Miami Herald (Sunday)

James Hubbell, 92, San Diego’s iconic artist, naturalist and peace advocate

- BY PAM KRAGEN

James T. Hubbell, an iconic sculptor and artist whose organicall­y inspired works can be found in homes, churches and public buildings throughout San Diego County and beyond, died May 17 at the age of 92.

Hubbell is perhaps best known for his other-worldly “habitable sculptures” compound in Santa Ysabel that he built by hand with his sons over many years. Due to health challenges, Hubbell and his wife, Anne, left their mountain home in 2021 to move into an assisted living community in Chula Vista, where he passed away peacefully with Anne and his family by his side.

Their property, which they deeded over to their nonprofit, the Ilan-Lael Foundation, in 2003, will carry on as an educationa­l center, artists retreat and archive and museum for his work and legacy.

Art and architectu­re fans from around the world fly in each year to walk through the imaginativ­ely shaped buildings, which resemble the Hobbit houses in Peter Jackson’s “Lord of the Rings” films, and the expression­istic organic style of Modernist Spanish architect Antoni Gaudí. (Spring tour season began May 10 and continues through June 17.)

The Hubbells bought the Santa Ysabel ranch land in 1958 and gradually built a home and art compound there over many years while raising their four sons. When a wildfire destroyed half of the buildings on the property in 2003, the Hubbells placed the land in the trust of Ilan-Lael, and it has since been rebuilt and expanded.

Throughout his long career, Hubbell explored concepts in organic architectu­re and design that were a unique expression

of San Diego.

The Santa Ysabel property was built to follow the natural lines of the land, with huge boulders incorporat­ed into the buildings. The swooping roofs suggest leaves, shells and bleached bones. The property was built with local stones, wood milled in nearby Julian and adobe fired in Escondido and Tecate. Colorful mosaic designs flow across walls and floors like the stream that crosses his property. Stained-glass windows amplify sunlight, washing walls and floors with rainbows of dancing color.

Door handles and cabinet drawer pulls were handforged with metal and manzanita tree burls.

In urban and suburban San Diego, James Hubbell created hundreds of public and private art installati­ons. Highlights included the Pacific Portal gazebo and Pacific Rim Park’s Pearl of the Pacific on Shelter Island, a mosaic fountain at Coronado Ferry Landing, and numerous stained glass windows, gates, and mosaics in private homes, libraries, and churches throughout San Diego County.

Internatio­nally, he

gained recognitio­n for collaborat­ive design-build projects in Tijuana, B.C., Mexico, and a series of peace parks around the Pacific Ocean built expressly to bring together people from different cultures as a Pacific family.

Hubbell was born Oct. 23, 1931, in Mineola, New York. Shy and struggling in school with traditiona­l lessons, he turned to nature and art to make sense of his world. He drew nature’s patterns incessantl­y, finding solace in beauty. Even as a small boy, his drawing abilities drew the attention of his teachers.

Just out of high school he had a chance encounter with a man named Quentin Keynes, grandson of Charles Darwin. Rather than head straight to college, Hubbell and Keynes spent a year traveling the world, including exploring the great works of art in Europe and studying the tribal cultures of Africa.

In 1951, he enrolled at the Whitney Art School in New York and then later studied at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield, Michigan, where he majored in sculpture. Later he moved with his family to Rancho Santa Fe, where his

mother purchased and renovated the Wishing

Well Hotel in the mid-1950s. He served two years in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, not as a fighter but as a base artist. After his military service, he dedicated himself to art.

Hubbell told The San Diego Union-Tribune that his artistic influences included the principles of Frank Lloyd Wright, the expression­ism of Antoni Gaudí (creator of the fantastica­l Sagrada Familia cathedral and Park Güell in Barcelona), the abstract forms of African sculpture and the meditative qualities of Buddhism.

After marrying the former Anne Stewart in 1958, he built them a one-room cabin in Santa Ysabel. Over the years that followed, their property would grow to 14 separate buildings that were connected by meandering paths.

Hubbell is survived by his wife, Anne; sons Torrey, Drew, Lauren and Brennan; three daughters-inlaw; six grandchild­ren; and one great-grandchild. In his memory, the Ilan-Lael Foundation has establishe­d The James Hubbell Memorial Art Fund.

 ?? K.C. ALFRED The San Diego Union-Tribune ?? The artist James Hubbell created imaginativ­e, other-worldly ‘habitable sculptures’ that resemble the Hobbit houses depicted in the ‘Lord of the Rings’ films.
K.C. ALFRED The San Diego Union-Tribune The artist James Hubbell created imaginativ­e, other-worldly ‘habitable sculptures’ that resemble the Hobbit houses depicted in the ‘Lord of the Rings’ films.

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