The kick-off events for the L.A. Phil's 100th-anniversary season, artist Lari Pittman's show of new textile paintings, Lincoln Jones' new ballet...
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[Arts & Culture]
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Arts & Culture
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Another week. Another slew of interesting culture happenings. I'm Carolina A. Miranda with your weekly dose of whatâs essential in the world of art and culture:
SPIRIT OF CAGE
In 1965, composer John Cage sketched a composition for piano on hotel stationery in Stockholm. Last week, musicians Thurston Moore, David Toop, Jon Leidecker and Gino Robair interpreted this loose work at the conclusion of a Cage conference in Pomona. Times classical music critic Mark Swed: âI never experienced two sounds sounding the same; under it all was a sense of unseen weird life below the sonic surface.â [Los Angeles Times](
Interpreting John Cage are, from left, Gino Robair, David Toop, Thurston Moore and Jon Leidecker. (Pomona College Department of Music)
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“Architects of a Golden Age”: Highlights from The Huntingtonâs Southern California Architecture Collection
Oct. 6, 2018-Jan. 21, 2019
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Documenting one of the most creative and influential periods in Southern California architecture, [âArchitects of a Golden Ageâ]( spotlights about 20 original drawings and plans selected from The Huntingtonâs important Southern California architecture collection. The exhibition highlights renderings that helped bring into existence some of the most extraordinary buildings in the greater Los Angeles area, including Downtown L.A.âs Union Station, Mayan Theater, Stock Exchange building and Chinatown structures, as well as seminal examples of the California Bungalow.
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8 MILE PARTY
Mark Swed attended the eight-mile long street party that marked the 100th anniversary of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Things kicked off at Disney Hall with Gustavo Dudamel leading John Williamsâ âMusic for Brassâ and concluded with Williams conducting music from âStar Warsâ at the Hollywood Bowl. In between, there were Korean drummers, Katy Perry, Wynton Marsalis and a Oaxacan band. [Los Angeles Times](
Fireworks light up the sky as singer Katy Perry performs and Gustavo Dudamel conducts the LA Philharmonic 100th anniversary concert. (Patrick T. Fallon / For The Times)
Swed also reviewed the L.A. Philâs official Disney Hall kickoff, which included the premiere of Andrew Normanâs âSustainâ: âa near out-of-body experience that sounds like, and feels like, the future we want, sans dystopia.â [Los Angeles Times](
Matt Cooper has the week ahead in classical music, including a mini-festival devoted to Claude Debussy. [Los Angeles Times](
ON BROADWAY & BEYOND
Times theater critic Charles McNulty had a sit-down in New York with Michael Cera and Lucas Hedges, who are appearing in playwright Kenneth Lonerganâs âThe Waverly Gallery.â âTheater isnât natural,â says Hedges, who broke out in Lonerganâs 2016 film âManchester by the Sea.â âYou have to find a way to make something that you know is going to happen surprise you.â [Los Angeles Times](
Michael Cera, left, and Lucas Hedges, in rehearsals for "The Waverly Gallery." (Brigitte Lacombe)
Plus, McNulty reviews Bekah Brunstetterâs âThe Cakeâ at the Geffen Playhouse. The story is about a baker (played by Debra Jo Rupp) who refuses to make a cake for a lesbian wedding. Aspects of the play â sparked by the Supreme Court case about a similar baker who refused to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple â can feel a bit sitcom-ish, says McNulty. But Ruppâs performance âripples with doubt and misgivings.â [Los Angeles Times](
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ON THE STAGE
A franchise sandwich shop serves as microcosm of U.S. work life in Bess Wohlâs âAmerican Heroâ at the Pasadena Playhouse. The play âapproaches big American themes with gentle humor rather than pulverizing seriousness,â writes reviewer Daryl H. Miller. [Los Angeles Times](
Sandwich makers played by Anna LaMadrid, left, and Laura Mann in "American Hero." (Dean Cechvala)
Philip Brandes reviews âA Picture of Dorian Gray,â based on Oscar Wildeâs novella, at A Noise Within. This play emphasizes the storyâs âpsychosexual elementsâ and actor Colin Bates âeffectively charts Dorianâs moral decline,â he writes, but not all of Wildeâs text âlends itself to the stage.â [Los Angeles Times](
Matt Cooper has the latest in theater, including theatrical chameleon Sarah Jonesâ latest, âSell/Buy/Date.â [Los Angeles Times](
And Kathleen S. Foley has the latest at 99-seat theaters, including a play that imagines âThe Merchant of Veniceâ from a Jewish perspective. [Los Angeles Times](
DAGGERS AND TELENOVELAS
Painter Lari Pittman has a new show at Regen Projects that pairs imaginary people with imaginary textiles that bear images of daggers and hand axes. I chatted with Pittman about these, as well as his interest in telenovelas and how violence can be made beautiful. âAestheticized violence is actually more disturbing,â he says. âItâs interesting how Catholicism was very, very deft at organizing representations of violence while wearing the garments of the sublime.â [Los Angeles Times](
Painter Lari Pittman at Regen Projects with canvases from his latest series, "Portraits of Textiles & Portraits of Humans." (Kirk McKoy / Los Angeles Times)
Times contributing reviewer David Pagel reviews Pittmanâs show. âWe usually assume that portraits are for people and that textiles are decorative, a matter of pattern and pleasantness as well as background enhancement,â he writes. âPittman scrambles such âeither/orâ exclusivity by painting portraits of each.â [Los Angeles Times](
ADVENTUROUS WOMEN
For years, conservator Maurine St. Gaudens has worked on paintings by early women artists from California and found little to no information available on many of them. âSometimes youâd get this really great painting and all youâd find is, âShe was a teacher, she lived with her parents and she was a spinster,ââ she tells me. To fill the gap â which includes tales of tequila and mules and hysterical fits â St. Gaudens gathered their histories in a four-volume set and a new show at the Pasadena Museum of History. [Los Angeles Times](
Maurine St. Gaudens, holding a self-portrait by Ruth Miller Kempster, at the Pasadena Museum of History. (Irfan Kahn / Los Angeles Times)
AN ARCHITECTâS WORK
Times contributor Mimi Zeiger profiles photographer Janna Ireland, who has been creating a record of the work of late architect Paul R. Williams, the first black member of the American Institute of Architects. [Los Angeles Times](
Architectural photographer Janna Ireland, who is documenting the architecture of Paul R. Williams (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
IN THE GALLERIES
Times art critic Christopher Knight has been hitting the galleries. Of a show of photographs by Jo Ann Callis at Rose Gallery that features the artistâs staged scenes from the â70s, he says, âCallis masterfully manipulates her fabricated scenes. She leads a viewer to the edge of what could be a violation of social norms â or what could just as easily be nothing remotely untoward.â [Los Angeles Times](
Jo Ann Callis, "Untitled (detail)," circa 1976. (Jo Ann Callis / Rose Gallery)
Knight also reviews Celeste Dupuy-Spencerâs paintings at [Nino Mier Gallery]( âbracingâ new works that âricochet off religious fundamentalism,â and pieces by Adam Saks at [Meliksetian Briggs Gallery]( inspired by the spiritual pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela.
A NOVELISTâS ART
When Victor Hugo died in 1885, few were aware he left behind nearly 3,000 pen-and-ink drawings, many composed during his exile on the Channel Islands. âHis isolation resulted in haunting images of landscape and architecture,â writes The Timesâ Jessica Gelt. The Hammer Museum will display 75 of these drawings. [Los Angeles Times](
And check my Art Datebook for many more openings and ongoing gallery and museum shows, including the performance art group En Cuatro Patas, who will appear at the Broad museum to attack a clay bust of a powerful figure one slap at a time. [Los Angeles Times](
A detail from "Ma destinée (My destiny)," by Victor Hugo, 1867. (Maisons de Victor Hugo, Paris / Guernesey / Roger-Viollet)
DANCE & SONG
Lincoln Jones took time during rehearsals of his new American Contemporary Ballet work âBurlesqueâ to talk with The Timesâ Jeffrey Fleishman about his collaboration on the dance with composer Charles Wuorinen. âItâs the most exciting process,â Jones said. âYou get to create something from scratch. You can plant an idea in a composerâs head.â âBurlesque,â paired with a re-imagining of âInferno,â a previous Jones ballet, will open the companyâs new season this weekend. [Los Angeles Times](
American Contemporary Ballet's Lincoln Jones. His new dance "Burlesque," set to music by Pulitzer Prize winning composer Charles Wuorinen, opens this weekend. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
SONG & DANCE
Songwriter Billy Strayhorn wrote some of Duke Ellingtonâs most well-known songs, including âTake the âAâ Trainâ and âSatin Doll.â Now choreographer David Roussève has made him the subject of a new work titled âHalfway to Dawn.â [Los Angeles Times](
David Roussève's "Halfway to Dawn." (Steve Gunther)
Plus, Matt Cooper rounds up whatâs happening in dance, including an architecturally driven work at the Ahmanson Theatre. [Los Angeles Times](
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IN OTHER NEWSâ¦
â A Miami-based developer has bought L.A.âs Santa Fe Art Colony and artists are now facing 82% rent hikes. [Hyperallergic](
â Frances Anderton has a great interview with sociologist Eric Klinenberg on why shared public spaces are key to bringing a society together. [KCRW Design and Architecture](
â The new crop of MacArthur Fellows includes L.A. violinist Vijay Gupta and composer Matthew Aucoin. [Los Angeles Times](
â Kriston Capps looks at the âsublime viewing experienceâ architect Thomas Phifer created for the Glenstone collection in Maryland (with a fascinating detour into the workings of the Senate Finance Committee). [Washington City Paper](
â William Poundstone says Gerald Buckâs little-seen collection, portions of which are at UC Irvine, âlives up to the mystique.â [Los Angeles County Museum on Fire](
â âWeâre talking less about whether a work is good art but simply whether itâs good â good for us, good for the culture, good for the world.â A terrific essay by Wesley Morris on how we evaluate art in 2018. [New York Times](
AND LAST BUT NOT LEAST…
The earliest surviving radio broadcast of Duke Ellington. [WBGO](
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