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Reading: John Outterbridge’s daughter salvages discovered artwork from Altadena ruins — with assist from his associates
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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > John Outterbridge’s daughter salvages discovered artwork from Altadena ruins — with assist from his associates
John Outterbridge’s daughter salvages discovered artwork from Altadena ruins — with assist from his associates
Entertainment

John Outterbridge’s daughter salvages discovered artwork from Altadena ruins — with assist from his associates

Last updated: August 14, 2025 4:50 pm
Editorial Board Published August 14, 2025
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Earlier than sunup on Jan. 8, because the Eaton fireplace roared throughout the San Gabriel Mountains, a blaze of texts and calls lit up my telephone with a ferocity of their very own.

I grew up on the sides of Outterbridge’s exceptional orbit of affect in Southern California’s Black Arts Motion; the potential loss was a staggering thought to course of. For now, we have been in a vestibule of hope: It was rumor, not reality, I informed them and myself.

Tami Outterbridge confers with artists Dominique Moody and Charles Dickson as they assist her excavate the burned Altadena property of her artist father.

(Michael Garnes)

As an internationally acclaimed artist and educator, Outterbridge, who died in 2020, was a kind of group lions, deeply rooted — ubiquitous, it appeared — all the time with a beneficiant ear and hand to assist. I met him taking artwork courses on the Watts Towers Arts Heart, when it was nonetheless situated in a whimsical, paint-bombed bungalow. It’s the place, as a toddler, I took my first classes with “Mr. Tann” — the ceramicist Curtis Tann — additionally a key participant within the motion, after which later sat with Outterbridge himself, watching his palms, observing his affected person instance.

His work, significantly his multilayered assemblage items, pierced one thing in me, particularly as a younger Black Angeleno, within the wake of 1965’s Watts rebellion and its glowing fury. I used to be creating my very own powers of commentary; what’s treasured, Outterbridge’s work emphasised, resided within the eye of the beholder. He was gathering bits and items thought-about to be “throwaway,” pulling from a “disaster” however shaping them into one thing very important and new. It was each reclamation and addendum, metaphors I carried into my future.

That Altadena property would include a bounty of that work — of correspondence to younger artists and colleagues, of pictures, of the echoes of all of the vigorous gatherings he and his spouse hosted. It was past heartbreak to even consider its demise.

Three days later, from my very own evacuation perch, I opened Fb to search out that his daughter, Tami, had posted a sobering affirmation, which learn partially:

Good day, FB Household & Buddies!

By God’s Grace, my mom Beverly Outterbridge and I are protected! Nevertheless we have now misplaced our properties! There was no time to seize a lot, so every part is misplaced. However, we’re right here! WE will not be misplaced …

Within the weeks following the hearth, the Outterbridges didn’t depart my thoughts: my reminiscences of recognizing Outterbridge — or “Bridge,” as he was known as — across the metropolis, at artwork reveals or group gatherings I used to be masking as a employees author for The Occasions. He’d cheer me on, typically ringing my desk on Spring Road: “Just checking in to see how they’re treating you …”

Triumphant Arms: Various surviving "found objects" from the John Outterbridge studio space

Surviving “found objects” from John Outterbridge’s Altadena studio, together with remnants of a piece by the late artist John T. Riddle.

(Michael Garnes)

In early summer time, I glimpsed a portrait of Outterbridge hanging in an exhibition I used to be writing about — his eyes staring, it appeared, by means of me. A like-old-times nudge I couldn’t ignore. I discovered a bench simply exterior the gallery, known as Tami to see how she was managing. Her voice was disarmingly vibrant; her phrases tumbled out in vivid colours, textures. She was assembling a imaginative and prescient. A challenge had introduced itself to her, a method to salvage the archive — or, extra exactly, create one thing altogether new.

In fact, she says, when a neighbor left a message within the early hours of Jan. 8, simply listening to his phrases — “You have lost everything” — knocked the wind out of her. “I sat there in the hotel parking lot with my mother thinking, ‘What does that even mean?’” she says.

It might be a number of weeks earlier than they might entry the property, because the Nationwide Guard had restricted entry. Considered one of Outterbridge’s oldest associates, the artist and co-founder of the previous Brockman Gallery, Dale Davis, promised his assist. “He told me, ‘I consider it my responsibility to escort you and your mother back,’” Tami says. He stored his phrase: “It was beautiful and true to form.”

As painful because it was for Tami to soak up firsthand “all the black, gray and blanch-white,” a germ of an concept took root in these ashes. Watching Davis journey by means of the positioning, gathering items of metallic, shards of ceramics and glass — there have been issues to salvage, simply as her father all the time had. There was chance.

Artists Sam Pace, left and Michael Massenburg  discuss ways to turn an electrical fixture into "found art."

Artists Sam Tempo, left, and Michael Massenburg focus on potential methods to rework {an electrical} fixture into “found art,” a specialty of John Outterbridge.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Occasions)

Not lengthy after, whereas she was working in her nook of the lot, the concept of “Diggin’ Bridge” and its varied prongs and phases — from archive-building to a documentary manufacturing to exhibition — took maintain. The identify got here first and the remainder adopted. That picture of Davis trawling the wreckage got here again: “It occurred to me that I could invite artists who were in the direct line of contact with my father to come to the property and to excavate with me,” she recollects. “Not only would they help me find things, but also they create a piece with what they found that could be a reflection upon … this man that we called ‘Bridge.’”

Within the “digging” she stitches collectively the bodily work of excavation, the ‘60s and ‘70s colloquial meaning of “dig” as to “understand” and, lastly, its nod to DJ/crate-digging culture that remixes and reimagines. (Support already locked in: Plain Sight Archive has partnered with them to assist with the creation of the community-sourced archive.)

Artist and long time friend of John Outterbridge, Stanley C. Wilson sifts through the ashes.

Artist and longtime friend Stanley C. Wilson sifts through the ashes of John Outterbridge’s property as a part of a multipronged challenge his daughter is asking “Diggin’ Bridge.”

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Occasions)

So far, she calculates, “I have about 25 artists rockin’ with me.” Amongst them: Dominique Moody, John and Connie Trevino, Betye Saar, Charles Dickson, La Monte Westmoreland, Stanley C. Wilson, George Evans and Ben Caldwell, working in shifts, shoulder to shoulder.

Within the blade-sharp warmth of July, I drive north towards the still-visible burn scar, as much as the positioning, replaying Tami’s description of what she’d endured that night time: an alarming orange glow filling her whole again window, the neighborhood’s streets full of fireplace and never one fireplace truck in sight.

Now, six months later, most of the parcels have been cleared. The Outterbridge lot remains to be a moonscape. I pull on PPE and head towards the devastating pile, that acrid post-fire odor nonetheless evident.

Wading in, I immediately encounter a well-known face, painter Michael Massenburg. Additionally current are Michael B. Garnes, a photographer and Bridge mentee who has been meticulously documenting the method, and Altadena-based artist Sam Tempo, whose Pasadena/Altadena roots attain again to the 1800s. Tempo and Massenburg are threading by means of the tight areas inside the shattered stays of the entrance home.

“This might be the room where we used to eat dinner,” Massenburg wonders aloud. Sorting by means of particles, he fishes out rusted metallic items — some round, some straight, although bent by warmth. “They already look like sculptures on the ground,” he confers with Tempo, then pauses, cautioning himself: “Don’t overthink.”

Artist Michael Massenburg carries off a sculpture removed from the ashes. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

Massenburg carries a sculpture faraway from the ashes.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Occasions)

He hears him, Bridge: the maxims, the methods. “He was organic and authentic,” he remembers, “From John, I always got a sense of family.” So, in gathering on this method and trusting what makes itself identified, “we are not celebrating the art of the artist, but the spirit of the artist.”

Even the rubble will quickly vanish; the Military Corps of Engineers has scheduled a agency date for Thursday. Tami has held them off for so long as she will. On this shortly closing window, the artists have labored miracles, unearthing treasures: ceramic items by Davis, a metallic scrap and bolts from one among her father’s items, her mom’s marriage ceremony ring, her father’s trademark wire-rimmed spectacles — and miraculously, a remnant of a thought-to-be-long-lost piece by my trainer, Curtis Tann.

There’s peace in laboring collectively, Garnes tells me: “It feels safe, even joyful to be in community on the property.” Gratitude has begun to edge in the place solely grief had claimed house.

“I feel like Dad is saying: ‘I have taught you this language. Now speak it,’” Tami displays, his cadences sounding in her voice. “There’s this language of the discarded thing. The language of transformation and redemption. This all feels very redemptive to me.”

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