Two views of the Broad's new exhibition “Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power, 1963-1983,” and our Spring Arts Preview.
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[Arts & Culture]
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Arts & Culture
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Your regular guide, Carolina Miranda, is taking a week off the keyboards. But the arts never stop in Southern California â and weâve just published our [Spring Arts Preview]( which we donât want you to miss. Iâm Laurie Ochoa, arts and entertainment editor of the L.A. Times with a super bloom of culture.
OUT OF THE BLIND SPOT
This weekendâs big art opening is the Broad museumâs âSoul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power, 1963-1983,â an exhibition filled with âsearing moments,â Times art critic Christopher Knight [writes in his review](. Itâs a necessary show. âBlack art,â Knight says, âhas languished in an institutional blind spot.â Among the most vital pieces is Faith Ringgoldâs âdevastatingâ map of black incarceration, âThe United States of Attica.â âNearly half a century on,â Knight writes, âRinggoldâs image still shocks.â
Assemblage art works, including many by Los Angeles artists, are some of the strongest pieces on view at The Broadâs âSoul of a Nationâ exhibition. Times writer [Makeda Easter reports]( on the importance of the style. âIt breaks with the American idea that when something is done you throw it away,â says Daniel Widener, UC San Diego history professor. âIt's got renewal at its heart, which is a radical message for people who are told theyâre disposable and in a country that praises disposability.â
Faith Ringgold's "The United States of Attica," 1971-72, offset lithograph, part of the Broad's "Soul of a Nation." (Pablo Enriquez / The Broad)
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BEFORE PHOTOSHOP WAS COOL
About 130 years before Photoshop, artist Oscar G. Rejlander used multiple negatives to create âone of the most vexed photographs of the 19th century,â [writes Times art critic Christopher Knight]( in his review of âOscar G. Rejlander: Artist Photographer,â at the J. Paul Getty Museum. Knight calls the photographic work âTwo Ways of Life (Hope in Repentance),â âepicâ and the exhibit âfascinating.â
Oscar G. Rejlander's "Two Ways of Life (Hope in Repentance)," 1857, albumen silver print. (Oscar Rejlander / J. Paul Getty Museum)
SPRING ARTS SPECIAL
Arts editor Craig Nakano put together a terrific [look at the best of whatâs coming this spring]( on the Southern California arts scene.
Times art critic [Christopher Knight is anticipating]( the start of construction on architect Thom Mayneâs new campus for the Orange County Museum of Art as well as several museum and gallery shows, among them, Aprilâs âOpen House: Elliott Hundley,â the inaugural show in MOCAâs series in which L.A. artists organizing exhibits from the museumâs permanent collection, and âSarah Lucas: Au Naturelâ at the Hammer in early June.
Times theater critic [Charles McNulty says âthe forecast for the spring season]( calls for a hurricane of tears, shot through with just enough laughter to keep theatergoers from going off the deep end.â Among his weepy picks, âTiny Beautiful Thingsâ based on the book of advice columns by Cheryl Strayed, âFalsettosâ coming to the Ahmanson and âDanielâs Husband,â which will have its Southern California premiere at the Fountain Theatre.
And in Times music critic [Mark Swedâs look at spring]( he says that âthe Los Angeles Philharmonic will be overstuffing Walt Disney Concert Hall with Mahlerâs âSymphony of a Thousandâ and hosting a 12-hour new-music marathon that opens with David Langâs âcrowd out,â composed for as many volunteers as can be rounded up.â
David Ulin [talks with director and multimedia artist]( Jan]( about his staging in April of Joan Didionâs âWhite Albumâ at UCLAâs Ralph Freud Playhouse, produced with his collective Early Morning Opera and the Center Theatre Group. âWe are watching a woman in crisis,â Jan says of Didionâs book, âdescribing a culture in crisis. I think of her as Ishmael in âMoby-Dick.â â
[Deborah Vankin experiences âThought Experiments in F# Minor,â]( âa site-specific, immersive walkâ installation with 3-D sound by Canadian artist duo Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller. The 40-minute âarchitectural adventureâ â new this spring and free to the public â is, on its most simplistic level, a tour through Disney Hall and its immediate surroundings.â
Makeda Easter [talks with 25-year-old choreographer and dancer Micaela Taylor]( who is getting national attention for her athletic but graceful, fluid yet precise style. Her TL Collective premieres its work âDriftâ at Ford Theatres on March 30. Easter also [previews this springâs dance happenings](.
Daryl H. Miller [sits down with Los Angeles playwright Inda Craig-Galván,]( who felt the urgency to write her new play âBlack Super Hero Magic Mamaâ after the police shooting of 12-year-old Tamir Rice. Itâs now at the Geffen Playhouseâs Audrey Skirball Kenis Theater.
And Matt Cooper [previews the Broadway national tours]( coming to Southern California this spring.
Cover illustration for the 2019 Spring Arts Preview. (Illustration by Michael Glenwood / For The Times)
YOU CAN PLAY WITH RAY
Donât tell violinist and former child prodigy Ray Chen that classical music is a fusty old art. Yes, as Chen [told Times arts writer Jessica Gelt]( he knows that the classical music community can be small and insular, but with his playing and huge social media following heâs opening up that world. On Friday, he and the LA Phil announced the Play With Ray contest, open to non-professional violinists around the world. The winner will play on stage this summer at the Hollywood Bowl with Chen, 30, and the L.A. Phil.
Violinist Ray Chen performing in London on June 2, 2014. (Tim P. Whitby)
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BREXIT’S ARCHITECTURE BUST
Many predictions have been made of Brexit’s effect on the economy of the U.K., but writer [Joseph Giovannini looks at what architects fear]( could happen if Britain separates from the European Union. Rem Koolhaas sees “pea soup and a complete absence of coffee” and “‘Little England’ all over again — a small-minded, prim and grim place.” The European Union, Koolhaas says, “modernized the English mentality.”
A London view taking in, from left, St. Andrew Undershaft church, the Scalpel tower, the Lloyd's building and the Leadenhall Building (also known as the Cheesegrater). Architects worry Brexit would hurt not only businesses' bottom line but also the profession's creative vitality. (John Keeble / Getty Images)
A PLEDGE FOR WOMEN COMPOSERS
Carlos Izcaray, music director of the Los Angeles-based AYS since 2016, has made a significant pledge: â50% or more of new music performed by the youth orchestra will be the work of female composers,â writes Tim Greiving, who [talks with Izcaray about his bold move]( âIt serves a little bit like a lab, to discover: How is the symphony orchestra relevant in a 21st century world?â
American Youth Symphony music director Carlos Izcaray. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)
TIME CATCHES UP
At the center of David Lindsay-Abaireâs career-launching play âFuddy Meersâ is an amnesia-damaged woman who greets each day like a blank slate. Reviewer Philip Brandes, [wrote about a revival]( of the work at Venturaâs Rubicon Theatre, says, âthe loopy plot and reality-upending antics, which looked so outlandish in 1999, now seem woven from todayâs headlines â particularly in the trauma-laden swamps of the #MeToo era.â
BELIEVE THE HYPE
âEven those who are not [hip-hop] fans ⦠will find âHype Manâ an overdue immersion into a cultural phenomenon,â writes F. Kathleen Foley in [her review of âHype Manâ]( at the Fountain Theatre. âDirector Deena Selenow elicits first-rate performances from her tight-knit cast.
Clarissa Thibeaux and Matthew Hancock in a scene from "Hype Man" at the Fountain Theatre. (Ed Krieger)
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PLAN YOUR ARTS WEEK
On the [99-Seat Beat, Philip Brandes previews]( Mary Zimmermanâs âArgonautikaâ at A Noise Within, âSteel Magnoliasâ at Actorâs Co-op, Brian Frielâs âFaith Healerâ at the Odyssey and Bernard Pomeranceâs biodrama take on âThe Elephant Manâ at El Portal.
Matt Cooper previews the week ahead in Southern California [museums]( [dance]( [theater]( and [classical music](. Plus he gives us his [weekend picks]( which including a female-powered salute to Yoko Ono at Walt Disney Concert Hall.
ESSENTIAL IMAGE
One image thatâs stuck with me this week is the display of 50 pairs of white shoes representing the 50 Muslim lives lost after a gunman attacked two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. The memorial, outside the countryâs All Souls Church, shows how people of all faiths were moved by the tragedy. Lorraine Ali [wrote about how thereâs never been such a contrast in views]( and narratives about Muslims this month, from the vitriol of suspended Fox News host Jeanine Pirro to grace of New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern, who wore a black head scarf when consoling the Islamic community after the shootings.
Fifty pairs of shoes for 50 Muslim lives lost. A memorial at All Souls Church in Christchurch, New Zealand. (Marty Melville / AFP / Getty Images)
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