This week's essential arts news focuses on all the closures, with needed non-coronavirus stories on protest music and radical opera design.
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
March 14, 2020
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In rough times, we turn to culture. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with your weekly update on whatâs happening â and the creative ways that some artists and organizations have found to contend with the coronavirus:
All the cancellations
The World Health Organization has officially declared COVID-19, the disease caused by a novel coronavirus, [a pandemic](. Gov. Gavin Newsom has called for [the cancellation of gatherings of 250 or more people]( across California. On Friday, the Los Angeles Unified School District announced it would be [closing schools](. (You can find The Timesâ complete coronavirus coverage [here](
All of this has had a cascading effect on Californiaâs cultural organizations.
[The Hollywood Pantages Theatre has suspended âHamilton.â ]
The Hollywood Pantages Theatre has suspended âHamilton.â (Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times)
The Timesâ Jessica Gelt rounds up [the cancellations in the performance arena]( including closures at the L.A. Phil, the L.A. Opera and Center Theatre Group. She also reports on [the cancellation]( of the L.A. Art Book Fair, which was scheduled to land at MOCA on April 3.
Deborah Vankin [rounds up the many L.A. museums]( that are shutting down, including, as of Friday, the Getty Center, the Getty Villa, the Broad and the Hammer.
[The Paul McCarthy exhibition at the Hammer Museum]
Drawings by Paul McCarthy at the Hammer Museum. (Christopher Knight / Los Angeles Times)
The Times entertainment team is keeping [a continuously updated master list]( of all the movie releases, concerts, festivals and other events that have been shut down â including Coachella and SXSW. For visual arts closures worldwide, ARTnews has [a comprehensive, continuously updated list](.
Ashley Lee reports on how the hotly anticipated âHamilton,â which was about to open at the Hollywood Pantages, has had to [suspend its performances]( one of many theatrical cancellations in L.A., San Francisco and New York, including Broadway.
KQED reports on the labor angle: basically, that cancellations are [âfinancially catastrophicâ]( for classical musicians.
Early in the week, before the WHO had declared COVID-19 a pandemic, many theaters appeared determined to stay open. Times theater critic Charles McNulty urged them to [set aside financial concerns and shut down]( âBy staying open, theaters are not just acting shortsightedly. Theyâre betraying their core constituency, older patrons, who are the group most vulnerable to coronavirus.â
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A bit of resilience
Though battered, curators, writers, artists and arts organizations are pitching in to make the coming weeks as humane as possible.
Ashley Lee reports on how some theaters, such as San Franciscoâs American Conservatory Theater and Berkeley Repertory, are turning to [presentations of live video recordings]( of some of their shows. Itâs the sort of thing that could give theater livestreaming a long-term boost.
[A.C.T.'s production of âToni Stone,â starring Dawn Ursula, center, will be available online.]
A.C.T.'s production of âToni Stone,â starring Dawn Ursula, center, will be available online. (Kevin Berne)
On his blog, music critic Alex Ross rounds up a list of upcoming [classical music livestreams](. And Anthony Tommasini, of the New York Times, [writes about the experience]( of viewing live performances staged for empty halls: âone of the most disorienting yet profound views of a performance Iâve ever had.â
Los Angeles Times contributor Stuart Miller reports that Michelle Kholos Brooksâ daring play, âHitlerâs Tasters,â is still coming to the Electric Lodge in Venice. But the theater is [capping the audience at 50 people]( and has instituted extra cleaning procedures.
[Michelle Kholos Brooks, the playwright behind âHitlerâs Tastersâ]
Playwright Michelle Kholos Brooks spends a warm moment with her dog Milo in Venice. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
In addition, Ohio-based curator Jordan Spencer [made a spreadsheet]( of all the artistsâ books that were scheduled to be released at the L.A. Art Book Fair, along with links to websites where you can acquire them. Find Spencer on Twitter [@Jor_danSpen_cer](.
Plus, Lin-Manuel Miranda shared an unreleased âHamiltonâ track on Soundcloud [for everyone to enjoy](.
Hyperallergic has [a story]( on how the New York Foundation for the Arts and the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation have teamed up to offer a new medical emergency aid program to artists.
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Want to see art at home? The Prado in Madrid has [a hit video series]( on Instagram that features guards, conservators and other generally unseen museum staff as hosts.
New York-based critic Justin Davidson reports on [how patrons can support the arts]( groups that are âfragile in the best of times.â He writes: âTicket buyers who come asking for refunds should, if they can, turn them into donations instead. ... Organizations can help their audiences help out. When Opera San Jose canceled its production of Mozartâs âThe Magic Fluteâ yesterday, the company simultaneously announced the creation of the [Opera San Jose Artists and Musicians Relief Fund]( an acknowledgment that the public might be generous with the suddenly unemployed.â
Davidson [also Tweeted]( about [a great story]( in Italyâs La Repubblica about how Italians are turning their apartment buildings into âsky choruses.â Watch the whole thing. Itâs only five minutes and itâs truly inspiring.
Non-corona news
It still exists!
Prior to all of the closures, Times classical music critic Mark Swed managed to [check out some of the early shows]( from the L.A. Philâs Power to the People! festival, which included an early workshop of âNueva Canción: Songs of Protest and Resistanceâ at the Wende Museum. âThe avant-cabaret project is a cycle of 1960s songs of political defiance from Latin America that will eventually have a theatrical setting,â he writes.
Previously, he [reviewed the festivalâs opening program]( which included Herbie Hancockâs âI Have a Dreamâ and a performance of Duke Ellingtonâs âThree Black Kings,â conducted by Gustavo Dudamel. âHancock introduced his set by telling the audience that the more he thinks about it, the more he believes the power is from the people,â Swed wrote. âAnd so it was for a little while.â
[Herbie Hancock hits the keyboards with the L.A. Philharmonic]
Herbie Hancock plays with the L.A. Phil as part of the now-canceled Power to the People! festival. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
I got to hang with the crew behind [the innovative design]( of the Industryâs âSweet Land,â an immersive opera that explored themes of colonization in a cluster of temporary structures in Los Angeles State Historic Park. (Like everything else, it too has been canceled â though the company is working on an on-demand video option.) While the opera may be placeless and timeless, itâs a design that has Los Angeles in its bones.
Be sure to click through. The portraits by Times photographer Jay L. Clendenin are stunning, and they beautifully capture the architecture and costume design of this meaningful narrative.
[Sharon Cho Kim as Wiindigo in âSweet Landâ]
Sharon Chohi Kim, company member of the Industry, as Wiindigo, in âSweet Land.â (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
And because development offices have gotta develop: In a rental event at MOCA Geffen, singer Willow Smith sealed herself in a box with a friend for 24 hours in a performance that, as Times reporter Amy Kaufman wrote, was [all about anxiety]( (right before her new album dropped). Thankfully my pal @vidalia was there [with a camera](.
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Domingo update
On Tuesday, L.A. Opera announced that it had concluded its investigation of sexual harassment allegations against former general director Plácido Domingo and found them to be credible. Jessica Gelt was able [to view a summary of the report]( which featured interviews with 44 people and listed 10 allegations of inappropriate conduct between 1986 and 2019.
Passages
Bill Stern, founder of the Museum of California Design, a pop-up curatorial project that examined the underexplored corners of California design, [has died at the age of 79](. His career included stints as a park ranger, a film dubber and a food critic at this paper and the L.A. Weekly, but it was ceramics that was his true calling â an area he got into after acquiring a set of Vernonware dishes from a porn star neighbor who was moving away.
[Curator Bill Stern in his Los Angeles home in 2003]
Writer and curator Bill Stern in his Los Angeles home in 2003. (Ken Hively / Los Angeles Times)
In other news
â Charles McNulty looks at the theatrical season planned for spring. If the pandemic eases and productions begin, the season will be redolent with [the sounds of Sondheim](.
â And looking ahead to fall, the Geffen Playhouse announced its [2020-21 lineup]( â the theaterâs 25th-anniversary season. It will include Bryan Cranstonâs directorial debut, âThe Inheritance.â
â Siobhan Burke has a fascinating read about how Performance Space New York has essentially handed over its programming schedule and budget to [a group of artists](.
â Artist Tatiana Vahan is conducting [an artistsâ census]( in Los Angeles.
â Amnesty International has called for the release of Luis Manuel Otero, an artist [detained by Cuban authorities]( for protesting a censorship decree.
â Sarah Hotchkiss writes an essay on the Hollywood trope of [the corrupt art critic](.
â William Poundstone has [a great story]( about a show of California women painters at the Long Beach Museum of Art (which as of Friday afternoon remained open).
â An exhibition at the Foundling Museum in London features 500 years of [pregnant women in art](.
â Which is a great segue to [this episode]( of the art podcast âIn Other Words,â in which host Charlotte Burns and L.A. art writer Jori Finkel talk about the ways in which female artists are depicted in media.
â Because we could all use something a little spiritual right now, [this conversation]( between Vija Celmins and Doug Wheeler on David Zwirnerâs âDialoguesâ podcast is pretty great.
And last but not least ...
Edvard Munchâs self-portrait after [surviving the Spanish flu](.
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