Charles Payzant (1898-1980)

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Tom Heffernan

CdM has had a number of famed artists that lived in our community.  We have featured Rex Brandt, who is likely the best known locally and Chuck Jones, who was called “the Orson Welles of animation.”  Today, we feature Charles Payzant (1898-1980), a talented illustrator and watercolor painter that lived in the village at 609 Acacia.  He was one of the pioneers of what would become known as the California Style of watercolor painting and would work on some of the most famous Disney movies of all time. 

He began his career as a commercial artist and during the Great Depression he took a job with Disney painting watercolor backgrounds.  He worked on many of the biggest cartoon shorts and made elaborate backgrounds for classics such as Snow White, Fantasia, Dumbo, and Pinocchio. CdM has had a number of famed artists that lived in our community.  We have featured Rex Brandt, who is likely the best known locally and Chuck Jones, who was called “the Orson Welles of animation.”  Today, we feature Charles Payzant (1898-1980), a talented illustrator and watercolor painter that lived in the village at 609 Acacia.  He was one of the pioneers of what would become known as the California Style of watercolor painting and would work on some of the most famous Disney movies of all time. 

After WWII, he would leave Disney to return to commercial art and began working with his wife, author Terry Shannon Payzant and he did the illustrations on fifty of her childrens books. He also was the director of the famed Dick and Jane series of school readers. It was estimated that 80% of American grade schools used this series.  He continued to work on private commissions and paint his California Style watercolors for the rest of his life.

The Orson Welles of Animation

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Tom Heffernan

Chuck Jones in his office at his home in Cameo Shores

Chuck Jones, the legendary animator and director who gave life to cartoon greats such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Road Runner was a longtime Corona del Mar resident.  In an almost 70-year animation career he directed more than 300 films, three of which won Academy Awards, received an Oscar in recognition of his life’s work, and created some of the most famous and beloved cartoon characters.  He is credited as a co-creator of Bugs, Daffy, Elmer Fudd, and Porky Pig and as the sole creator of Road Runner & Wile E. Coyote, Marvin Martian, Pepe Le Pew, Michigan J. Frog and dozens more memorable characters.  

​After three decades at Warner Brothers, he started his own studio, Chuck Jones Enterprises in 1962 and produced cartoons for MGM including Tom & Jerry shorts and a TV adaptation of Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas.  He continued to write, direct, and produce for many years with his last major film ”Chariots of Fur” featuring Road Runner and Wile E. Coyote, being released by Warner Brothers in 1996.  

Jones continued his TV work through the mid-1970s at his own production company, Chuck Jones Enterprises. (Photo: The Chuck Jones Center for Creativity)

In 1992, his Bugs Bunny cartoon, ‘What’s Opera, Doc? (1957) was added to the National Film Registry and he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1995.  Perhaps his greatest honor was when Robin Williams presented him with an Honorary Oscar at the 68th Academy Awards in 1996.  Williams concluded his impassioned introduction of Jones by calling him “The Orson Welles of Animation.” 

Chuck Jones lived in a 1961 single level home on Cameo Shores at 4527 Tremont Lane and was a regular at Five Crowns until he passed away in 2002 at age 89.  It appears he bought the house on Tremont where he had his home office, in 1979.  When it was sold in 2018, it appeared to be largely original at that point.  It was subsequently torn down in 2019 and there is a new house going up now.  

Chuck Jones’ home in Cameo Shores at 4527 Tremont Lane, Corona del Mar, CA

He founded the Chuck Jones Center for Creativity, a non-profit in Costa Mesa that encourages creativity through art classes, exhibitions, film festivals, and their online community.  They have some great virtual projects that you can work on from home if you are looking for something to do while stuck indoors.  

Rex Brandt

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Tom Heffernan

Photo of Rex Brandt (credit:californiawatercolor.com)
Artist Rex Brandt, who lived and worked in Corona del Mar for most of his life, is considered one of the most important and influential California watercolorists.
‘Morning Mood at Balboa’

From ‘Blue Sky’, his home and studio located on Goldenrod next to the Footbridge, he created hundreds of paintings of coastal scenes and one of the most important watercolor schools.  Through the school and eleven books on watercolor painting, Brandt taught and inspired many professional artists.

Photo of Rex with his wife Joan Irving Brandt at home at ‘Blue Sky’ (credit: coronadelmartoday.com)

There is a plaque today that recognizes where ‘Blue Sky’ used to be located.  The 1941 home was designed by Brandt and was formerly located at 405 Goldenrod.

‘Consulting the Map’ is a watercolor of the Irvine Ranch, 6 miles inland from Rex’s home. It was featured on the cover of ‘Westways’ magazine in November 1954.
‘Tom’s ‘Old’ House’, 1979

Kay Finch (1903-1993)

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Tom Heffernan

Continuing on the artist theme, ceramic artist Kay Finch (1903-1993) built her studio and showroom next to Five Crowns where Crown Cove Assisted Living is now located.  It was later Sam’s Seafood and Don the Beachcomber. 

F​inch attended the Memphis Academy of Fine Arts in the 1920s and would move with her husband to California in 1929.  She did some freelance work and teaching before opening a small studio in a former milking shed.  As demand for her work grew, she and her husband, Braden Finch, bought a two lot parcel of land on PCH and had her studio next to her home.  Demand for her work shot up during WW2 when imports were stopped and she expanded her studio and showroom.  By the late 1940s, she employed as many as 65 employees, all the pieces were made by hand, with each designed by Finch.  Her designs were known for their color and distinctive whimsical design.  You can find many of her pieces on eBay today, generally from $30-$300.

CdM Artists: Edith Cope (1883-1975)

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Tom Heffernan

Over the years – there have been many noted artists living among Corona del Mar’s  Flower Streets.  One of them, Edith Cope was born in California on March 29, 1883.   Known for floral still lifes, her paintings were done with her finger tip/nail and many of her works are miniatures. 

A long time resident of Corona del Mar, she lived at 602 Heliotrope, and passed away at age 91 on January 3, 1975.