From coronavirus quarantine, essential culture news, including how Trump channels Sophocles, the loss of beloved Broadway playwright Terrence McNally and other art figures to COVID-19 and other pandemic-influenced culture shifts.
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
March 28, 2020
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Greetings from the quarantine! Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer for the Los Angeles Times, with all things arts and culture and coronavirus â as well as an incredibly well-dressed chihuahua.
Essential image
[âGoldie in Fanatic Female Frustration,â a comic crawing by Aline Kominsky-Crumb]
âGoldie in Fanatic Female Frustration,â 1975, by Aline Kominsky-Crumb, from the artistâs solo show at Kayne Griffin Corcoran. (Kayne Griffin Corcoran)
Countless galleries were scheduled to open shows on the week that L.A. began to go into lockdown. That doesnât mean you canât see what they were planning to show. Many spaces have responded by creating online programming. Until they reopen, Iâll be kicking off each newsletter with a work from one of these shows ...
... starting with comic artist Aline Kominsky Crumbâs [solo exhibition]( at Kayne Griffin Corcoran. âGoldie in Fanatic Female Frustration,â above, was created in 1975, and features one of the artistâs alter egos. It was part of a wave of taboo-shattering comics from the â70s that employed elements of autobiography to satirize the culture and explore female sexuality. See the entire show digitally in the galleryâs [online viewing room](.
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Oedipus wrecks
Times theater critic Charles McNulty has been watching President Trumpâs daily briefings and is âstruck by the parallel between our president and that quintessential Sophoclean sufferer, Oedipus.â Thatâs not to imply Trump has a mom thing; instead McNulty explores the lesser known political situations Oedipus faces as a leader in an era in which a plague is killing crops â in particular, [his relationship to absolute power]( âan ever-present danger when a ruler convinces himself that his authority is unimpeachable.â
[President Trump and a detail of âOedipus and the Sphinx,â by Jean-August-Dominique Ingres]
President Trump and a detail of âOedipus and the Sphinxâ by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, part of the collection at the Louvre. (Trump photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images; Oedipus image by Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images)
A life of love and valor
Playwright, musical librettist and screenwriter Terrence McNally, the pen behind stage works such as âKiss of the Spider Womanâ and âLove! Valour! Compassion!,â died at 81 from complications related to the novel coronavirus. âWhile most playwrights since World War II have arrived like comets, creating their signature scripts early in their careers,â wrote The Timesâ Mike Boehm [in this paperâs obit]( âthe arc of McNallyâs writing life testified to the riches â especially insight, empathy and a hesitance to judge flawed people too harshly â that came with maturity.â (Boehm is one we also lost all too early: he died in 2019.)
âMr. McNally introduced Broadway and Off Broadway audiences to characters and situations that most mainstream theater had previously shunted into comic asides,â wrote Jesse Green and Neil Genzlinger [in their obituary]( in the New York Times. McNallyâs first Broadway production, in 1965, featured âan almost unheard-of romance between two men.â
Charles McNulty paid tribute [in an appreciation]( âA leading gay playwright who embraced his communal role yet adamantly resisted ghettoization, he taught compassion and acceptance by reminding audiences that gays and straights want the same things â to love and to be loved, to find purpose (if not meaning) in the swirling mystery and to be forgiven while learning (grudgingly) to forgive.â
And reporter Ashley Lee chatted with lyricist Lynn Ahrens and composer Stephen Flaherty about what made McNally [such a great collaborator]( on the musical âRagtimeâ (and how he liked really large type). âHe was so poetic and lyrical,â says Ahrens, âand really had a way of inspiring songs in his musical collaborators.â
Lee also spoke with a teary Matthew Lopez, the playwright behind âThe Inheritanceâ and the âLegend of Georgia McBride,â about the importance of McNallyâs work to [his own development as a person and a writer](. âMore than any other playwright of his generation, he had the ability to look honestly at the world and not ignore its flaws but to actually see the beauty in the flaws.â
[Playwright Terrence McNally at his home in New York City]
Playwright Terrence McNally at his home in New York earlier this month. (Al Pereira / Getty Images)
The theater world turned out to honor McNally on social media. Lin-Manuel Miranda described himself as âheartbroken,â and Chita Rivera wrote, âA huge part of me is gone.â Lee rounds up [the reactions](.
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Coronavirus hits the arts economy
Itâs been a grim week for arts workers. In Los Angeles, MOCA has laid off its [97 part-time employees]( and the Hammer Museum has laid off [150 student workers](. The Timesâ Deborah Vankin has been digging into the story. Thus far, LACMA is still planning on paying its hourly and part-time staff during the closure period, and the Broad museum plans to pay employees through at least April 8. âI think itâs something no museum can, in good conscience, avoid thinking about right now,â says Selma Holo, director of USCâs Fisher Museum. âMuseums, depending on how reliable their funding is, have to address it.â
[A file photo of the exterior of the Museum of Contemporary Art on Grand Ave.]
The Museum of Contemporary Art is laying off part-time and hourly workers workers. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
The traveling production of the acclaimed revival of âOnce on This Islandâ has [canceled its run]( making it the first Broadway national tour to close prematurely. And New York City Ballet has also [canceled its season]( but will pay its employees, and the New York Philharmonic is [furloughing musicians](. In addition, the Tony Awards have been [postponed indefinitely]( and the Ojai Music Festival has [canceled its season]( for the first time in 74 years.
In the Bay Area, the San Francisco Art Institute [will not be accepting new students for the fall 2020 semester](. In a letter sent to faculty, staff, students and trustees, the schoolâs president, Gordon Knox, said that the schoolâs already precarious financial situation has been exacerbated by the pandemic: âWe are now considering the suspension of our regular courses and degree programs starting immediately after graduation.â
At the time the school had been in negotiations to merge with a larger Bay Area institution, reports Sarah Hotchkiss of KQED, but [talks stalled]( when coronavirus hit.
San Francisco Chronicle art critic Charles Desmarais reports on a COVID-19 impact survey organized by the San Francisco Arts Alliance. The study estimates that area arts organization [could lose about $73 million in revenue]( and donations if the shutdown continues through the summer.
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All of this makes [a tweet by former U.N. Ambassador]( Nikki Haley sting quite a bit. The stimulus bill allots funding to the Kennedy Center, the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities, among other cultural groups. âHow many more people could have been helped with this money?â she asked. Charles McNulty writes that itâs small potatoes given everything else thatâs going into the bill â âthe equivalent of a waitress at a diner being left a penny after working a 14-hour shift.â
As always, you can find a complete guide to The Timesâ coronavirus coverage at [latimes.com/coronavirus](.
Fresh air in the age of ârona
The Timesâ Daniel Hernandez has an essay on why the lockdown of public spaces is [aggravating the emotional impact of the epidemic](. âOne of the last remaining channels of social cohesion and mental well-being that we have left as societies fight the global pandemic is access to public lands, and the public right-of-way,â he writes. Donât miss the incredible images in this piece by staff photographers Carolyn Cole, Luis Sinco, Robert Gauthier and Jay L. Clendenin.
[An aerial view of a near empty skatepark in Venice Beach after the coronavirus lockdown]
Aerial views of the Venice Beach skatepark where a handful of skaters defy the cityâs closure order. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Urbanism writer Alissa Walker looks at the distribution of that outdoor space. Experts are recommending everyone stay in their own neighborhoods, but [not all neighborhoods are created equal when it comes to public space]( nationwide, 100 million people do not have a park within a 10-minute walk of their home. âWe need to stop shaming people who are going for walks in the park to rightfully get some air after a tough week,â says architect and urbanist Jonathan Fertig. âAnd start shaming politicians who arenât closing down streets to cars.â
Learning from a codex
In 1576, as colonial Mexico was being ravaged by a smallpox pandemic, a Franciscan monk and a group of indigenous scribes sealed themselves off in a convent and put the finishing touches on a vital record of indigenous life. The Florentine Codex, as that book is known, is an encyclopedic look at Nahua life in the Valley of Mexico before the arrival of the Spanish. Its creators were unable to use color in its final chapters because they ran out of pigment â and couldnât secure anymore while in quarantine. But they nonetheless created an incredible historical document, a richly layered work of art and an object that speaks to survival and resilience. I look at [what we can learn from the Codex]( at this moment in time.
[A healer caring for patients suffering from smallpox in Book 12 of the Florentine Codex]
A detail from the Florentine Codex shows a healer caring for patients suffering from smallpox. (Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana / MiBACT)
Passages
Maurice Berger, an accomplished writer and curator whose prescient work on art and race helped set a framework for the social discourses of today, [died last weekend]( of complications from COVID-19 at the age of 63. âHe was just a tireless advocate for talking about race in the art world,â said UCLA art historian Steven Nelson.
Michael Sorkin, an architect, critic and educator whose writings often examined the political nature of architecture and the inequities of urban space, [has died at 71]( â also from complications related to COVID-19.
[Here is his tongue-in-cheek design]( from 1997, showing a series of glove-shaped towers at Dodger Stadium.
Best arts online
The Timesâ Matt Cooper has been hitting the keys to deliver daily digests of the best culture events online â including [a free stream]( of Hugh Jackman starring in a revival of âOklahomaâ at the National Theatre of London in 1998, [a performance]( of the Pacific Opera Projectâs âMadama Butterfly,â and [a whole archive]( of concerts previously held at the Natural History Museums of Los Angeles County.
Find Cooperâs daily dispatches at [this link](. Plus, find broader listings on The Timesâ [âThings to Doâ]( site, which features everything to do with kids, with food, with video games, with your garden, with ... you get the idea.
Jori Finkel has [10 binge-worthy art podcasts](. And if you want [culture you can groove to]( youâre in luck because The Timesâ Makeda Easter rounds up the best online dance classes, from Bollywood to ballet.
[Dance fitness class at Debbie Allen Dance Academy]
Dianne Shorte swings into action in a dance fitness class at Debbie Allen Dance Academy. (Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)
In the news
â As all those talking heads are doing cable news appearances from home, design writer Kathleen A. Hughes is [having a looking at their interior design](.
â The Rams have [a new logo]( â and it looks like a logo for a morning show.
â Legendary movement artist Yvonne Rainer has [created a choreography]( that you can do in your home.
â A Russian theater is going to stage performances for [one spectator at a time](.
â Some good news: [Nine arts writers]( have been named the winners of the 2020 Rabkin Award, including Seph Rodney of New York and Sam Lefebvre of San Francisco.
â Paddy Johnson looks at how the move to online sales platforms [may hurt small galleries](.
â The L.A. County Department of Arts and Culture has [rounded up resources]( available to culture workers affected by the pandemic.
â The Art Newspaper [also has a list of resources](.
â Even better, performance artist Guillermo Gómez Peña has devised [a guide]( to surviving the apocalypse.
And last but not least ...
An Instagram account of an influencer chihuahua in Japan that wears hand-made clothes. Bless you, [@montjiro](.
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