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Health & Fitness

MY MUSE BOX - Watts Towers - A Local, State & National Treasure

Watts Towers - one man's towering achievement!

 

Look at these Towers – they’re 99 feet tall!!! - and stand in a seemingly nondescript, low income neighborhood of Watts, Los Angeles.  They were built by one man – by himself!!! – for reasons known only to himself - and stand as a testament to the human spirit.

 The back story:

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 Long before recycling became a national sport, there lived an Italian immigrant in Watts, LA, doing his ‘recycling’ thing – saving the environment while creating something beautiful.  He made ‘recycling’ into an art form.

 His name was Simon Rodia.  His art form – the extraordinary ‘mosaic’ spiral structures called the Watts Towers.  He was an uneducated telephone repairman and tile setter who built these structures from his own ‘made-up’ cement mixture w/out any ‘learned’ engineering or architectural knowledge, then turned them into an exquisite maze of mosaic.  His achievement is nothing short of mind boggling.

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 Even though Rodia was married three times and had children, one of whom died in early childhood, he was basically a loner and, as the legend goes, a drinker.

 When he bought his home in Watts, he chose a property that would allow him to follow his ‘vision.’  He lived alone and paid the neighborhood kids pennies to find “found” objects to incorporate into his Towers and surrounding cement garden.  The Towers were his passion.  He draped the structures w/ string lights and would work on them late into the night.  It kept him sober and less lonely.  During WWII he was forced to remove the light strings and there were whispers that the Towers served as an enemy radio station.

 Then, in 1954 he walked away from Watts and his Towers, giving them to a neighbor.  He moved away, never to return.  No one knows why.

 Over the years the Towers were almost razed as an ‘eyesore.’ At one point, someone even wanted  to buy them and turn them into a taco stand.  However, w/ the help of the Committee for Simon Rodia’s Towers in Watts, founded in 1959, and many others, artistic sanity prevailed and the Towers have been preserved, restored and are now  listed in the National Register of Historic Places and is deemed a National Historic Landmark.  Even during the Watts Rebellion in 1965, the Towers were left untouched.

 After exploring the Towers, I dropped in next door at The Watts Towers Art Center that hosts on-going art exhibits, and where you can see a short film about Rodia with old B&W footage of him, this little man with big dreams, with his own voice over commentary. 

 Next door is the vibrant and active Charlie Mingus Youth Arts Center with classrooms for art and music open to all the neighborhood children.  It even has a garden where the children can plant and nurture vegetables and flowers.

 During a tour of the Watts Tower Art Center at the Mingus Center I got to see the art rooms and student art displayed in a beautiful exhibit.  A funny story:  when the building was finished “they” had forgotten to plan for a music room – which was rather jaw-dropping since the Center is named after Charlie Mingus (raised just a few blocks from the Towers) one of the great names in the history of jazz.  However, a room planned for another use was converted into the music room and the kids have been learning instruments and producing their own CDs ever since.

 Two hours later I left this amazing cultural center sitting in the shadow of the towering Towers that represent, to me at least, how one individual can help change the world and lift the human spirit through art.

 While you contemplate places to go and things to see this summer with your family or friends or out-of-town guests, may I recommend a visit to the Watts Towers…  they confirm that one person can do great things.

 Learn more about Watts Towers, Simon Rodia and the Watts Tower and Charles Mingus Art Centers  + video and how you can support them

http://www.wattstowers.us/history.htm

 And, since we were just talking about mosaics…

 Have you ever tried making mosaic art?  I did when I designed a backsplash for my friend Candace’s butler’s pantry using shards from china and Roseville pottery she inherited from her mom… cherished pieces that were destroyed in the 1994 Northridge earthquake.  It’s messy and time consuming and I didn’t even have to erect spiral towers or climb many stories while the cement was still wet to create my mosaic vision.  In fact, since Candace’s tile man was the one who really implemented my design, I didn’t realize how messy (and tricky) it was until HGTV decided to highlight Candace’s home on “Your Home w/ Kitty Bartholomew” and I was asked to demonstrate how to make the backsplash by recreating the process, on-camera, giving step-by-step instructions on a model 2’x 2’.  The Watts Towers are waaaayyyy more than 2’x2’…

                                                                            ****

 To read more about good food, good wine and great places to go, join me at :

www.mydinnerswithrichard.blogspot.com

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