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 collage of several public artworks across San Diego.
Public Arts
There are more than 800 pieces of public art in the city of San Diego, and hundreds more across the rest of San Diego County. The region received more than $10 million in state and federal grants for public art in the last five years.

Keeping up the legacy of Niki de Saint Phalle

Note: This story is part of an ongoing series about public art in the San Diego region.

French artist Niki de Saint Phalle lived in San Diego towards the end of her life, until her death in 2002.

She left a major public art imprint on the region: "The Nikigator" just outside the Mingei International Museum in Balboa Park, "Queen Califia's Magical Circle" in Escondido's Kit Carson Park, the abstract face-like "Coming Together" sculpture watching over downtown next to the Convention Center, UC San Diego's "Sun God" and more.

With nine distinct installations (Queen Califia, with its many sculptures and components, counts as just the one), San Diego County has more public works by Niki de Saint Phalle than any other city or county in the world.

<i>Niki de Saint Phalle is pictured in 1965, posing with her "Nanas," at the Gallerie Alexandre Iolas, Paris.</i>
André Morain
Niki de Saint Phalle is pictured in 1965, posing with her "Nanas," at the Gallerie Alexandre Iolas, Paris.

Lech Juretko, her longtime assistant, worked with Saint Phalle on many of these works, and still takes care of most of them — a job made more challenging by insufficient funding for public art maintenance.

Lech Juretko points out cracks and damage in a mosaic egg sculpture, part of Niki de Saint Phalle's Queen Califia's Magic Circle, on June 2, 2023 in Escondido, Calif.
Julia Dixon Evans
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KPBS
Lech Juretko points out cracks and damage in a mosaic egg sculpture, part of Niki de Saint Phalle's Queen Califia's Magic Circle, on June 2, 2023 in Escondido, Calif.

On a gray, still-drizzly recent morning, Juretko arrived at Kit Carson Park. Despite the sun beginning to poke through, light rain overnight meant the park's hidden jewel, "Queen Califia's Magical Circle," would likely be closed. The entrance maze can be slippery if there are any puddles on the ground.

"Queen Califia's Magical Circle" was Saint Phalle's final work of public art, and can seem more like a magical playground than a sculpture, beckoning children to play amongst the curious characters.

There's an abstract, mirrored maze to welcome visitors, a circle of "totems" of fantastical creatures, indigenous imagery, Saint Phalle's hallmark "Nanas," giant, mosaic serpents, and the powerful queen herself at the center.

Unfortunately, Saint Phalle died before seeing the finished product.

"It was a big shock for me, too. If you know a person for so many years, you get close," Juretko said of Saint Phalle. "But after, you know, life goes on and you have to finish it."

Saint Phalle's granddaughter, Bloum Cardenas, worked alongside Juretko and other assistants to complete her final projects — "The Grotto" in Hanover, Germany, which opened in March 2003, and Queen Califia in October that year.

The type of art that Saint Phalle created in her later years is vivid and recognizable. There's an intense curiosity and happiness in the work — a happiness hard-won after a troubled past. These later works feature bright, larger-than-life characters and fantastical animals, each one mosaicked with intricate details like small polished stones.

The colorful stones, or "m and m's" of Niki de Saint Phalle's Queen Califia's Magic Circle are shown on June 2, 2023 in Escondido, Calif.
The colorful stones, or "m and m's" of Niki de Saint Phalle's Queen Califia's Magic Circle are shown on June 2, 2023 in Escondido, Calif.

"We call this M&Ms because it looks like M&Ms," Juretko said, running his hands across one creature's glass pebble-dotted body.

Juretko met Saint Phalle in 1994 as a handyman working on her home, a connection via Martha Longenecker of the Mingei Museum. Saint Phalle then asked Juretko to help with her mosaic sculptures, and before long, he was traveling with her around the world, learning about contemporary art techniques and working closely with her on much of her work.

And now, he's stepped into the role of caretaker.

Lech Juretko and Niki de Saint Phalle are shown surveying the work on one of her sculptures in 2001, in a still from the KPBS documentary short, "Niki de Saint Phalle-Coming Together," produced in 2002.
Nick Nordquist, Michael Gerdes
/
KPBS
Lech Juretko, at left, and Niki de Saint Phalle, right, are shown surveying the work on one of her sculptures in 2001, in a still from the KPBS documentary short, "Niki de Saint Phalle-Coming Together," produced in 2002.

Her elaborate construction makes caring for the sculptures a significant job.

When she was still alive, Saint Phalle herself joked that she was an "expensive" artist. Everything she earned from selling a work of art, she'd sink into her next project. Juretko said that just one particular section of a serpent's "scales" cost around $3,000 in materials. So finding — and keeping stock — of replacements is expensive.

Damage is shown to a sculpture in Queen Califia's Magic Circle by the late artist Niki de Saint Phalle in a June 2, 2023 photo.
Julia Dixon Evans
/
KPBS
Damage is shown to a sculpture in Queen Califia's Magic Circle by the late artist Niki de Saint Phalle in a June 2, 2023 photo. When stones are damaged or lost, replacement can be complicated and expensive.

When a stone falls out, the replacement is more akin to a dental procedure than art. Juretko said it's rare to be able to pop a stone back into place simply. There's a risk of weakening nearby stones during the repairs. And the larger pieces of glass, reflective and shiny tiles, are at risk of cracking or being shattered due to vandalism or accidents.

After years of damage, Queen Califia was fenced off, surveillance cameras were installed, and open hours were limited to a few mornings each week and occasional Saturdays when volunteer docents can be present. Vandalism can still be a problem, however, even as recently as 2018.

But the cities that own these works of public art can’t always provide enough funding for the regular upkeep Juretko thinks is necessary.

Danielle Lopez is assistant director of community services for the city of Escondido and public art falls under her purview. For repair work on "The Queen," as she calls it, the Niki Charitable Art Foundation splits the cost and selects an artist that the city can use — usually Juretko.

"It's always been Lech. It will probably remain Lech," Lopez said.

Recently, they repaired a large section of "Queen Califia's Magical Circle" to the tune of $56,000.

"These tiles are from New Mexico, from Italy, it's not like something you can just go to your local tile store and pick up," Lopez said.

Lopez said Escondido is planning a rental event space nearby to support Queen Califia, and they're also in the process of developing a public art master plan as a city, something that could shape the care and creation of public art in the area for years to come.

But for now, funding for public art in Escondido comes from development impact fees — which cannot be used for maintenance. That money is designated only for new installations of public art and recreation projects.

"It's for new. It's for expanding. It's for growth," Lopez said. "So we rely on donations to repair our pieces. We have an account, a maintenance account, but it does go quickly and it doesn't get replenished as quickly as it gets used."

Niki de Saint Phalle's signature is shown on a tile tucked inside Queen Califia's Magic Circle in Escondido, Calif. in a June 2, 2023 photo.
Julia Dixon Evans
/
KPBS
Niki de Saint Phalle's signature is shown on a tile tucked inside Queen Califia's Magic Circle in Escondido, Calif. in a June 2, 2023 photo.

Juretko thinks true caretaking of Saint Phalle's sculptures would mean regular maintenance rather than just fixing things when they're broken or in obvious disrepair. He said some of Saint Phalle's similar garden-type sculptures in other parts of the world get daily maintenance.

Juretko also points to other public Saint Phalle works in our region that are in disrepair: like "Coming Together," by the Convention Center, which he said has sprinklers and landscaping equipment too close to the sculpture, causing damage.

For him, it comes down to the difference between repair and regular care.

"When you come here when everything looks [a] disaster and you start from the scratch again, and after three, four, five years the same. I mean how many times you can do this?" Juretko said. "The ideal solution, it should be maintenance."

Lech Juretko is shown at Queen Califia's Magic Circle, a Niki de Saint Phalle public art installation, on June 2, 2023.
Julia Dixon Evans
/
KPBS
Lech Juretko is shown at Queen Califia's Magic Circle, a Niki de Saint Phalle public art installation, on June 2, 2023.

There's something intensely personal about Juretko's dedication to the work of Niki de Saint Phalle, his longtime friend and mentor.

"She was the best person. As an artist, sometimes you hear that the artist is ugly or this and that. But she was the best person. Because of her I learned, let's say everything what I learned is because of her," he said.

Queen Califia's Magical Circle is open in Escondido from 9 a.m. to noon on Tuesdays and Thursdays and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the second and fourth Saturdays of each month. Visit here or call (760) 839-4000 for more information.

KPBS is embarking on a series to explore public art. Follow this series for stories about the artists who make these works, why public art is created, what impact it has and where it can be found.

Julia Dixon Evans writes the KPBS Arts newsletter, produces and edits the KPBS/Arts Calendar and works with the KPBS team to cover San Diego's diverse arts scene. Previously, Julia wrote the weekly Culture Report for Voice of San Diego and has reported on arts, culture, books, music, television, dining, the outdoors and more for The A.V. Club, Literary Hub and San Diego CityBeat. She studied literature at UCSD (where she was an oboist in the La Jolla Symphony), and is a published novelist and short fiction writer. She is the founder of Last Exit, a local reading series and literary journal, and she won the 2019 National Magazine Award for Fiction. Julia lives with her family in North Park and loves trail running, vegan tacos and live music.
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