer

NATS GETTY, 22, model, designer, and art collector KNOWN FOR Their enormous family, shoots for W magazine, Michael Muller, and “walking with my brother on his runway debut,” says Nats.

Both siblings design for August Getty Atelier—Nats works on the men’s line, August dreams up the women’s and was just named Emerging Fashion Designer of the Year from the Daily Front Row.

WHAT’S NOW

Working with the new LGBT center in Los Angeles and designing 2016 collections.

WHAT’S NEXT

“We go to Santa Barbara to unwind and rejuvenate. (It’s hard being 22.)” —NATS GETTY

THESE PAGES AND PAGES 156-157: Makeup by Geoffrey Rodriguez, hair by Diana Lucia. ALL OTHER PAGES: Makeup by Tomiko Taft, hair by Kittum for José Eber.

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AUGUST IN RAG & BONE AND AUGUST GETTY ATELIER. NATS IN CHLOE AND JENNIFER MEYER JEWELRY. FOR MORE INFORMATION, SEE “SHOPPING GUIDE,” PAGE 183.

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BEAUTIFUL MINDS Santa Barbara is where fantasies come to life and creative icons come to live

Driving up from the south, about 10 miles out, you pass through a wild, empty stretch with few signs of civilization other than the ribbon of highway that divides the scruffy sagebrush cliffs from the Pacific Ocean. When you round the cape at Rincon Point, the vegetation suddenly pops out— a brighter shade of green and lusciously tropical, like the work of an exuberant gardener. Then you see it: the white, low-slung city and its glittering harbor sheltered between mountains and sea. Santa Barbara feels like an island. It’s where people come to heal, to try on new lives, to make up their own rules of the game. It’s where fantasies come to life—often with unexpected consequences. Consider the story of MARTHA GRAHAM. Her father was a third-generation doctor from Pittsburgh, her mother traced her lineage straight back to the Mayflower, and her sister inherited a lung condition. The family came to Santa Barbara in 1908 in search of a cure from the winters of eastern privilege. In their case, the cure took the form of a Montecito olive ranch (“Martha Graham,” December/January 2008). One day, a traveling dancer dressed as a Hindu goddess appeared in Santa Barbara and lit a fire under young Martha’s imagination. The rest is, well, the history of a long and graceful conquest of the capitals of the dance world. And then there’s MADAME GANNA WALSKA (“A Life Less Ordinary,” February/March 2005), a Polish-born opera singer whose questionable talents as a chanteuse were no match for her genius in securing auspicious marriages. She tallied six husbands who had the unfortunate habit of expiring during their unions or after the divorce. When she finally had enough of Paris and New York, she decamped to Santa Barbara, where the fantasy took the form of Lotusland—an extraordinary 37-acre botanical garden of rare and exquisite beauty. Santa Barbara is where East moves West and then shoots for the moon. But it doesn’t always go according to plan. EDIE SEDGWICK’s grandfather—a New York patrician from his top hat down to the bottom of his bags of money—also brought his family over in search of a salt-air cure (“Almost Famous,” October/November 2006). His son, Duke, indulged his dreams without limits, careening through Santa Barbara’s artistic and social elites at his sprawling ranch and scattering broken hearts around the hillsides. The piper called for Edie, a wild, beautiful, and perfectly insane “It Girl” who died of drug-related causes at the age of 28 and is remembered today for her 15 minutes of fame in Andy Warhol’s Factory during the 1960s. When PBS came up with the idea for the first reality show in 1971, they naturally looked to Santa Barbara. Where else would you find a “normal” family willing to do something so out of the ordinary? The producers of An American Family meant to document a year in life of the standard-issue

b y K AT H E R I N E S T E WA R T

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Edie Sedgwick

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P H OTO G R A P H : T. C . B OY L E , L U C A T R OVATO

SANTA BARBARA IS WHERE EAST MOVES WEST AND THEN SHOOTS FOR THE MOON.

T.C. Boyle The Loud family

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American Dream, so they chose BILL AND PAT LOUD, who lived with their five children and assorted pets in a ranch-style home on the Riviera (“Cinema Verité,” August/September 2010). During the course of the filming, the oldest son came out as gay—a television first—and Bill and Pat decided to get divorced. That’s the thing about living the dream: You can’t always predict how it’ll turn out. In a place where you get to make up the rules, not surprisingly, people sometimes decide they don’t need to follow any rules at all. During the PROHIBITION era, the beaches of Santa Barbara were like Normandy for bootleggers—except that our rumrunners were greeted with warm embraces and empty glasses (“Hooch Heyday,” December/January 2007). Every few years, a fresh tale of scandal blows through one part of town or another, usually on the fine line that separates Martha Graham high society from high crimes and misdemeanors. Oftentimes, Santa Barbara is where the square peg at last finds a comfortable home. In the case of BUCKMINSTER FULLER, that would undoubtedly be a multidimensional home (“A Beautiful Mind,” October/November 2008). The scion of a family of Boston transcendentalists and inventor of geodesic domes, Fuller struggled in geometry class as a 12-yearold, got expelled from Harvard twice, experienced a life-transforming encounter with a great white spirit over Lake Michigan (she instructed him to seek out the universal laws of nature for the benefit of all humankind), and coined the phrase “Spaceship Earth.” Bucky’s own spaceship—for he was a philosopher of the peripatetic kind—increasingly touched down in Santa Barbara for lectures, seminars, and meetings with some of the greatest minds at UCSB. In short, he was a man made to order for spaceship Santa Barbara—the kind of man who would break the mold, if only he could find it. With the benefit of hindsight, Fuller’s mad visions—he championed renewable energy and sustainable environmental practices—make many contemporaries look like the crazy ones. AND THAT’S ANOTHER REASON WHY THE NATION NEEDS SANTA BARBARA. AMERICANS ARE IN THE UNFORTUNATE HABIT OF MEASURING THE VALUE OF EVERYTHING IN TERMS OF EITHER FAST MONEY OR EVEN FASTER PLEASURE. WE’RE HERE TO SHOW THAT THERE IS ANOTHER WAY. SANTA BARBARA IS A LABORATORY FOR NEW WAYS OF LIVING.

Hippies in other towns loitered in city parks and put flowers in their hair. Our bohemians moved up to MOUNTAIN DRIVE 169

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and invented the hot tub (“Mountain Drive,” June/July 2007). They also concocted distinctive bacchanalian rituals that, in Rock Hudson’s 1966 movie Seconds, gave the movie-going public a startling glimpse of life outside the white picket fence. Their ceremonies eventually morphed into the Renaissance Faires that now appear across the nation. SANTA BARBARA IS A PLACE THAT HONORS TRADITIONS BUT ALSO INVENTS THEM. To celebrate our Hispanic heritage

and community that dates back to the late 1700s, the city turns out for OLD SPANISH DAYS FIESTA (“Viva La!,” Summer 2014) that features an elaborate equestrian parade that has few equals. To welcome the SUMMER SOLSTICE (“Seeds of Love,” Summer 1999), we turn out again and again for a colorful homegrown parade of exuberant paganism. That same easygoing island attitude makes Santa Barbara a natural habitat for artists, architects, writers, and scientists. It seems inevitable that the pioneering architect Frank Lloyd Wright should have built a fine, wooden house here. It seems equally appropriate that this same house should now be home to the writer T.C. BOYLE (“Creative Genius,” February/March 2009). The list of celebrated inhabitants could go on: Jeff Bridges, Kevin Costner, Ellen DeGeneres, Fannie Flagg, Sue Grafton, Pico Iyer, Rob Lowe, SUZY PARKER, Dennis Miller, Ronald Regan, Carol Burnett, Bob Zemeckis, Ivan Reitman, Katy Perry, OPRAH WINFREY, Dick Wolf, and others. Santa Barbara attracts creative artists the way French cafes used to attract existential philosophers. MAYBE ONE OF THE NICER THINGS ABOUT LIVING IN THIS SLIGHTLY UNMOORED CITY IS THAT WHILE THE BIG RULES

Stringent ordinances have preserved the town’s Spanish Mediterranean design as well as many architectural landmarks—from the Old Mission Santa Barbara to 19th-century adobes and Mission revival manses. In recent years, Spanish colonial revival masterpieces of GEORGE WASHINGTON SMITH, nature-inspired constructions of LUTAH MARIA RIGGS, and inventive cottages of the Moody sisters have given way to the modernist masterpieces of Barry Berkus and Barton Meyers as well as the quirky artisanship of Jeff Shelton. Of course, with so many important estates in our midst, some number of squabbling heirs and duelling beneficiaries are bound to appear. What, for instance, will become of Bellosguardo, the unbelievably scenic hillside estate of the late HUGUETTE CLARK, heiress of a 19th-century copper-robber-baron (“The House on the Hill,” August/ September 2009), overlooking East Beach? Whether or not the estate ends up as a home for the arts, as Clark appears to have intended, hinges on the outcome of a story that continued on page 175

PHOTOGRAPH: DANIEL HENNESSY

ARE OPEN TO QUESTION, THE LITTLE RULES ARE RESPECTED.

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PHOTOGRAPH: DANIEL HENNESSY

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BEAUTIFUL MINDS continued from page 170 involves a confederation of local dignitaries, relatives who never knew her, a nurse who cared for her all too well, and inevitably, the IRS. But Santa Barbara is more than a playground for elites of money and culture, as some critics may say. If there is a sensibility that brings almost everyone together here, it’s one that puts most of its eggs in the basket of “now.” Santa Barbarans celebrate the present. We shop at the farmers market, savor the steady stream of friendly greetings, meet up later for afternoons on the beach with the dolphins and pelicans, and wait for that instant when the sky erupts in a blaze of orange and pink and the sun dips toward the horizon. Santa Barbara is a place where moments matter, and people care enough about one another to make them count. On that drive up the coast, as you pass Rincon and the foliage hits you like a tropical dream, you can see why early pioneers of the movie business such as CHARLIE CHAPLIN imagined that Santa Barbara would one day become the film capital of the world. Fortunately for us, we didn’t become Tinseltown (“Almost Hollywood,” June/July 2006). As you wind past the hedges that shield celebrity estates, you can see that we are something so much better. This is where Hollywood goes to heaven. And heaven always turns out to be something very different—brighter, darker, funnier, and altogether more human—than anything we could have ever expected. n

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SUMMER 2015

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Sorry, Not For Sale. (but this could be your home away from home!)

Regent Suite

Regent offers the most all-inclusive cruise of any cruise ship, anywhere. Onboard Regent’s ships, all rooms are “suites” or better. Regent offers Sip, Sail, and Savor, a 6-star culinary experience with French, classic American, and a taste of Tuscany.

Owner’s Suite

Oceania provides the best cuisine at sea of any cruise ship, anywhere. On their newest ships, Marina & Riviera, Oceania features a restaurant called La Reserve by ‘Wine Spectator.’ Onboard Marina & Riviera, discover Bon Appetit at Sea, the only cooking school at sea to offer hands-on instruction.

Wintergarden Suite

Seabourn offers the “World’s Most Luxurious” small ship accommodations featuring no more than 229 suites per ship. Seabourn is pleased to be partnering with UNESCO to promote sustainable tourism at World Heritage properties. Seabourn features The Spa at Seabourn – the highest rated spa at sea.

Crystal Penthouse Bathroom

Crystal Cruises is the world’s leading luxury cruise provider, having earned unprecedented recognition as the World’s Best for an incredible 20 years – an accomplishment unmatched by any other cruise line, hotel or resort anywhere. Aboard the all-inclusive, ultra-luxurious Symphony and Serenity, refined elegance meets casual simplicity. Crystal sails to all seven continents, providing worldwide experiences that bridge the best of land and sea.

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SantaBarbara

SHOPPING GUIDE

Santa Barbara Magazine (ISSN 0744-5199. USPS 112-990)

PAGE 154 ON HILARY Thom Browne peplum dress, $1,800, and cardigan, $850, Julianne, 805969-7100. Sandals, $680, Céline, 310-8880120. SALT sunglasses, $425, Occhiali Fine Eyewear, 805-963-5760. Bracelets, necklace, and ear cuff, Hilary’s own. ON WILLIAM Striped sweater, $295, and Hudson white jeans, $165, Saks Fifth Avenue, 805-884-9997. Oliver Peoples sunglasses, $425, Occhiali Fine Eyewear, 805-963-5760. Watch, price upon request, Silverhorn Jewelers, 805-969-0442. PAGE 155 ON LUCKY Topman shirt, $50, and Acne Studios jeans, $230, Nordstrom, 805-564-8770. ON DAISY Isabel Marant Tracey fringed top, $715, Shopstyle, shopstyle.com. Isabel Marant Étoile mid-rise skinny jeans, $350, Net-a-Porter, net-a-porter.com. PAGE 156 ON ERIN Michael Kors gingham fit-andflare dress, $2,195, Neiman Marcus, 818316-7000. Belt, stylist’s own. Earrings, price upon request, Arik Kastan, shop.arikkastan.com. PAGE 157 ON SARA Michael Kors off-the-shoulder crop top, $475, Neiman Marcus, 818-3167000. Michael Kors macro gingham fullpanel skirt, $1,295, and Stuart Weitzman Nudistsong ankle strap sandal, $398, Nordstrom, 805-564-8770. Jewelry, prices upon request, Arik Kastan, shop .arikkastan.com. PAGE 159 Sand cotton chino pants, $175, and sport coat, $625, Saks Fifth Avenue, 805-884-9997. Topman shirt, $50, Nordstrom, 805-564-8770. SALT sunglasses, $425, Occhiali Fine Eyewear, 805-963-5760. Skull ring, $750, Daniel Gibbings, 805-565-1284. ON TYLER J. Lindeberg wool dress pants, $295, Saks Fifth Avenue, 805-884-9997. Oxford shirt, $39.95, H&M, 805-9574303. Black label jacket and vest, price upon request, Sand, sand.dk. Ray-Ban sunglasses, Tyler’s own. ON BRENNAN Black label suit, price upon ON CHANNING

request, Sand, sand.dk. Foxboro check shirt, $195, Civilianaire, 805-969-2520. Thom Browne sunglasses, $675, Occhiali Fine Eyewear, 805-963-5760. Rings, price upon request, Muse Metalsmiths, musemetalsmiths.com. PAGES 160-161 ON PYPER Iro romper, $500, Diani, 805966-3114. Isabel Marant vest, $1,030, and clay tassel leather sandal, $895, Net-a-Porter, net-a-porter.com. Jewelry, stylist’s own. ON LUCKY BLUE Topman shirt, $50, and Acne Studios jeans, $230, Nordstrom, 805-564-8770. ON DAISY Isabel Marant jacket, $590, top, $210, and pants, $289, Net-a-Porter, net-a-porter.com. ON STARLIE Iro dress, $615, Intermix, 805969-2184. Isabel Marant necklaces, from $150, Net-a-Porter, net-a-porter.com. PAGE 162 Cream caftan, price upon request, The Row, 310-853-1900. Valentino flat knee-high gladiator sandals, $1,495, Intermix, 805-969-2184. Rolex, price upon request, Silverhorn Jewelers, 805-969-0442. Jewelry, Hilary’s own. ON WILLIAM Floral shirt, $198, and Hudson white jeans, $165, Saks Fifth Avenue, 805-884-9997. Oliver Peoples sunglasses, $425, Occhiali Fine Eyewear, 805-963-5760. Watch, price upon request, Silverhorn Jewelers, 805-969-0442. ON HILARY

PAGE 163 Custom suit and shirt, price upon request, Miller’s Oath, millersoath .com. Dita sunglasses, $675, Occhiali Fine Eyewear, 805-963-5760. ON TIAGO AND LUCA Imps & Elfs jeans, $76, Dani Boy, 805-770-3155. Will military jackets, $225, Stella McCartney, stellamccartney.com.

Summer 2015, Volume 42/Number 4 is published quarterly with an additional issue in February by Smith Publishing Group, LLC. Periodical postage paid at Santa Barbara, CA, and additional mailing offices. Editorial office: 2064 Alameda Padre Serra, Ste. 120, Santa Barbara, CA 93103. Telephone: 805-965-5999, fax: 805965-7627, editorial e-mail: editorial@ sbmag.com. POSTMASTER: Send

address changes to Santa Barbara Magazine, P.O. Box 16386, North Hollywood, CA 91615. Subscriptions: telephone: 888-592-0026, e-mail: sbrcs@magserv.com. Domestic rates

ON CARTER

PAGES 164-165 ON AUGUST Rag & Bone sweater, $140, Nordstrom, 805-564-8770. Pants, August’s own. ON NATS Dress, price upon request, Chloé, 323-602-3155. Chloé Fynn sandals, $851.86, Far Fetch, farfetch.com. Jennifer Meyer bracelets, from $350, and ring, from $420, Net-a-Porter, net-a-porter.com.

are $24 for one year (five issues), $36 for two years (10 issues). for airmail, add $40 postage. for orders outside the United States, add $20 postage. Single copies are available at newsstands and other magazine outlets throughout the United States.

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AVA I L A B L E T H R O U G H D A N Z I G E R G A L L E R Y.

#weliveinparadise

Photograph by Will Adler.

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