Triumph of the spirit
Mike Swanson
Ceramics artist Mark Blumenfeld was throwing pots in his studio on
Canyon Acres Drive, preparing for his annual Christmas show, when a
friend in North Laguna told Mark’s wife, Beverly, that the canyon was
on fire. That was at 11:30 a.m. Oct. 27, 1993.
By 4:15 p.m., Mark was standing on the roof of his studio with a
trickling hose, trying to save it and the rest of his family’s
property from flames bearing down the brushy hill that serves as
their backyard.
It didn’t take long for Mark to realize he had no chance against
the blaze, but it took the insistence of then-14-year-old son Daniel
to convince Mark and Beverly to leave.
“It was a good thing our son yelled at us,” Beverly said. “We were
in shock and should have left a lot earlier than we did. I started
packing at around noon, so we ended up with a lot of stuff, but that
studio and everything in it was how we made our living. It was hard
to leave behind.”
Mark and Beverly, married for 36 years, have been exhibiting and
selling their ceramics at the Sawdust Festival since 1968, a year
after having moved to Laguna. They paid $40,000 for their half of the
lot on Canyon Acres, which had three houses and three artist’s
studios. Nikki Grant, Mark’s sister, and her husband, Jay, paid for
the other half. The fire claimed all six structures.
Nothing in Mark and Beverly’s studio but their kilns and the
pottery that was inside them survived the fire. Some of their work
was naturally raku’d by the flames, but Mark didn’t like any of the
remains enough to keep them. Even their cast-iron stove was reduced
to a black puddle, he said.
“It was like a tornado of fire,” Mark said. “Trees were blowing
up, the sky was gray, embers were falling all over the place. I’d
seen fires on TV before, but it’s nothing like being there right in
the middle of it.”
It took almost two years before their studio was rebuilt, and the
Blumenfelds lived in it another two years before they had a house
again. Because their first studio wasn’t insured, they used the
insurance from the third house which they’d rented out to pay for it,
deciding to decrease their lot by one structure and pour more money
into the studio.
Before anything on their lot was in livable condition, however,
the Blumenfelds depended on friends and loyal customers to keep them
afloat. Several people, including a ceramics company, donated their
time, supplies and money to sustain a family that had depended on its
artwork and rental income to stay out of the red.
It helped that the fire had hit right after the Sawdust Festival,
Mark said, as sales from it account for about 75% of his income.
Their focus in the aftermath of the fire was getting their studio
back to resume making their living.
“We didn’t even think about the house until the studio was up and
running,” Beverly said.
Mark, with the help of architect Daniel Martinez, used about the
same floor plan as the original studio, but built up, raising the
ceiling from 9 feet to 22 feet. The large hill behind their lot made
city view ordinances moot.
“The old studio was built one piece at a time by a bunch of
hippies, including me,” Mark said. “I got to build my new one the way
I wanted it. I always wanted a barn, so I built my studio like a
barn.”
Mark and Beverly’s dream studio, complete with a kitchen, is 1,700
square feet, and their rebuilt house -- which they also built much
higher -- is 3,200 square feet including the garage, about 1,500
square feet larger than the old house. They didn’t worry much about
fireproofing the buildings, sticking primarily with wood and stucco.
“If a fire like that came through again, nothing could stop it,”
Mark said.
About 65 houses on Canyon Acres were destroyed, and after new
houses started popping up, some on the street who didn’t lose their
homes wished they did, Mark said.
“The fire ended up being really fortunate for us,” Mark said. “It
didn’t seem that way for a while, but now, we have this valuable
property instead of just valuable land. We have no intention of
selling it, but it’s nice knowing you have something valuable.”
Beverly agreed, adding that the new house and studio are far more
comfortable to live and work in.
“It used to be hot in the summer and cold in the winter,” Beverly
said. “Now it’s comfortable year-round.”
Other than some boxes still full of the heirlooms Beverly packed
in 1993, there are no traces of the fire at the Blumenfeld home.
“I never even think about it anymore,” Beverly said.
Beverly credits much of their quick recovery to community support
when times were toughest, extending as far as the television, which
kept victims informed about where they could find aid, even sites
that housed pets.
The Blumenfelds had four cats, and they all found homes at no cost
for a month until the couple rented a house in Arch Beach Heights.
“It was amazing how fast everything came together,” Beverly said.
“One of the most incredible things about this country is how quickly
it supports disaster victims. You always hear about earthquake
victims or fire victims being helped when they need it most, but we
felt it firsthand.”
Now, 10 years later, shortly after receiving a 2003 Sawdust
Festival award for being the best ceramics artist, Mark is throwing
pots again -- this time in a high-ceilinged studio -- preparing for
his 20th annual Christmas show.
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