Artist colony and museum in Altadena, United States
Zorthian Ranch
General information
Location
California
Town or city
Altadena
Country
United States
Zorthian Ranch is a 48-acre artist colony in Altadena, California established in 1946 by Armenian-American artist Jirayr Zorthian. Described as a "masterpiece of outsider architecture",[1] much of the property was destroyed in the Eaton Fire in January 2025.
Background
The Zorthian family escaped the Armenian massacre and in 1923 fled to the United States. Zorthian and his first wife, Betty, moved to Altadena to experiment with urban homesteading in 1946. Driven by his father's assessment of the US as "a wild, beautiful, abundant, rich and wasteful country", Zorthian vowed to recycle everything he could and create a self-sufficient environment on the ranch.[2] Sculptures and built environments on the property utilized repurposed architectural fragments, construction debris, doll parts, lawn furniture, telephone poles, railroad ties, and old cars and trucks. Zorthian salvaged only materials created by hand.[3][4] The first structures built, the Chardhouse and the Studio, used redwood from homes that had been demolished. The Palace, built in the 1970s, was made with railroad ties, discarded telephone poles, and insulators. The Zorthian Barn Gallery housed mural studies created by Zorthian commissioned under President Franklin Roosevelt'sWorks Progress Administration during the Great Depression. Associated with the assemblage movement, he viewed the entire ranch as his canvas. [5] Waste became art, and the property became an open art gallery. Zorthian referred to the ranch as "The Center for Research and Development of Industrial Discards with Emphasis on Aesthetics." [6][7]
During the summers of 1958 through 1982, Zorthian and his second wife, Dabney, ran Zorthian Ranch for Children, an anarchic daily art camp for kids. Zorthian traded art classes for lessons in physics from his neighbor, Richard Feynman, a Nobel Prize laureate who spent considerable time at the ranch. [8][9]
Zorthian was known as the "last bohemian," and the ranch became well-known as a hub for bohemian bacchanals. [10]In 1952 Charlie Parker led a legendary naked all-night jam session, excerpts from which were released on CD in 2006. Andy Warhol, Bob Dylan, and Andre Segovia, among other artists and intellectuals, also attended the parties.[11]
When Zorthian died in 2004 at the age of 92, the ranch was entrusted to his children Alice and Alan. [12][13]An artist colony and functioning ranch with organic gardens, poultry coops, horse stables, beehives, and honeycombs, ten residential structures made of reusable, reinvented waste, were rented to artists. The ranch was also used for events and as a location for film and photography. [7]
In a 2014 PBS segment, Alan Zorthian said: "The wind gets very strong here...Drainage can be an issue with rain, and then we have periods of drought and station fires." On January 8, 2025, all but two of the buildings on the property were destroyed in the Eaton wildfire.[14] A GoFundMe campaign to rebuild Zorthian Ranch was launched on January 10. [15]
References
^Harvey, D. (2016). 'Spiritual Revival"; Modern Painters; 28(9), 60–67
^ DeTuran, Veronique (10 March 2011); "Farmville Altadena; The urban homesteaders here find an ideal land that goes beyond sustenance"; Los Angeles Times, page E.1.