Landscape Architecture

Wing Ranch: Art and Architecture in the Santa Monica Mountains

Wing Ranch Duquette Pagoda Detail Photo © Alice Joyce

Francie Rehwald’s Wing House has the media buzzing. Working with architect David Hertz of Santa Monica, Ms. Rehwald responded with enthusiasm to the notion of repurposing a 747 aircraft, using wings as roof structures, and deconstructed tail pieces, cockpit windows, fuselage, et al. to build the ranch’s main house, guest lodgings, barn, meditation chamber and more. The 55-acre property Ms. Rehwald purchased had once been a getaway for Tony Duquette, legendary Los Angeles artist/designer, and his wife Elizabeth. Duquette dubbed the property, ‘The Empire,’ devoting 30 years to building out a fantastical setting. Duquette’s extravagant sanctuary featured a plethora of ornamental pavilions, pagodas, houses and outbuildings that utilized old props, along with discarded salvage of every stripe for construction materials: Oil drums and satellite dishes, metal pipes and Navy surplus framing devices, embroidered parasols, and antlers with a provenance tracing to Hearst’s San Simeon ranch – All were reworked in marvelous and amazing ways; these cast-off objects transformed into dreamy elements of enchantment. In 1993 a fire swept through Malibu, destroying all but a few of the unique creations Duquette designed for his so-called Sortilegium.

Continue reading Wing Ranch Soars: Architecture in Tune With Nature

Landscape Architecture

L.A. Modernism .. Schindler House

Schindler House  (Photo: Alice Joyce)

A visit to the MAK Center might well be a highlight of a trip to Los Angeles for devotees of mid-century Modernist architecture and landscape design. The Center maintains the Schindler House in West Hollywood, a fine example of the work created by Austria-born, American architect R.M. Schindler.

Continue reading Schindler House .. L.A. Modernism

Historic Gardens

Getty Villa: Elegant Symmetry .. Echoes Ancient Rome

Getty Villa Outer Peristyle Hedge and Pool Photo © Alice Joyce

Located along the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, the Getty Villa first opened in 1974 as the original J. Paul Getty Museum; the architecture of the site patterned after the Villa dei Papiri – a Roman country house dating to the first century. The Villa closed for renovation in 1997, just as The Getty Center opened to great fanfare in Los Angeles. After a 12-year closure, the cultural cognoscenti were abuzz by 2006 as the Getty Villa reopened with stunning exhibition spaces; presenting an unparalleled showcase for Greco-Roman & Etruscan antiquities. An overall stunning redesign by architects, Machado and Silvetti Associates of Boston received widespread praise.

Continue reading Getty Villa: Elegant Symmetry .. Echoes of Ancient Rome