Reports on the L.A. dance scene, LACMA's delayed building plans and new leadership at the Huntington.
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[Arts & Culture]
Arts & Culture
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The weekend is upon us with Hades-hot temperatures, and the team at Essential Arts (a.k.a. me, staff writer Carolina A. Miranda) is ready to go all [Margarita Bear]( and bust into someoneâs yard, drink their booze and clamber into their pool. In the meantime, hereâs whatâs hot in the world of culture, much of it air-conditioned:
FRESH MOVES
Los Angeles dance troupe Barak Ballet is about to go on tour, and Times contributing reviewer Laura Bleiberg caught them in performances at the Broad Stage in Santa Monica before they set out. The costumes were âluscious,â and the choreography paired classical movement with an exotic score. âBarak,â she notes, âcontinues up a path toward excellence.â [Los Angeles Times](
Sadie Black, Stephanie Kim, Julia Erickson and Hannah Wilcox in Barak Ballet's "Desert Transport." (Cheryl Mann / Broad Stage)
Plus, an extensive report on L.A.âs burgeoning dance scene. [New York Times](
And, in case you missed it, our guide to the best L.A. dance companies. [Los Angeles Times](
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CLOCK TICKING ON LACMA REBUILD
Deborah Vankin reports on where things stand with Michael Govanâs grand building plans for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. âThe [Peter] Zumthor project is about six months behind schedule,â she writes. âThe process, including building permits and entitlements, is taking longer than expected, Govan says. And the museumâs $650-million fundraising campaign, he adds, is âin pace with the project.â Which is to say: going slowly.â [Los Angeles Times](
A rendering of a new, $650-million LACMA building designed by Peter Zumthor. (Atelier Peter Zumthor & Partner)
Plus Vankin walks through a history of LACMA building plans. (I swear that 1986 Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer building is the architectural equivalent of â80s shoulder pads.) [Los Angeles Times](
The Robert O. Anderson building, designed by Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer, 1986 — now the Art of the Americas building. (Museum Associates / LACMA)
Which brings me to this terrific photo essay featuring fashion from the 1988 Melanie Griffith jam, âWorking Girl.â I am now ready for the architecture of Aqua Net. [Clothes on Film](
SLEEPER HIT
Since weâre on the subject of LACMA: Times art critic Christopher Knight reports that, despite its dry-sounding name, âThe Chiaroscuro Woodcut in Renaissance Italyâ is âground-breakingâ and âlucidly organized.â The show, currently on view at LACMA, tracks the ways in which 16th century masters, including innovators such as Ugo da Carpi, captured shadow and light, in some cases producing a veritable âRenaissance CinemaScope.â [Los Angeles Times](
A detail of Ugo da Carpi's "Hercules and the Nemean Lion," circa 1517-18. (LACMA)
97 YEARS YOUNG
Painter Luchita Hurtado, age 97, is one of the breakout stars of the Hammer Museumâs âMade in L.A.â biennial. The Venezuela-born artist, who produces surreal forms that employ pattern and the body, has been pals with artists such as Rufino Tamayo and Isamu Noguchi but has shown her own work infrequently. Recent exhibitions have helped raise her profile, and incredibly, the near-centenarian is still drawing and painting. As she tells me: âThere is still life in this old horse.â [Los Angeles Times](
Painter Luchita Hurtado, 97, stands among three of her paintings for the "Made in L.A." biennial. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
NEW LEADER AT THE HUNTINGTON
The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens announced it has appointed Karen R. Lawrence, former president of Sarah Lawrence College, as its new director. Lawrence, as Jessica Gelt reports, is credited with savvy fundraising at the college during the recession. The $$$ is important, but Iâm hoping the first thing Lawrence will do is strip down this institutionâs dowdy, unwieldy name so that itâs simply âThe Huntingtonâ â which is what everybody calls it anyway. [Los Angeles Times](
Karen R. Lawrence will take over as president of the Huntington beginning Sept. 1. (Stefan Radtke)
IN THE GALLERIES
Times contributing reviewer Leah Ollman has been doing the gallery thing. This includes a visit to [Gavlak]( to see sculptures by Alex Anderson that display âa penchant for barbed beauty,â and a swing by the [California African American Museum]( where Shinique Smithâs installation of found objects reflects a site where ânurture and nationhood convergeâ and âclash anew.â
Also on the to-do list: âThe Candy Storeâ at [Parker Gallery,]( a group show that brings together work from the fabled Folsom, Calif., art space founded by Adeliza McHugh â which was intended to be a nougat shop, until McHugh was unable to get the necessary permits. This âdelectable tribute,â writes Ollman, âtells the Candy Storeâs heartening tale with vivid concision.â
“Doggie Diner Los Angeles 1936,” 1966, a ceramic by Chris Unterseher at Parker Gallery. (Chris Unterseher / Parker Gallery)
Need more art? My weekly Datebook has all the happenings, including a photography show about dust at UC Riverside and a presentation by Emory Douglas in Hollywood. [Los Angeles Times](
SINGING WITH THE ANGELS
In 1993, a Fulbright scholar from California by the name of Amy Biehl was killed in a black township in Cape Town. In response, her parents launched a foundation to support arts and education in South African townships. Singers from the Amy Foundation choir recently teamed up with L.A.âs very own Angel City Chorale to mark the latter organizationâs 25th anniversary. The musical collaboration, which took the young South African singers around L.A. over the course of a week, is covered by The Timesâ Makeda Easter. [Los Angeles Times](
Amy Foundation singer Lukholo Tomose at his first American baseball game at Dodger Stadium. (Maria Alejandra Cardona / Los Angeles Times)
AROUND TOWN
Times contributor Matt Cooper has all the best weekend picks, including the launch of the iPalpiti Festival of International Laureates at Disney Hall and free Shakespeare in Griffith Park. [Los Angeles Times](
While Philip Brandes rounds up whatâs happening in the 99-seat theaters, including âBig Fishâ in Anaheim and a story about a Russian-style summer romance by the Antaeus Theatre Company in Glendale. [Los Angeles Times](
ARCHITECTURE + VR
On a recent visit to the studio of Morphosis architects in Culver City, I strapped on a pair of virtual reality goggles and got to feel what itâll be like to stand in the atrium of the firmâs planned Orange County Museum of Art. I spoke with Morphosis founder Thom Mayne, as well as an architect at Frank Gehry Partners, to see how architects are beginning to employ this new technology. [Los Angeles Times](
Morphosis director of technology Kerenza Harris employs a VR headset to view a rendering. (Morphosis Architects)
CRITICISM I’M DIGGING
A wondrously dyspeptic review of Bill Clinton and James Pattersonâs thriller âThe President Is Missingâ by Anthony Lane: âBill Clinton, who can write, has hooked up with James Patterson, who canât, but whose works have sold more than three hundred and seventy-five million copies, most of them to happy and contented customers for whom good writing would only get in the way.â [New Yorker](
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IN OTHER NEWS….
â âIt just feels like the whole place hasnât come together around what they need.â A report on New Yorkâs floundering Lincoln Center. [New York Times](
A view of Lincoln Center. (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)
— An engrossing, erudite profile of artist Adrian Piper by Thomas Chatterton Williams. Piper’s solo retrospective, on view at the Museum of Modern Art, will land at the Hammer Museum in October. [New York Times](
— “When Henry Taylor paints, it is as though he had been born with caulk over his eyes, as if it were nothing for him to access that low-down, murky place where we store who we are.” Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah profiles the L.A. painter. [Vulture](
— In tribute to the late photographer Laura Aguilar (obituary [here]( poet and artist Raquel Gutierrez recalls the Chicana lesbian haunts and softball teams of L.A.’s Eastside. [New Inquiry](
— A rare self-portrait of renowned 17th century painter Artemisia Gentileschi has entered the collection at the National Gallery in England. [The National Gallery](
— Speaking of portraits: William Poundstone has a terrific piece on Desiderio da Settagnano’s “Bust of a Young Boy” (1460-64), on view at the Getty Museum — from a pioneering sculptor who knew how to let kids be kids. [Los Angeles County Museum on Fire](
— Artist Senga Nengudi is known for sculptures crafted from pantyhose. A show at Art + Practice in Leimert Park examines her trajectory as a performance artist, a practice nurtured by the period she spent in L.A. [Artnet](
— In his review of the latest design spectacle at Washington, D.C.’s Building Museum, Kriston Capps wonders if the institution is “taking architecture seriously.” [Citylab](
— Sort of related: Raney Knudson examines the museum spectacle complex. [Glasstire](
— “I see fiction not as the construction of an alternate world but as what your imagination gives you from the real world.” A Q&A with Pulitzer Prize-winning critic Hilton Als. [Paris Review](
— Architect Jeanne Gang on why architecture needs to contend with pay equity. [Co. Design](
— “‘Do I look busy?’ becomes more important than ‘Am I doing my best work?’ ” Apparently open plan office design isn’t all that. [Quartz](
— Related: a flashback to this 2016 report on how the open plan became all the corporate rage. (Blame advertising.) [NPR](
— Critic Allison Arieff on why we need to reconnect with our streets. [New York Times](
— The great, terrifying dance epidemic of 1518. [The Guardian](
AND LAST BUT NOT LEAST…
Helen Keller and her dogs. [Perkins School for the Blind](
âFollow me on Twitter [@cmonstah](.
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