Lectures Series – Commemorating the 1925 Earthquake

June Lecture Series – 1925 Earthquake Centennial Commemoration

Pearl Chase outside the Plans and Planting Committee. Photo courtesy of the Santa Barbara Historical Museum.
1317 State Street, Arlington Hotel. Photo courtesy of Mary Louise Days
1500 State Street, Trinity Episcopal Church. Photo courtesy of Mary Louise Days.
35 State Street, Californian Hotel. Photo courtesy of Mary Louise Days.

The Architectural Foundation of Santa Barbara is pleased to announce our June Lecture Series, focused on commemorating the centennial anniversary of the 1925 Earthquake that changed Santa Barbara forever. We hope you can join us for one or more lectures, and you’ll save if you purchase all four lectures as a series!

Pearl Chase: The Woman Who Helped Shape Our City, Part One, by Cheri Rae

June 5, 2025 at 6:00 pm

Info + Tickets

The author of A String of Pearls: Pearl Chase of Santa Barbara will join us for two special presentations that will offer insights about how this iconic figure helped shape the City of Santa Barbara before and after the 1925 Earthquake.

Part I: From her upbringing in Boston to her experiences in the San Francisco Earthquake to the establishment of the Community Arts Association.  Within the CAA, a Plans and Planting Committee was created which campaigned to increase public awareness and appreciation for architectural quality and integrity.  Plans and Planting was a major force behind the movement to design buildings in the Spanish Colonial Revival style and give Santa Barbara a unified architectural look.

 Pearl Chase: The Woman Who Helped Shape Our City, Part Two, by Cheri Rae

June 12, 2025 at 6:00 pm

Info + Tickets

Part II: How Pearl worked with Bernhard Hoffmann immediately after the Earthquake and carried on his work through the Plans and Planting organization after he left Santa Barbara. Historic photos, anecdotes, and Pearl’s own words will add to your understanding of the leadership role of this extraordinary woman in the creation of the myths and magic of Santa Barbara that continues to this day.

Why Buildings Fell: The 1925 Santa Barbara Earthquake, by Sage Shingle

June 19, 2025 at 6:00 pm

Info + Tickets

Join us for an eye-opening lecture on why buildings fell during the 1925 Santa Barbara earthquake.  Using simple, everyday language, and historic photographs local structural engineers, Sage Shingle S.E. of T&S Structural Engineers, will evaluate the key reasons why many downtown structures collapsed—and what lessons we’ve learned since.  Whether you’re a history buff or just curious about earthquake safety, this talk will give you valuable insights into how buildings stand (or fall) when the ground shakes.  Don’t miss this fascinating look at Santa Barbara’s past and how it shaped the city we know today.

The Earthquake Survivors Speak, by Betsy Green

June 26, 2025 at 6:00 pm

Info + Tickets

The earthquake that hit Santa Barbara on the morning of June 29, 1925 killed 11 people.  For those who survived, it was a day they would never forget.  What was it like to be shaken awake at 6:42 in the morning?  People in hotels were thrown out of their beds and staggered down the stairs.  Families in homes stumbled through items that had fallen on the floor and ran outside.  People on the streets and sidewalks dodged the debris raining down.  But although the buildings downtown fell apart, the people pulled together and helped each other.  After a cup of strong coffee and some breakfast provided by volunteers in De la Guerra Plaza or Alameda Park, people began to think about rebuilding Santa Barbara in a style that would be envied by other cities.

Historian and author Betsy J. Green will share some of the stories told by the earthquake survivors and their descendants.  Copies of her latest book, Way Back When: Santa Barbara in 1925, will be available.

Exhibition – GIMME SHELTER by Marcia Rickard

Past Exhibition – GIMME SHELTER by Marcia Rickard

May 31 – August 9, 2025 at the Architectural Foundation Gallery

Opening Reception: Saturday, May 31st from 2 – 4p.m. 

Artist Talk: Saturday, March 29th at 2 p.m.

Press:

Read Josef Woodard’s article in The Independent here

Read the article in VOICE Magazine here

Fault Lines 1925, by Marcia Rickard

The Fragility of Home, by Marcia Rickard

The Architectural Foundation of Santa Barbara is pleased to announce the opening of GIMME SHELTER, an exhibition of paintings and prints by Marcia Rickard that highlight the fragility of “home” in a world fraught by war and natural disasters.

The opening reception will be held at the Architectural Foundation of Santa Barbara on Saturday, May 31st from 2 – 4 p.m. A conversation with Marcia Rickard and Architectural Historian Dennis Doordan will take place on July 12th at 2 pm.

Art is a way to confront what scares and scars us. Local artist Marcia Rickard has created a body of work that addresses the human tragedy caused by the physical destruction of home, be it Aleppo, Ukraine, Gaza, Los Angeles—or Santa Barbara. The title of this exhibition comes from the Rolling Stones song, Gimme Shelter:

Ooh, the fire is sweepin’/ Our very street today / Burns like a red coal carpet…
The floods is threatening / My very life today / Gimme, gimme shelter / Or I’m gonna fade away (Keith Richards and Mick Jagger)

GIMME SHELTER includes paintings, drypoint prints, monotypes, paintings, and fabric pieces with images of current events often added as collage elements and photo transfers. Despite the perverse allure of such images (sometimes referred to as “disaster porn”), Rickard asks us not to forget the human lives impacted by such events. Her work reflects the human dimension that loss of shelter—a place of personal safety, a refuge, a home—means, the recognition that in today’s world, this could suddenly be any of us.

“… I am drawn to the horrifying yet mesmerizing daily news photographs of destruction— war, terrorism, environmental degradation, natural disasters—that emphasize the fragility of our world.”

Marcia Rickard is a retired art historian (Professor Emerita from Saint Mary’s College, Indiana) who maintained a consistent artistic practice throughout her thirty-four years of teaching art history courses ranging from European Gothic art to Indonesian textiles. Since moving to Santa Barbara in 2019, she has studied printmaking with Siu Zimmerman.

The Architectural Foundation of Santa Barbara (AFSB) seeks to promote quality in architecture, art, and design by fostering an understanding of excellence in the urban environment. The AFSB offers diverse programs serving Santa Barbara County that provide educational opportunities for the community with participation from local architects and design professionals. Learn more at afsb.org.

2025 KDA Sketch Session

2025 Kids Draw Architecture Sketch Session!

We hope you can join us this year for the 39th annual Kids Draw Architecture sketch session! It will be held at the Casa de la Guerra on Sunday, May 18th from 1 -3 p.m. This is a FREE event, and all sketching materials are provided. 

2025 KDA Sketch Session Flyer
2025 KDA Sketch Session SPANISH