Monthly Archive for April, 2009

News in the News Pt 2: The Once and Future Chronicle

For years I’d been considering painting the San Francisco Chronicle building at 5th and Mission. I ‘d hesitated because the location seemed so difficult. When the Hearst Corporation announced it was shutting down the Seattle Intelligencer and eying the San Francisco Chronicle for closure, I hurriedly set up my easel on what Leah Garchik would describe as a “boomerang shaped traffic island”.

This was one of the busiest sites at which I’ve worked. It was also one of the most interesting.

Storm Clouds over the Chronicle, 24" X 48" (Click on image to enlarge)

Storm Clouds over the Chronicle, 24" X 48" (Click on image to enlarge)

I started Sunday, March 15 . There was a strong wind and heavy clouds. I got soaked and my easel very nearly blew over into the traffic but I managed to block in an ominous sky.

Monday, I’d just started painting when I caught sight of Joel Selvin striding towards me in a maroon overcoat. Like everyone that I would talk with, Joel was concerned about the future of the paper, but, unlike most, he was not upset about leaving.
“I’m 59 and I have a book deal. So I’m taking a buyout. I started here as a copy boy when I was seventeen. It was so different then. You know, the presses used to be down there.” He pointed to the far end of the building.
“When they started to roll the building would rumble and shake. You felt the building lurch and you knew we were going to press. There were grates over those windows. Hot air would be driven out by the machinery. After work I’d stand on the street below inhaling the smell of the presses.”

Over the next few weeks, as I talked with reporters, columnists, editors, copywriters, and teamsters about the crisis, I had the sensation that I was standing in the eye of a storm. Of course, the Chronicle’s drama was unfolding against the backdrop of collapsing economic institutions, and the huge brouhaha over “retention bonuses” at AIG which added a surreal dimension to this local event.

An insurance agent “between jobs” stopped to chat. Referring to AIG, he volunteered his opinion of management in the insurance industry.
“These guys at the top, four rungs above me, with their Yale and Harvard degrees, all they know how to do is play golf, walk around in expensive suits, and tell you where to eat that’ll cost you $ 300 or more. They couldn’t run a hot dog stand!”
When I asked him about his chances of finding another job. He replied confidently.”Oh I’ll find another job. I know how to talk.”

Chronicle writers and staff were less sanguine. Being in the newspaper business they had a sense of the “big picture” and they could see that that if they took a buyout or were laid off they would probably never have a job like this again. I became aware of a real esprit de corps which in the current circumstances was accompanied by gallows humor: I was told that the joke making the rounds was that the paper must be going under because it was having its portrait painted.

Photo courtesy of Maryly Snow, www.snowstudios.com/artist.htm

Photo courtesy of Maryly Snow, www.snowstudios.com/artist.htm

Kenneth Baker passed by on several occasions. One day he remarked on the ominous clouds in my painting. I told him that they had taken this form almost by accident. That I was pleased with the ‘fissure’ in the clouds falling diagonally towards the silhouetted Chronicle building.
“More like slow lightening.” he replied.

Just about every afternoon, around the time that I put on the clock, the Executive News Editor, Jay Johnson, would stop on his way to work. One afternoon, observing his long face, I asked him how he was doing.
“Not so well. Last night I had to say goodbye to a hundred and twenty employees.”

Friday, March 3, was the last day for many of the 120 who’d opted for buyouts. Steve Rubenstein and a number of other reporters paused to chat with me on their way to a final lunch. Steve posed for a photo next to my painting. An associate told me that Steve was brokenhearted to be leaving, but that staying was too risky.

This last observation was reinforced by a younger reporter, Jonathan Curiel, with whom I had a stimulating conversation about the Middle East and about Robert Fisk whom he had interviewed. I inquired if he had taken a buyout.
“No, but maybe I should have. The paper needs to shed another 30 people. They could fire me next week.”

Shortly after he left, a gentleman stopped whose wife was completing her last day at the paper.
“Who’s going to monitor our local and national government if we lose our newspapers?” He asked, “ It’s newspapers that generate most of the investigative reporting. I don’t think Americans realize what the loss of newspapers will mean for our democracy.”
“A democracy that we barely salvaged in the last elections.” I added.
He nodded grimly and crossed the street to meet his wife at the entrance on Mission.

A lifetime subscriber, who’d overheard him, shared her concern. “ I’m so upset. Every time I receive my paper it’s a little thinner. It’s like watching someone on chemotherapy. I just hope it survives and recovers.”

Those who remain at the Chronicle, and many good people remain, must strive that much harder to reinvent it. To somehow link it effectively into cyberspace while remaining a tangible paper of record. Non profit institution, investigative reporting by subscription, these and many other ideas swirling around probably need to be explored.

Whatever our criticisms of the paper (and Chronicle readers are a diverse and critical bunch) the paper functions as our public square. It is a place. It leaves a permanent record. The mercurial internet is everywhere and nowhere. Words cut into stone in the ancient forum. Words printed on paper today. Ok, so I can print words from the internet and pass them around to my friends. But will they be in news stands on the street, in coffee houses, on breakfast tables all over town? Will they remain as part of the common historical record in ten or twenty years?

Friday, April 10 my last day on the street I spoke for a few minutes with Deputy Editorial Page Editor, Lois Kazakoff. She had no doubts as to the value of the Chronicle. “ It tells our stories.” she declared.

Like it or not, over the years the Chronicle’s reporters, editors, columnists have laid the cobbles or bushwacked the trails that constitute much of the intellectual landscape that we navigate in the Bay Area. We should all work to keep this institution alive.

I am offering a special of $5 Shipping & Handling on all prints on paper. Prints on canvas are also available online. To purchase the original painting please inquire: anthonyholdsworth@yahoo.com

A Hidden Gem in Oakland: The Dunsmuir-Hellman House

The Dunsmuir-Hellman House, an arrow shot away from the 106th Street exit of 580, is a world removed from Thirteenth and Franklin Streets where I last worked in Oakland. This testament to the Greco-Roman thrust of our westward course of empire stands in splendid isolation in its own 45 acre valley. When the wild turkeys make a racket or the wind blows, they muffle the the low hum of the hidden freeway. At such times observing the duck pond, the thirty-seven room mansion, the subsiding swimming pool, the tiny grotto and the barn strung out along this valley with a stream running through it, observing all this, one can be excused for imagining oneself in another time and place.

The Dunsmuir-Hellman House, Oakland

The Dunsmuir-Hellman House, Oakland

I encounter many interesting people while I paint on the street.  I met Annalee Allen this way, in Oakland, around the time of the Loma Prieta Quake (Nov 1989). I was documenting the quake’s aftermath while she, as president of  the Oakland Heritage Alliance, was working to preserve some of the older historic buildings that had been damaged by the quake.

Recently we’ve been discussing collaborating on a book that would feature my paintings of Oakland accompanied by her historic commentary.  Annalee observed that the Dunsmuir Hellman-House would need to be included.

So I went out and painted it. This seemed a good moment to explore a collaboration. I’m, therefore, turning the rest of this post over to Annalee – my first guest blogger!

ANNALEE ALLEN

The Dunsmuir Hellman House # 2, Oakland

The Dunsmuir Hellman House # 2, Oakland

Until recently, I thought I knew pretty much all the history of the beautiful landmark Dunsmuir House and Gardens located in the Oakland hills, near the San Leandro border. I knew the the hidden valley where the mansion stands was once the property of Ygnacio Peralta, son of Don Luis Peralta, whose 44,000 acre Rancho San Antonio once encompassed all the land of present day Alameda, Oakland, Piedmont, Berkeley, and Albany. I knew that later the valley belonged to a Gilbert Tompkins who maintained a trotting horse breeding farm with stables and a racing track.
And I knew that the early 20th century Broadway stage actress Edna Wallace helped select the architect J. Eugene Freeman to draw up plans for the stately Colonial Revival style residence for her mother Josephine who, after a years long love affair, was finally able to marry her sweetheart Alexander Dunsmuir, the son of a very wealthy Canadian mining magnate. The star crossed lovers were not able to enjoy their hidden retreat for long, I knew, because both passed away within a few short years, leaving the property to Miss Wallace.
Despite her best efforts Edna Wallace could not keep up the large estate and she soon sold it to a banker,  I.W. Hellman, Jr. and his wife who lived across the bay in San Francisco and wanted a secluded estate where they could relax and entertain family and friends.
I have come to know a lot more about the Hellman years, from reading a fascinating new book, “Towers of Gold: How One Jewish Immigrant named Isaias Hellman Created California,” written by Frances Dinkelspiel, Hellman’s great-granddaughter. From her book I came to know how her ancestor immigrated to California in the 1850s from Bavaria, a 16 year old Jewish boy who started out working in a cousin’s stationary store. The author traces the young man’s rise from store clerk to brilliant financier and head of Wells Fargo Bank, and how nearly single handedly, he propelled frontier California into the modern era.
It was the Hellmans who over several decades, beautified and developed the property which they called Southvale Park, calling upon landscape designer John McLaren (of Golden Gate Park fame) to lay out the gardens, swimming pool, tennis courts, and ornamental ponds. The home was lavishly furnished with purchases made when the family traveled to Europe, and according to her book, through the years there were many family weddings, celebrations and gatherings.
In the early 1960s the family sold the property to the city of Oakland, and since the 1970s a dedicated nonprofit group has maintained the estate and offered public tours and other wonderful community events (the upcoming Easter egg roll party on the lawn is one example). Recently the nonprofit’s director, Jim deMersman, formally petitioned the Oakland City Council to change the name, as a way to honor and celebrate the Hellman family’s long association with the Dunsmuir property.
So, if it has been awhile since you last visited, make a date to go up to the Dunsmuir Hellman Historic Estate. Visit www.dunsmuir.org to learn more.
(Written specially for this blog by Annalee Allen.)

News in the News Pt. 1: Gossip at the Chronicle

Leah Garchik gave me pride of place in her column today, so I thought I’d post a picture courtesy of Jeff, a bicycle messenger/ blogger at www.bluoz.com , who’s been photographing the progress of the painting, on his daily route. It’s been a unique experience to work in front of the Chronicle during this period when the paper is reinventing itself.

Painting In Progress at the Chronicle

Painting In Progress at the Chronicle

After the painting is finished, in about ten days, I will write about some of my experiences here. In the mean time, please subscribe to my RSS feed or add me as a friend on facebook for updates.



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