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An arts celebrity who doesn’t toot his own horn: Herb Alpert

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It’s a rare celebrity in Los Angeles who’s not tooting his or her own horn -- let alone one who’s also a major philanthropist, a benefactor to the arts and arts education. But the word “humble” is often used to describe Herb Alpert, he of the chart-busting Tijuana Brass fame, by those who’ve gotten to know him. He’s given away more than $100 million through his foundation, which was set up in 1988.

Alpert has yet another hat, that of visual artist. Today he’s amid a forest of sinuous black totems spiraling into the lofty heights of Ace Gallery Beverly Hills. They’re an art form he has practiced for the last two decades -- sculpture. “I do something every day, whether sculpting or painting,” he says. “It definitely feeds my spirit when I sculpt or paint or blow the horn, that’s an essential part of my being.”

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About 40 years ago he took up painting. Then he picked up working with clay from his friend, sculptor Kristan Marvell. “Once I put my hand on the clay, I was hooked,” Alpert says. “It’s a very sensual feeling, you can work very quickly if the clay is cooperating.” He began forming small pieces a few inches tall, then they became several feet tall.

“I began doing this in the kitchen,” he says with a laugh, “which my wife wasn’t crazy about.” Especially when he used a blowtorch to soften up wax pieces. His wife is singer Lani Hall, with whom he released an album last year, “Anything Goes: Herb Alpert & Lani Hall Live.” Alpert also has an album coming out this fall, “I Feel You.”

Later they built a studio on their property in Malibu. The sculpture in “Black Totems,” the current show at Ace (through Aug. 28), are made of bronze coated with a soft black patina, and reach up to 18 feet high, fabricated at a local foundry.

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They were inspired by totems of the Pacific Northwest Native Americans and by the tall, gnarly “scholar’s rocks” prized by Chinese literati. “There was a progression, I started making them larger and larger,” he says. “As they go up, there are parts I change from the original concept. I like to keep that spontaneity -- to me it’s like jazz. I’m not trying to analyze it, I’m just trying to feel it.”

To read my full Arts & Books profile, click here.

-- Scarlet Cheng

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