Los Angeles Times

Renewal out of the ashes

An artist finds liberation after his painful losses from the Thomas fire

- deborah.vankin @latimes.com

It was close to midnight when the call came from a panicked neighbor. A roaring wildfire was racing down the mountain and the flames would be there soon. It was time to get out. But John Wullbrandt, a prolific artist who’d been painting the landscape around La Granada Mountain since he was a teenager, refused to leave. He’d been preparing for this moment for the last 15 years. The 100-acre former cattle ranch just above Carpinteri­a in Santa Barbara County has been in Wullbrandt’s family for four generation­s. Fire was always a threat.

He and his partner, Jean-Claude Rivalland, had encased the house in corrugated steel, installed three 5,000-gallon water tanks and laid 300 feet of fire hose. Each year, they cleared vegetation around the house and had circled the structure with fire-resistant succulents. Decades of his paintings, including the works he cherished most, were tucked away in two steel shipping containers he believed could withstand a wildfire. They were going to stay, and fight.

Shortly after midnight on Dec. 10, as the Thomas fire raced toward them, Wullbrandt took the northeast corner of the house, Rivalland the southwest. They tied their animals — two donkeys, two cows, a mule and a horse — to the side of the house and hosed them down with water. They figured their four dogs and two cats would be safe inside the house, and the tortoise could ride out the fire in the bathtub.

Finally, the towering wall of flames reached them. They affixed their mask respirator­s and battled the onslaught with fire hoses, buckets of water and the animals’ drinking troughs. The fire’s deafening moan was so loud it sounded like a freight train, and the smoke so thick, they couldn’t communicat­e

or see each other. So they fought solo, each feeling he was the last man on Earth, ensconced in scalding heat, flying embers and whirling ash.

When it was over, Wullbrandt had learned what near-death looks like: It is crimson and deep orange, as if rendered in the “Naphthol Red” and “Cadmium Orange” tubes of paint that he often works with. It is brilliant and murky at once, with flickers of gold, deepgreen and blue, like the rolling hills, ripe fruit and sun-dappled beach in Wullbrandt’s downtown Carpinteri­a murals. In the eye of the fire, not unlike when he’s painting sometimes, Wullbrandt says he felt an otherworld­ly calm.

“It was like being in the epicenter of a blowtorch,” Wullbrandt says. “It took all of our might. But we were well prepared, we were confident, like when I paint — I had peace of mind. It was actually quite beautiful, haunting.”

With his tanned face, Santa Claus-like beard and soft, hazel eyes, 66-year-old Wullbrandt looks like a modern-day cowboy, rugged and sensitive. He grew up in Carpinteri­a, where his late father, Ernest C. Wullbrandt, served multiple terms as

mayor. The sleepy beach town was spared from the fire, the largest in California history, but is still dangerousl­y smoky more than a week after the first flames. As Wullbrandt strolls down the ash-speckled sidewalks of Wullbrandt Way — named after his father — he stirs a “big man on campus” reaction. Neighbors, friends, local business owners nod as they pass by, often slapping him on the shoulder or stopping for hugs.

As he drives up the mountain to Wullbrandt’s ranch in his old Mitsubishi SUV, the scene along the rocky, dirt road looks like a steam punk moonscape of blackened tree skeletons coated in gray ash. Crisped shipping containers and lone propane tanks litter empty lots where houses once stood, their barbedwire fences now bent and charred. The air is so thick with smoke, it leaves a bitter, burnt taste with every breath. When the wind picks up, it sends enormous, billowy clouds of gray ash into the car’s path, obscuring the bumpy road ahead.

Wullbrandt left the area in 1978 for San Francisco, he explains in the car, to forge a career as an artist. He was rejected by the commercial gallery establishm­ent there — “devastatin­g” at the time, he says — but he made a living over more than three decades through private commission­s and selling artwork to luxury hotels and resorts around the U.S. mainland and Hawaii. His pastoral scenes of local flora and fauna and illustrate­d cultural histories have adorned hotel suites, lobbies and golf clubhouses.

With San Francisco as his home base, Wullbrandt traveled the world looking for inspiratio­n — India, Nepal, Japan, South Africa — and making paintings.

His many public artworks have included a city commission­ed architectu­ral trompe l’oeil on a building in San Francisco’s Tenderloin district and multiple murals inside the Dole Food Co.’s corporate headquarte­rs in Westlake Village.

When San Francisco became too expensive for the artist and his longtime partner, they returned to Carpinteri­a and in 2002 bought “El Rancho Botello,” which his great-great uncle homesteade­d in 1913. It was a working cattle ranch until last year. Wullbrandt, a longtime vegetarian, suddenly had to learn how to brand and castrate cows, buck hay and herd cattle.

All the while, Wullbrandt painted, working intensely for weeks at a time either in his studio, a stand-alone cabin encased in metal, or outside two adjacent shipping containers situated about 600 feet from the house. Capturing the local landscape and its history is his passion. Nearly all of his neighbors own pieces of his art, he says. In 2013, the late “Fast & Furious” actor Paul Walker commission­ed two pieces.

One of his works is in the collection of the Carpinteri­a Valley Museum of History; others are on loan to local businesses. His most recent mural, chroniclin­g agricultur­al developmen­t in Carpinteri­a, was unveiled in the town’s center earlier this year.

Knowing that his personal collection of paintings was safe in his studio — decades of carefully rendered observatio­ns — brought him a deep sense of purpose and accomplish­ment.

“So many of my murals have been destroyed over the years,” he says, “I felt it was responsibl­e to hold onto some [art] — that I was in charge of holding onto my own history.”

The inferno, which cut through Wullbrandt’s property like “fast-flowing lava,” torched 100-year-old oaks, ceanothus trees and swaths of coyote bush. It left the outer regions of the ranch burned to a crisp, the no washy landscape dotted with sizzled trees, charred antique farm equipment, shattered glass and fried rat and rabbit carcasses.

Wullbrandt admits that some might consider it irresponsi­ble to have stayed at the ranch and fight the fire, especially considerin­g the sheriff ’s call, two days earlier, urging them to evacuate.

“But I’m passionate about where I live, and I have the freedom to make that choice,” he says. “The ranch hadn’t burned in over 100 years, so we knew it was coming, it was inevitable. We prepared. We spent 15 years being responsibl­e.”

And the plan worked, at least in part. The house and its immediate surroundin­gs were untouched, save for a 1-inch burn spot on the front porch step and tiny fire lashings on the porch posts.

But all his preparatio­ns for protecting the art studio were for naught. It was burned into oblivion.

Wullbrandt knew the studio and shipping containers had wood floors, but he was certain there was metal beneath them. That was not the case. The fire blew underneath and ignited

everything inside, turning decades’ worth of paintings into ash. The oldest work that Wullbrandt lost was a series of charcoal figurative drawings from when he was in junior high school; his most treasured work lost was a still life of an Art Deco vase in which he felt he’d successful­ly experiment­ed with the rules of compositio­n.

Most devastatin­g, Wullbrandt says, are his ravaged archives: 50 years’ worth of letters, personal photograph­s and slides, portfolios of drawings and sketches, treasured books, maquettes for murals, pre-internet newspaper and magazine articles about him, along with TV and radio interviews on VHS and cassette tapes and documentat­ion from early public art projects — all turned to dust.

The corrugated steel barn, too, was destroyed; it also didn’t have a metal floor, as Wullbrandt had thought. He lost three significan­t large-scale paintings that were housed there, along with family heirloom furniture, century-old tools his family used to build the ranch and his sister’s collection of antique saddles.

“It was terrible,” he says of watching his art studio burn during the fire. “But I thought: ‘We’re alive.’ ”

This is what rejuvenati­on looks like: It is “Chromium Oxide Green” and “Light Blue Violet,” like the tubes of paint Wullbrandt will use in the landscape paintings he’s planning for an upcoming show. Just a week before the fire, he was voted into the Oak Group, an artists organizati­on that raises money for environmen­tal preservati­on causes. They’ll exhibit his work at the Santa Barbara Public Library’s Faulkner Gallery, as part of a group show, in the fall. He’ll also have a solo show in 2018 at Carpinteri­a’s Palm Loft Gallery, he says.

“The fire has given me an opportunit­y to show my work, it’s given me something to head towards,” Wullbrandt says.

Losing so much in the fire, he says, has been oddly liberating. For years, Wullbrandt meant to organize his archives. But that would have required classifyin­g his history, and he isn’t one who likes to be pigeonhole­d, he says. Losing everything frees him from the daunting task of sorting his sprawling life’s work and, for better or worse, from his personal narrative. It presents an opportunit­y to start anew.

“There’s not being burdened with all the trappings of my life,” he says. “I thought that one day I would take all of this archival stuff and turn it over to someone; and somehow that would validate my career. But I don’t have to do that now. I’m free to paint.”

Wullbrandt may be eerily at peace about the Thomas fire, but standing by the remains of his destroyed barn, he chokes up thinking about his ancestors. “The fact that my family’s ranch burned on my watch,” he says, tears pooling in his now bloodshot eyes. “It’s been tough. But I know I did everything I could. My ancestors would be darn proud.”

The sorrow is compounded at the mention of his neighbors.

“My heart goes out to those who have lost far more than I have,” he says.

Still, Wullbrandt remains optimistic. In town, Wullbrandt stops at a small garage that was once his grandfathe­r’s plumbing shop and which he now uses for storage. He lifts the metal grate and there, piled up with the cardboard boxes, bikes and old furniture, was a glossy, 10-foot-wide painting of his ranch in better times, vibrant and alive. It depicts cowboys roping and herding cattle across dark green hills, the Carpinteri­a Valley and city of Santa Barbara stretching out to the sea in the background.

“Gone, all of this gone,” he says, sweeping his hand across the landscape depicted in the painting.

But with loss comes new life. “It really will be like the Phoenix rising out of the ashes, the rebirth,” he says. “It will be so much more beautiful once it starts to rejuvenate. We’re gonna see wildflower­s we haven’t seen in 100 years.”

Then Wullbrandt gazes up at a mountain ridge in the distance, now an ash-gray paint stroke on the horizon.

“The spring — just wait. As an artist, I can’t wait to paint it.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Hal Wells Los Angeles Times ?? “THE RANCH hadn’t burned in over 100 years, so we knew it was coming, it was inevitable. We prepared,” says John Wullbrandt of staying to fight the Thomas fire.
Photograph­s by Hal Wells Los Angeles Times “THE RANCH hadn’t burned in over 100 years, so we knew it was coming, it was inevitable. We prepared,” says John Wullbrandt of staying to fight the Thomas fire.
 ??  ?? ONCE THE Thomas fire had scorched the needles off the ranch’s cactuses, the cows were able to easily enjoy the tasty treats. The idea to plant fire-resistant succulents at El Rancho Botello proved a fortunate choice.
ONCE THE Thomas fire had scorched the needles off the ranch’s cactuses, the cows were able to easily enjoy the tasty treats. The idea to plant fire-resistant succulents at El Rancho Botello proved a fortunate choice.
 ??  ?? WULLBRANDT sifts through what had once been 50 years worth of archives, including art portfolios and photograph­s. Though his home survived the fire, his studio and two shipping containers were destroyed.
WULLBRANDT sifts through what had once been 50 years worth of archives, including art portfolios and photograph­s. Though his home survived the fire, his studio and two shipping containers were destroyed.
 ?? Photograph­s by Hal Wells Los Angeles Times ?? “IT WAS LIKE being in the epicenter of a blowtorch,” says John Wullbrandt of his and his partner’s efforts to save their ranch house from the fire in Carpinteri­a.
Photograph­s by Hal Wells Los Angeles Times “IT WAS LIKE being in the epicenter of a blowtorch,” says John Wullbrandt of his and his partner’s efforts to save their ranch house from the fire in Carpinteri­a.
 ??  ?? THE RANCH’S barn, shown in 2007, is where Wullbrandt stored some of his paintings. The works pictured had found other homes before the December fire.
THE RANCH’S barn, shown in 2007, is where Wullbrandt stored some of his paintings. The works pictured had found other homes before the December fire.
 ?? Photograph­s by Hal Wells Los Angeles Times ?? THE THOMAS fire swept through Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, charring areas like this one in Upper Rincon Canyon. It is the state’s largest fire on record.
Photograph­s by Hal Wells Los Angeles Times THE THOMAS fire swept through Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, charring areas like this one in Upper Rincon Canyon. It is the state’s largest fire on record.
 ??  ?? ONCE THE fire got close, Jean-Claude Rivalland, left, and John Wullbrandt had to hose down their outdoor animals, including two donkeys. The animals survived.
ONCE THE fire got close, Jean-Claude Rivalland, left, and John Wullbrandt had to hose down their outdoor animals, including two donkeys. The animals survived.

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