Ivo van Hove's "Network" starring Bryan Cranston on Broadway, an LAUSD reprieve for Beau Stanton's Koreatown mural, a slow down in LACMA fundraising.
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[Arts & Culture]
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Arts & Culture
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Welcome to the holiday weekend! Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with your weekly dose of what is making us mad as hell ⦠in the best way possible.
A POTENT ‘NETWORK’
Bryan Cranston is tearing things up in Ivo van Hoveâs Broadway production of âNetwork,â inspired by the 1976 Sidney Lumet film, and Times theater critic Charles McNulty says itâs âunmissable.â Cranston plays Howard Beale, the fading newscaster who finds a renewed audience by ranting against hypocrisy. âTottering in a raincoat as his mind unspools and his ratings explode, Cranstonâs Howard has the look of tortured bafflement of a New York King Lear,â writes McNulty. [Los Angeles Times](
Bryan Cranston as Howard Beale in "Network" at New York's Belasco Theatre. (Jan Versweyveld)
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Back in Los Angeles, McNulty had a gander at Taylor Macâs âHoliday Sauce,â which brought âdrag dazzle, queer straight talk and cabaret radicalismâ to UCLAâs Royce Hall. It was, he writes, âa cathartic spell to make things a little lighter for all those who find caroling, eggnog and enforced family visits destabilizing.â [Los Angeles Times](
A scene from Taylor Mac's "Holiday Sauce" at Royce Hall. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
LAUSD PAUSES MURAL REMOVAL
The Los Angeles Unified School District put a hold on its plan to paint over a mural by Beau Stanton at Koreatownâs Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools after an activist had claimed that a starburst pattern portrayed a Japanese flag from World War II. However, street artist Shepard Fairey called the decision censorship and told The Timesâ Howard Blume that he would insist on the removal of his own mural of Robert F. Kennedy if the plan proceeded. [Los Angeles Times](
Members of the Kennedy family also weighed in. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wrote to school board president Monica Garcia: âAs fiercely as they supported tolerance, and diversity, my father and my uncle loathed censorship. My father and uncles considered people who destroyed art in the service of political agendas as the worst sort of scoundrels.â [Los Angeles Times](
Plus, Times art critic Christopher Knight notes that the federal Visual Artists Rights Act and the California Art Preservation Act put limits on the destruction of art. Other artists who painted murals on the site â James Bullough; Allison Torneros, known as Hueman; and Cyrcle, the L.A.-based artist-duo of David Leavitt and David Torres â announced they would join Fairey in seeking their worksâ removal if LAUSDâs plan went through. [Los Angeles Times](
LAUSD has postponed its plan to paint over a mural at Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools in Koreatown. (Kirk McKoy/Los Angeles Times)
CHALLENGES FOR LACMA RE-BUILD
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art set a goal to hit $600 million in fundraising for its planned Peter Zumthor-designed building by the end of this year. But the campaign is still only at $560 million. âPeople donât know if thereâll be a downturn or anything like that â but weâre not worried,â director Michael Govan tells The Timesâ Deborah Vankin. âWe have lots of contingencies in the budget.â [Los Angeles Times](
A rendering of LACMA's $650 million, Peter Zumthor-designed building project. (Atelier Peter Zumthor & Partner / The Boundary)
TINY HOUSES
Pasadenaâs ArtCenter College of Design has three full-scale prototypes of tiny houses and numerous models from a project seeking solutions for the homeless on view at the Main Museum. âYou canât remove politics from design on this level at all,â ArtCenter professor James Meraz told The Timesâ Jessica Gelt. âWe immediately got thrust into the NIMBY idea that people donât want this.â [Los Angeles Times](
L.A.'s Main Museum is showing prototypes for tiny houses, such as Merge, a project by artCenter. (Juan Posada)
VIOLINIST TO ACTIVIST
After winning the MacArthur fellowship this year for his social justice work, violinist Vijay Gupta is giving up his seat at the Los Angeles Philharmonic and will turn full time to activism and his nonprofit Street Symphony. âI feel like the L.A. Phil saved my life when I was a 19-year-old kid,â he tells Deborah Vankin. âAnd Iâm really excited to take that artistry beyond Los Angeles and beyond the work of being in an orchestra.â [Los Angeles Times](
Vijay Gupta, pictured outside the Midnight Mission on skid row. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
YEAR IN REVIEW
Because no end-of-year is complete without a look backâ¦
â Christopher Knight reports on how female artists finally outnumbered men in solo museum shows in Los Angeles in 2018: 11 to six â in a year in which womenâs issues in art and politics were top of mind. [Los Angeles Times](
â Jeffrey Fleishman looks at how the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh provided âmessy entertainmentâ and bared deep divisions. [Los Angeles Times](
â I look at the ways in which the tension between art and money played out in 2018: including a Banksy auction, anti-gentrification protests and the complicated questions of patronage when museums and the moneyed are connected to ugly political news. [Los Angeles Times](
SANDOVAL ON THE SCREEN
Jazz trumpeter Arturo Sandoval has plenty of accomplishments to his name. The latest: The Cuban-born musician recently scored his first film, Clint Eastwoodâs âThe Mule,â about a nonagenarian who becomes a drug runner. Itâs a subtle work, he tells contributor Tim Greiving, Eastwood didnât want to âgive away, in the very beginning, all the drama and all the problem that come afterward.â [Los Angeles Times](
Jazz trumpetist Arturo Sandoval has produced his first film score for "The Mule." (Jeremy Lock)
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ART AND ABOUT
L.A. artist Mark Bradford has a new sculpture in San Diego that can be seen for miles: a blinking light atop a 196-foot pole that telegraphs the phrase âWhat Hath God Wroughtâ in Morse code. The phrase is derived from the first words ever sent via telegraph, but in our current political context, writes Times contributor Leah Ollman, âthe inference is typically bleak.â [Los Angeles Times](
Mark Bradford's "What Hath God Wrought" at UC San Diego. (K.C. Alfred / San Diego Union-Tribune)
Ollman also reviews two Los Angeles shows: Leidy Churchmanâs âtender and inquisitiveâ paintings at [Reena Spaulings Fine Art]( and Max Hooper Schneiderâs bizarre aquariums and bleak dollhouses at [Jennyâs]( which âtwists our culture of abundance into a freakish dystopia.â
ON STAGE
Contributor F. Kathleen Foley reports on the Troubador Theater Companyâs rollicking Christmas spoof âThe Year Without a Santana Clausâ at the El Portal Theatre in North Hollywood through Dec. 30. [Los Angeles Times](
Gary Goldstein checks out âLove Actually Live,â inspired by the 2003 holiday rom-com: âSimply let this superbly mounted, quasi-jukebox musical wash over you with the warmth and joy of its myriad components.â [Los Angeles Times](
READY FOR THE WEEKEND
Matt Cooper has the week ahead in [museums]( [dance]( [theater]( and [classical music]( â as well his weekend picks, including a re-imagined âNutcracker Suiteâ and a free holiday celebration at the Music Center. [Los Angeles Times](
American Contemporary Ballet's "The Nutcracker Suite." (Victor Demarchelier)
IN OTHER NEWS…
â Donald Trumpâs border wall will no longer be âbig and beautiful,â it will be âartistically designed steel slats.â [Intelligencer]( [Huffington Post](
â Alissa Walker pens an epic poem to scooters. [Twitter](
â Walker also has a great critique of Teslaâs Boring Company tunnel: âa private piece of infrastructure built for the convenience of some car users ... instead of improving the entire transportation experience for everyoneâs benefit.â [Curbed](
â Nearly half of architecture students are women, but few stick with the profession. Allison Arieff asks why. [New York Times](
â From the Department of Andean postmodern: Peruvian electronica producer QOQEQA makes hallucinatory use of the buildings of Bolivian architect Freddy Mamani in the video for his new self-titled single. [Remezcla](
â Itâs not the first time Mamaniâs designs have popped up in music videos. [Los Angeles Times](
â The Soviet avant-garde apartment you can rent on Airbnb. [The Art Newspaper](
â A podcast that deconstructs opera arias. [New Yorker](
â Jennifer Swann on how arts institutions are expanding in South L.A. [ARTnews](
â An art show in Detroit pays tribute to the women of Lowrider magazine. [Hyperallergic](
â An exhibition at the Museum of Arts and Design shows how L.A. artist Peter Voulkos âreinvented ceramic art.â [New York Times](
â A lawsuit against a video game maker raises questions about the copyright of dance. [The Verge]( [Los Angeles Times](
â Journalist Lori Tharps makes the case for writing Black with a Capital B, in reference to people and culture. [New York Times](
AND LAST BUT NOT LEAST…
Happy Holidays from the Essential Arts & Culture dogs, Henry and Bonnie. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times)
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