Los Angeles Times

A dazzling walk in a forest of lights

- calendar@latimes.com

mable) attraction­s. “If you were to look at this from above, each of these dots would correspond to a pixel on a video signal.”

“Flower Power” is one of 10 light-driven art installati­ons at “Enchanted,” which has returned to Descanso for the third straight year. The event been a runaway success for the off-the-beaten-path gardens, with total attendance last year topping 130,000 — of which about 70,000, according to executive director Juliann Rooke, were firsttime visitors.

“I wanted Los Angeles to come and see and fall in love with us,” says Rooke. “So I think we accomplish­ed that.”

Though it runs through the holidays, until Jan. 6, “Enchanted” is not a traditiona­l holiday light display — a choice Rooke says she made in part so the event would be welcoming to visitors from all religious and cultural background­s, but mainly because she wanted “Enchanted” to showcase the beauty of Descanso itself.

“We’re trying to create something that brings people close to nature,” says Rooke. “I wanted it to be about Descanso. If you start inching into holiday land, then it isn’t about us as a place.”

Rooke began developing the concept for “Enchanted” about four years ago, when she was Descanso’s chief operating officer. She traveled around the country to other public gardens in search of inspiratio­n and found it at Chicago’s Morton Arboretum, which hosts its own nontraditi­onal wintertime light show, “Illuminati­on.”

“Their trees weren’t wrapped with lights,” she remembers. “Instead, they were more like rock stars. They were uplit.”

To create “Enchanted,” Rooke hired Lightswitc­h, the same lighting and visual design firm that works with the Morton Arboretum. That brought in Medvitz, an L.A.-based Lightswitc­h principal, who instantly clicked with the project.

“We walked the property and walked the property and talked about what mattered,” says Rooke. “He did so much research; he was so thoughtful about understand­ing who we are.” When Medvitz presented his design concepts, “he just hit everything. He got right away [that] we weren’t trying to create a mall Christmas.”

Medvitz acts as “Enchanted’s” creative director and oversees the team that gets the show up and running, a process that keeps him onsite for about six weeks leading up to opening night.

“There’s some of our crew,” he says as an orange electric cart whizzes past, carrying workers up to the “Fantasy Forest,” where subtle lighting and a chandelier suspended in the trees suggest the ruins of an ancient castle superimpos­ed over Descanso’s extensive camellia collection.

After dark, when Medvitz and his crew stay late to test the lights — “it’s just us and the coyotes,” he says. Descanso borders a largely undevelope­d stretch of the Verdugo Mountains to the south, so wildlife encounters are not uncommon. “There was a deer buck that got startled the other night and ran through the tulips,” he says matter-of-factly.

Elsewhere around the gardens, “Enchanted’s” installati­ons include a Japanese garden bathed in blue, wintry light, offset by bright red paper lanterns; a grove of live oaks surrounded by illuminate­d platforms that change color with patrons’ footsteps; and an “ancient forest” of ferns and redwoods that’s filled with dramatic uplighting and firefly-like swarms of pinprick lights from strategica­lly placed laser projectors. “This is really epic at night,” Medvitz says proudly of the latter display, noting that visitors often compare it to a scene from “Avatar” or “Jurassic Park.”

“What’s great about this project and kind of unique in our portfolio is that we’re actually creating what people are coming to see,” says Medvitz, whose other Lightswitc­h clients, besides the occasional pop star, tend to be trade shows and corporate events. “We’re not creating an environmen­t around a car of a video game or whatever’s being sold. We’re creating the experience.”

In addition to his design team at Lightswitc­h, Medvitz brought in two outside artists to contribute to “Enchanted”: Jen Lewin, a New York-based artist who specialize­s in interactiv­e sculptures, and Hyperspace Bypass Constructi­on Zone, an Oakland-based duo who fabricate large-scale geometric shapes stamped in intricate patterns. Lewin returns to “Enchanted” with “Aqueous,” an interlocki­ng series of illuminate­d pathways, while Hybycozo is back with “Celestial Shadows,” a collection of their suspended polyhedron­s, all spinning and lighted from within to throw gorgeously filigreed shadows over the nearby rose garden and the rapt faces of visitors.

“We love seeing kids play with the spinning shadow pieces,” says Hybycozo’s Yelena Filipchuk. “Although we did have to put up ‘Spin Gently!’ signs.”

Both “Aqueous” and “Celestial Shadows” have appeared at other events and art exhibition­s all over the world, including at Burning Man, which Medvitz says helps attract visitors who might not otherwise think to trek out to a botanical garden in the suburbs.

“The kids that go to those electronic music festivals, they all come with their lightup antennae and vests and stuff,” he says. “They’re into it. The only thing they complain about is there are no DJs.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? VISITORS EXPERIENCE one of the “Enchanted” installati­ons on a rainy 2016 night in La Cañada Flintridge. All the glowing displays can be seen on a one-mile walk.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times VISITORS EXPERIENCE one of the “Enchanted” installati­ons on a rainy 2016 night in La Cañada Flintridge. All the glowing displays can be seen on a one-mile walk.

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