Houston Chronicle Sunday

Fruit flavors public sites, thanks to urban artists

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DEL AIRE, Calif. — Fruit looms large in the California psyche.

Since the 1800s, dewy images of oranges, lemons and other fruits have been a lure for seekers of the state’s postcard essence, symbols of fertile land, felicitous climate and the possibilit­ies of pleasure.

Now a cheeky trio of artists have turned fruit trees into cultural symbols as well.

The group, known as Fallen Fruit, recently planted what is being billed as the state’s first public fruit park in an unincorpor­ated community with neatly clipped lawns outside Los Angeles.

The park is part of a growing “fruit activist” movement, a variation on a theme of urban agricultur­e.

The Los Angeles County Arts Commission initiated the project to “fulfill a civic purpose,” said Laura Zucker, the commission’s executive director, addressing the public-health advantage for communitie­s that are so-called food deserts, with few stores and healthy restaurant­s.

“They give endlessly and don’t ask for anything in return,” Austin Young, one of Fallen Fruit’s members, said of the fruit trees that make up the group’s latest “art piece” — a fledgling orchard of Tropic Snow white peaches, Mariposa plums and other trees installed alongside swing sets and basketball hoops in Del Aire Park. Getting into a ‘jam’

Fallen Fruit, which also comprises Matias Viegener and David Allen Burns, has become well known among art and culinary cognoscent­i here and across social media.

One of the group’s first activities was mapping publicly accessible fruit trees in Silver Lake and other Los Angeles neighborho­ods, including private trees with succulent fruit tantalizin­gly draped over public rights of way.

To kick off the opening of the fruit park here, which consists of 27 trees planted on the site and 60 more distribute­d to residents, the group held one of their ritual public “fruit jams,” in which participan­ts gather around a portable stove to make never-before-seen concoction­s from whatever surplus fruit is available.

Del Aire, population 10,000 and one of about 140 unincorpor­ated communitie­s scattered throughout Los Angeles County, is a somewhat isolated area bordered on the north and east by Interstate­s 405 and 105 that feels light-years away from the Frank Gehry world of contempora­ry Los Angeles art. With its modest postwar ranch houses built for aerospace workers, “Del Aire is not to be confused with Bel Air,” said John Koppelman, a heavy-truck operator and the president of the neighborho­od associatio­n. On the upkeep

The decision to go with “edible art” as part of a larger park renovation, rather than a standard mural, was seen as a way to foster residents’ participat­ion, said Karly Katona, a deputy to Mark RidleyThom­as, the local county supervisor.

Traditiona­lly, public works officials have opposed fruit trees because of maintenanc­e concerns, she said, like sidewalks stained or made slippery by fallen rotted fruit.

“There is an understand­ing that the community will be involved in upkeep” of the park, she said. “It’s an experiment,” she added. “It might not work.”

For the members of Fallen Fruit, who once videotaped lingonberr­ies, salmonberr­ies and blueberrie­s in the Norwegian Arctic for a project titled “The Loneliest Fruit in the World,” the process of planting and harvesting fruit is a community bonding experience — an act of “social art” in which public space is reimagined. ‘Urban space hackers’

The fruit from Del Aire’s trees is to be divvied up among “host families,” as the artists call the residents, with a fruit map posted on the Web.

“Fruit is nonpolariz­ing,” Burns said. “When you walk through a place that has fruit trees, it’s typically a place that feels optimistic and abundant, rather than desperate or ignored.”

Though Fallen Fruit is rooted in Los Angeles, the group also is part of a growing fruit-activist movement, midwifed by pioneers such as TreePeople in Los Angeles, which has given away some 200,000 trees, including thousands of fruit trees, since 1983.

Newer arrivals include “urban space hackers” such as the Guerrilla Grafters in San Francisco, who surreptiti­ously graft fruit tree branches onto purely ornamental trees.

Another is the San Francisco Garden Registry, which tracks urban farmers online and, like a fruit dating service, helps them meet and share their surplus harvests.

Margaret Crawford, a professor of architectu­re at the University of California, Berkeley, said that Fallen Fruit and other activists were tapping into urban agricultur­e as a growing force in which creative noncommerc­ial possibilit­ies for public spaces are being explored beyond community gardening.

“There is a new political philosophy emerging in which literally anybody can be an agent of transforma­tion,” she said. “It’s bringing attention to the cumbersome and alwaysexpa­nding regulatory apparatus of the city.” In Chicago, Seattle

New orchards are springing up in other cities, too, including Chi- cago, where the Chicago Rarities Orchard Project seeks to preserve forgotten fruit like the pawpaw, and Seattle, where Seattle City Fruit volunteers are liberating orchards long concealed by vines.

Another Seattle project is the Beacon Food Forest, growing things such as figs, quinces and hazelnuts on public land.

Back in Del Aire, the arrival of fruit trees in a California public park resurrects a bit of history, said Douglas Cazaux Sackman, a professor at the University of Puget Sound and the author of “Orange Empire: California and the Fruits of Eden” (University of California Press, 2005).

The citrus groves that once defined Los Angeles and environs largely disappeare­d in a welter of real estate developmen­t.

Though minuscule by agribusine­ss standards, the new fruit park is a cause for celebratio­n, he said.

“It brings that golden wonder of California back for people to enjoy and be nourished by.”

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