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September 2005
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Judy Alduenda and The Art ofDecorative Painting

Judy Alduenda with dog “Cedar.”
By Laura Calverley

Local artist Judy Alduenda is passionate about painting — tole painting.

The decorative art uses specific strokes and techniques to color a line design or drawing. A tole painter can use many mediums — oils, watercolor and acrylic paints — and paints on many surfaces, including wood, fabric, metal, glass and more. Alduenda specializes in acrylic paints because they are safer to work with.

“ ‘Tole’ means ‘painting on tin’ in French,” Alduenda explained. “There are hundreds of different applications — tin and wood, which are both used a lot; canvas, and even gourds. Placemats and table runners can be made from the canvas. Many pieces are made of wood, from seasonal wall and door hangings to decorative boxes and cabinets.”

Alduenda, who has painted for 19 years, enjoys teaching her craft to others. For 13 years, she has taught five classes a week, Monday through Thursday, in a home studio

in Ramona called “The Tole Folks.” Beginner classes are offered only twice a year, in spring and fall. The next beginner class starts Sept. 14.

“There are some basic skills that beginners need to learn first to begin decorative painting, including how to prepare a surface, painting strokes, and painting techniques,” Alduenda said. “I start from scratch and teach all the basics.”

She said interested students don’t need any special skills, “just an interest in art or painting and doing something artistic.”

Classes at The Tole Folks run three hours, usually from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., and each consists of about eight to 12 students. There is one morning class, on Thursday.

Her current class project is a large white gourd painted to look like a ghost, with a jack-o-lantern smile and a small, flat nose protruding from the face. It is an ideal Halloween decoration for any home.

The Young Polynesians performing group.
Students who take Alduenda’s 12-week beginning class don’t just learn basic skills of decorative painting. Each takes home a finished project and a photo of the finished work.

“In my continuing classes, we work on one project and then I retire it,” Alduenda said. “I don’t teach it again. I want to give each of my students something that is exclusive — something unique to them.”

The walls at The Tole Folks studio are covered with wonderful examples of her works, from a wooden Santa Claus face to a window piece with whimsical pictures representing the four seasons.

“In fine art, you do your own line drawings, and in tole painting, you start with a ready-made line drawing,” she said, “and it’s the techniques and color you use that enhance the drawing and bring it to life.”

Projects can be simple or very elaborate. incorporating many colors, stencils and techniques to “antique” the work or give it an aged look. A project may take two weeks or 10 weeks or more to complete, depending on its difficulty.

Alduenda’s favorite project is a wooden mirror frame that is exquisitely decorated. It’s also the piece she spent the most time on, more than 350 hours. It hangs in her living room along with many other examples of her work.

Alduenda always has a booth at the “Seasons of the Heart” craft show in Ramona, but she only sets up an informational display because she doesn’t sell her work. She could not charge the prices for the work that the time involved demands, so she mostly gives away her work to family and friends.

Alduenda, who painted since college, began her teaching career at a Ramona store called Buckles and Bows. After it went out of business, her classes were still in demand, so she opened her home studio. The Tole Folks is one of only a few decorative painting home studios in San Diego County.

“One of the differences between fine art and decorative painting is that you need to stand back when you look at fine art to appreciate it,” Alduenda said. “With decorative painting, you have to get close up to see all the detail and appreciate the time and effort that has gone into it.”

Alduenda’s professional studio includes a long work table for students, with her desk at the far end. It is equipped with a remote television system and camera, so while she works on a project at her desk, it can be seen in two television monitors on the walls on either side of the table. The system also allows her to zoom in and out on the details of the work.

She admits that it is difficult to master decorative painting

in one 12-week class. Some students have taken her classes for years. Ninety-nine percent of her students are women, age 25 to 85.

“I still have two students from my original class at Buckles and Bows,” she said.

“This is a passion with me,” she added. “I want to teach as many people as possible, because once you learn how to do it properly, it’s something you know for life.”

For more information on taking a decorative painting class at The Tole Folks, call (760) 789-2660, and Alduenda will send you a flier.

Photo by Laura Calverley

Polynesian Dancing Is a Way of Life By Ruth Lepper

Penni Evans has been dancing traditional Polynesian dances since she was a small child. After she left her native Hawaii, she started teaching the dances to other women. Now she heads a group of professional dancers called “Young Polynesians.”

“I’ve been teaching for over 30 years,” Evans said during a break from rehearsals. “This group came together 25 years ago. Some of them have been with me 17 years.”

Her son, Evan Evans, 31, is the drummer and a fire-knife dancer for the group, along with family friend, Garrett Himaka, 23. The band also includes two guitarists, a keyboard player and vocalist.

The dancers, usually between five and eight women, range in age from 20 to 40. The number varies and Evans said she is always looking for more students.

“It’s a lot of fun,” she said. “I have a very entertaining show. It’s a fun show. It never ceases to amaze me how people react... The audience is always fun. I bring guys up from the audience and teach them to do the ‘ta more.’ It’s the mating dance in Tahiti.”

The Young Polynesians perform mostly at conventions in Southern California and have bookings an average of three times a month. The group also has been featured performers at the San Diego Zoo, on cruise ships and at private parties.

“I have agents that book us into hotels,” Evans said, adding that an upcoming engagement will be at a luau at a San Diego resort.

“I started the group just by chance,” she said. “I started the group because I wanted to exercise.”

The exercise evolved into teaching others, and before long, she had two dance studios in El Cajon. Evans moved to Ramona three years ago and now has rehearsals in El Cajon and Ramona.

“I’m really passionate about the hula, being from Hawaii,” she said. “A lot of people don’t know of the hula. The hula is the art of the Hawaiian dances. The hula is an appreciation of the Hawaiian dance.

“The hula is every aspect of life. Some people have never been to Hawaii; I try to give them a little flavor of it.”

For more information about the Young Polynesians, Evans can be contacted via e-mail at alohapenni@aol.com.