Veteran Firefighter/Artist Allan Albaitis
On July 28, 1947 Allan was born near a town called Baldwin in the lower peninsula of Michigan. He graduated from North Muskegon High School in 1965. Honorably discharged from the military in 1969, and
having an "Expert-Rifle" rating, his percussion training with his high school band and only a single
semester
of formal art education as a skill set, Allan decided that his musical
skills might serve him better than his art or M-16.
Being a rock star in the era of Woodstock had an undeniable
appeal to a long-haired 25 year old.
Sending his drums ahead by bus, he straddled his motorcycle and left
Muskegon Michigan for the desert of Las Vegas. Certainly, the “Entertainment
Capital of the World” could find room for another good drummer. As it turned
out, it couldn’t. “The good, steady musician jobs required juice,” he states.
“I was definitely sans jus”.
A short lived attempt at teaching at his own drum
studio led to another few years of travel with bar bands and the eventual
conclusion that a change was needed. A self-confessed adrenaline junky, Allan
knew that wherever the change would take him, it had to be close to the edge.
During this period, a TV show that caught his interest was the Jack Webb
creation, “Emergency” which featured the exploits of Johnny Gage and Roy DeSoto
of Los Angeles County Fire Dept. These were the formative years of the
Paramedic program and for Allan, a foreshadowing of his future.
His first emergency response was in 1977 and began
nearly five years as a medic with Mercy Ambulance, a private company, now American Medical Response (AMR).
His first day as a professional firefighter with the Las Vegas Fire Dept. was
January 18, 1982. He had finally arrived... at the edge.
The cliché anthem of the pedal-to-the-metal Baby
Boomers, “Born To Be Wild”, for Allan wasn’t so much a theme song as a
statement of obvious truth. “For 15 years, my only transportation was my
Harley”, he states matter-of-factly. His fellow rescuers saw him not so much as
a firefighter who also rode a Harley but as a biker who was also a firefighter.
He still rides the Harley he has had for over thirty years.
His art, however, was never far from his side. In
the late 70’s and early 80’s, he cranked out a monthly a cartoon strip called
“Frank & Ziggy” for a 4-state motorcycle magazine, Freedom Rider. Once on the job, there were always situations that demanded an Albaitis cartoon. There is no
shortage of material for “gotcha” cartoons in any firehouse. Over the years the “toons”
evolved into serious art and in 1995, his first national release, “Return To Glory” was unveiled.
In 1997, Firefighter Albaitis published “Guardians”
which features the spirits of long gone old timers in a thundercloud assisting
their counterparts below to douse a house fire. The edition of 2500 prints sold
out through his website, fireart.com, in 2002.
Many of his paintings have hidden or ambiguous
images. At the request of Firehouse Magazine, to create the cover of their Millennium Issue in the fall of 1999, he followed the directive to "imagine" American Fire & Rescue in the year 2025. While delta-winged fire engines dominate the foreground,
an orange/red nebulae in
the
distant
background
swirls with the image of a horse-drawn stream pumper in the epic, "Millennium Challenge".
His “American Grace”, a tribute to the responders of September 11th,
seems to center on the image of an American Flag when, actually what appears to be a flag is the twisted, glowing wreckage of the smoldering towers; there is no
flag in the piece.
“If
there is an underlying theme or philosophy to my work it is simply, look again.
As with all things in life, there’s more than what meets the eye,” he says.
“Look deeper and more shall be revealed.”
He recently signed his latest agreement with the world-renowned Bradford Exchange, for a tenth project which is providing much of the
exposure necessary for his niche artwork.
“The
day I hung up my gear for the last time was one of mixed emotions to be sure”,
Albaitis says of that day, July 4, 2007. “But through my art, I will always stay in touch with those
courageous men and women. Fire and Rescue has defined nearly half of my
life. Retirement will be a new chapter, but it’s the same great book.”
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