Los Angeles Times

Having a whale of a time

Artist is bringing back first of his sea creature murals, painted on Laguna hotel in 1981.

- By Faith E. Pinho Pinho writes for Times Community News.

Thirty-eight years after a pair of whales first floated onto a wall on South Coast Highway in Laguna Beach, artist Wyland is bringing them back.

The muralist is re-creating the first of his worldwide “whaling walls,” 23 years after it was painted over in a dispute with a neighborin­g hotel operator.

“I always told myself I’ll come back and paint it,” he said.

On July 9 — 38 years to the day after he finished his original work — Wyland (who goes only by his surname) was in the same spot, paint bottle in hand.

“I’m having a lot of flashback memories doing this one,” he said.

Wyland saw the opportunit­y when Hotel Laguna, which sits directly opposite the parking lot from the whaling wall, changed hands in January. Real estate investor Mo Honarkar signed a 99-year lease for the building with plans to revitalize the aging landmark.

Honarkar has repeated his intention to preserve the character of the old hotel, but some fear the effect his other planned developmen­ts could have on the town.

“It’s wonderful to know that we can support this dream of his, this longtime dream that’s come full circle,” said Hasty Honarkar, Mo’s Honarkar’s daughter and vice president of Laguna Creative Ventures, a branch of his Laguna Beach Co.

Passersby on Friday paused to squint up at the mural, murmuring in admiration.

“I love you, Wyland!” one woman said.

“Thank you for sharing your incredible beauty to the world,” said another.

“You’ve touched a lot of lives.”

The artist, his sea-blue eyes twinkling, responded with a warm thank you and a quip.

“It’s fun, isn’t it?” he called down to a pedestrian from his perch on a scaffold splattered in blue paint.

“It is so fun!” she called back, shielding her eyes from the sun.

Wyland grinned. “It’s a hobby that got out of control.”

Between paint strokes, Wyland regaled listeners with tales of his other whale murals around the world and the history behind the Laguna whales.

“Every wall has a story. They’re like my kids. I had 100 kids, and they were all born on ugly walls,” he said with a chuckle. “I made them more beautiful. This one’s special because it was the first and it inspired all the rest.”

The history of this mural is rooted in the sea.

As a child in Detroit, Wyland dreamed of seeing the ocean. When his mother took him to Laguna Beach when he was 14, he dove into the water. As he was surfacing, he saw two gray whales hugging the shore, spouting a tall stream of water.

“It was like seeing dinosaurs — the coolest thing ever,” Wyland said. “Yeah, I always said I want to live in Laguna Beach.”

On his 25th birthday, the self-described “starving artist” returned to his childhood dream town to put the finishing strokes on his first major work: a life-size portrait of the two whales he saw as a child.

At the 1981 dedication, Wyland said, Gordon Grant, a longtime Los Angeles Times journalist in Orange County, called out, “How many of these are you going to paint?”

The artist had planned to do only one. Instead, Wyland responded, “I’m going to do 100.”

That resolve — and the inaugural whaling wall — inspired a 27-year project that took Wyland and his collection of sea creatures to walls around the United States and several other countries, including New Zealand, Russia and China.

Propelled by his success, Wyland painted each for free to help raise awareness about ocean and animal conservati­on.

But in 1996, the Laguna Beach whales disappeare­d. Claes Andersen, then-operator of Hotel Laguna, called the weather-worn work an eyesore. In a battle of art versus property rights, Anderson won the right to paint over Wyland’s work.

Wyland was devastated. He had bought the building behind the mural to house his gallery and studio space, thinking the $1-million purchase would save the wall. Instead, he discovered too late that the wall belonged to Hotel Laguna.

A few months later, he erected a smaller tile version on his studio wall, just above the whitewashe­d wall. The reincarnat­ed mural, which has remained, depicts the same mother and calf swimming in the blue ocean.

His new mural of a family of whales stretches across 160 feet, below the tile. Wyland plans to add more fish and a reef, inspired by his diving excursions off Laguna’s beaches.

He wants to make this mural “a masterpiec­e,” he said.

But this time, he’s being more cautious by painting on canvas, not the wall, in case the new hotel operator decides to change the place. Besides, he said, he hopes to display the canvas in a museum.

Still, he has high hopes for collaborat­ion with the Honarkars.

“I’m taking an ugly eyesore and I’m making it a beautiful experience for the people that come to Laguna,” Wyland said. “Mo’s doing the same thing with the hotel.”

One potential issue is unresolved: The artist didn’t get a permit to paint this mural.

He said he didn’t feel he had to because he had a permit for the first version and this one is technicall­y temporary.

The matter is winding its way through City Hall, Mayor Bob Whalen said Friday.

In the meantime, Wyland will keep painting the whales.

 ?? Bob Grieser Los Angeles Times ?? LAGUNA BEACH artist Wyland, seated, oversees a re-creation of the first “whaling wall” he painted 38 years ago at Hotel Laguna. The original mural was painted over in 1996 after a dispute with the hotel operator.
Bob Grieser Los Angeles Times LAGUNA BEACH artist Wyland, seated, oversees a re-creation of the first “whaling wall” he painted 38 years ago at Hotel Laguna. The original mural was painted over in 1996 after a dispute with the hotel operator.
 ?? Don Leach Daily Pilot ?? AS WYLAND works, he regales listeners with tales of his other whale murals around the world.
Don Leach Daily Pilot AS WYLAND works, he regales listeners with tales of his other whale murals around the world.

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