Plugging pandemic holes with endowment money, "Hamilton" on TV, uncertain future for high school performing arts students and a digital theater experience in our weekly arts newsletter.
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â
[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
May 16, 2020
[View in browser](
Youâre here. And Iâm here. Which makes it a fine time for an arts newsletter. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, shaggy staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with your weekly delivery of essential culture news â and drive-by art shows.
Essential image
[âAs I Look Into You I Begin To See Myself,â a painting by Jennifer Guidi]
âAs I Look Into You I Begin To See Myself,â 2019, by Jennifer Guidi. (Brica Wilcox / Jennifer Guidi, Gagosian)
L.A. painter Jennifer Guidi opened a solo show, âGemini,â at one of Gagosianâs New York outposts in late February ... and I donât need to tell you what happened next.
The artist creates deeply textured paintings (often incorporating sand) that draw from abstraction, textile traditions and color theory, among other themes. For this exhibition she explores ideas of duality (inspired by her astrological sign). The show includes two horizontal landscapes, one of which is featured above, that dwell on those transitory moments known as dusk.
You can see more work by the artist on [Gagoâs website](. The artist has also compiled [a playlist]( of what sheâs listening to when she works in the studio.
ADVERTISEMENT
Money troubles
The American Alliance of Museums estimates that U.S. museums are collectively losing $33 million a day. Which raises the question of those multimillion-dollar endowments. Should some wealthy institutions, such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which has a $3.6 billion fund, dip into their kitties? Or should endowments be preserved to help assure the future of the institution? And what about restricted funds? The Timesâ Deborah Vankin has [an essential explainer](.
Dana Kopel, who was furloughed from the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, writes about [the inequities the furloughs have revealed]( âI am not interested in asking what art looks like in these uncertain times. I want answers to other questions. What does art look like when you canât pay rent? What does art look like when youâre too sick to get out of bed, and too broke to go to the hospital?â
Plus: A look at some of the curatorial work [that has been lost]( as a result of the pandemic.
The arts and coronavirus
The Hollywood Bowl has [canceled its season]( for the first time in 98 years, reports Jessica Gelt â and summer will simply not be the same. âItâs a devastating blow to our organization,â says Chad Smith, chief exec of the L.A. Phil, which manages the Bowl.
In [a separate report]( Gelt notes that the cancellation will generate a chain reaction in other parts of L.A.'s performing arts ecosystem. The Hollywood Bowl Orchestra (65 musicians and staff) will be furloughed, as will 226 seasonal employees. The L.A. Phil is facing an $80 million budget shortfall and will draw $20.6 million from its endowment to help plug the gap.
[The Hollywood Bowl in 1926]
The Hollywood Bowl stage in 1926. (Music Center Archives / Hollywood Bowl Collection / Fred Kuphal Photography. )
The opening of âHamiltonâ at the Hollywood Pantages has been [pushed back to Sept. 6](. The good news is that the engagement has been extended through February of next year.
On the other hand, âHamilton,â the movie, which stars creator Lin-Manuel Miranda in the title role, [will arrive early](. Way early. The film had been scheduled for release in late 2021. Instead, it will debut on Disney+ this July 3. Times theater reporter Ashley Lee says the decision is a âbold move that makes theater [more financially accessible to the masses]( But only if you are a Disney+ subscriber.
The film will certainly give theater lovers something to soak up over the summer because Broadway will [remain shuttered through Labor Day](. Touring productions, however, will each decide, on a case-by-case basis, whether to reopen in conjunction with hosting venues.
Speaking of theater, critic Charles McNulty checked out âThe Present,â Helder Guimarãesâs virtual magic performance for the Geffen Playhouse â a work McNulty describes as âthe closest approximation Iâve had to being in a theater since the pandemic closed the venues.â Guimarães, he adds, is â[a magician Jorge Luis Borges might have dreamed up](
[Helder Guimarães in Griffith Park.]
Helder Guimarães in Griffith Park. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)
Incidentally, the New Yorkerâs Alexandra Schwartz also found [an online work]( was quite beguiled by]( Richard Nelsonâs âWhat Do We Need to Talk About?â In the work, commissioned by New Yorkâs Public Theater, she reports that Zoom wasnât an âirritating technical compromise but an integral plot point.â
Related: McNulty sat in on a videoconference organized by L.A. Theatre Speaks in which theater directors talked about creating stage content for online platforms. He examines [the challenges these productions face]( â but also what it means for theaters to have audiences âgrow accustomed to watching plays and musicals on their devices.â
Makeda Easter likewise reports on [how dance companies are going virtual]( to survive. âThere is no going back to normal,â says Laura Karlin, director of Invertigo Dance Theatre.
âLetâs bring the house concert into the twenty-first 21st century.â Alex Ross profiles classical pianist Igor Levit, who has staged dozens of impromptu concerts online since the lockdown began in Germany, in the [New Yorker](.
For the students at the Los Angeles County High School of the Arts (LACHSA), Ramón C. Cortines School of Visual and Performing Arts (Grand Arts High School) and other arts-focused schools, âtheir lost performances go beyond the disappointment of not being able to share their work with family and friends,â reports The Timesâ Dorany Pineda. âThe arts, after all, are not electives for them but potential careers.â Pineda explores [what the pandemic means for arts students](.
For [a related profile]( she spends time with LACHSA student Estefani Lopez, who used to make the daily trek from Riverside to L.A. to study music. She now studies remotely on Zoom and is rehearsing for a virtual version of âWest Side Story.â
[Estefani Lopez performs at L.A. County High School for the Arts last November]
Estefani Lopez performs at L.A. County High School for the Arts last November (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)
Contributor David Pagel ponders the contradictions of [teaching a physical medium such as art online](. âThe technology we use to maintain a safe distance ..., " he writes, âmakes its own âartisticâ decisions: deleting details, editing experiences, changing colors, shifting scale and dimension.â
For her exhibition at A-B Projects, artist Phoebe Cummings [created sculptures out of raw clay]( that would decay over the showâs run. The show was cut off by the safer-at-home orders, but the works remain in place as a curious memento mori, writes contributor Leah Ollman, âa reminder of the transience of beauty and life itself.â
ADVERTISEMENT
Dispatches from hither and yonder
Governor Newsom has [OKâd the re-opening of outdoor museums]( in California â but L.A. County, which has been hardest hit by the pandemic, âmay go a little slower than the stateâ said L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer. And then there is the question of what qualifies as an outdoor museum.
But you neednât wait for the museums to open. The artist-run space Durden and Ray has organized installations of outdoor works around the city that you can see on a walk or from your car. âWe Are Here / Here We Areâ gets rolling Saturday. [Check its website]( for a map of locations.
[An installation view of outdoor paintings by Luciana Abait]
An installation view of outdoor paintings by Argentine artist Luciana Abait, on view as part of the outdoor exhibition âWe Are Here / Here We Are.â (Luciana Abait)
In the meantime, museums in Europe have begun to reopen [with new rules]( that include one-way routes and obligatory face masks.
More than 200 arts leaders in New York have been [gathering for a daily Zoom call]( to exchange ideas, tips and mutual support in the midst of the pandemic.
Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times
Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.](
In late April, the city of Vilnius, Lithuania, [announced plans]( to turn over streets and squares to restaurants and cafes to allow them to operate with adequate social distancing. Now Berkeley has [introduced legislation for a similar option](. And San Jose has announced a program that will allow businesses such as restaurants to occupy parts of streets and parking lots. What say you, L.A.? Turn Melrose into an outdoor cafe?
Art critic Martin Herbert writes about why the art world needs to [take a break]( âIn the art world and outside of it, I suspect most of us spend more time on intake than contemplation.â
Jerry Saltz on deli coffee and and the Art Institute of Chicago and Wheat Thins and cancer and COVID-19. [Somehow it all comes together](.
Citylab rounds up maps of [life under lockdown](.
The best arts online
Looking for some good streams? Matt Cooper has the latest, including [a free, 48-hour stream]( of a performance of âCatsâ (the theatrical work, not the movie), [a performance]( of Nora and Delia Ephronâs monologues piece âLove, Loss & What I Woreâ featuring Carole Kane and Tracee Ellis Ross, and [a virtual festival of dance films]( organized by Dance Camera West.
You can find his regular missives at [âThings to Do: Arts and Culture.â](
[Dance Camera West is staging an online film festival devoted to dance]
A still from âFrom Knee to Heart,â about Spanish dancer and choreographer Sol Picó â featured in Dance Camera Westâs online film festival. (Dance Camera West)
The newly formed Gallery Association Los Angeles has just launched [galleryplatform.la]( which will feature rotating exhibitions by L.A. galleries. The first show features work from artists represented by 1301PE, Jeffrey Deitch, Park View / Paul Soto, Vielmetter Los Angeles and many more.
Arts writer Jillian Steinhauer rounds up a list of [five artists to follow on Instagram](. And New Yorkâs New Museum has launched âBedtime Stories,â an online initiative organized by artist Maurizio Cattelan that features a crew of collaborators (including Iggy Pop and Abraham Cruzvillegas) [reading selections from their favorite books](.
The museums are getting boozy. The Getty has posted [recipes for cocktails inspired by ancient art](. (Though, seriously, Getty mixologists, I gotta go find saffron in the middle of a pandemic?)
For parents: The way to San Jose is through [a new coloring book](.
Passages
Thomas Sokolowski, the longtime director of the Andy Warhol Museum, who led some of the art worldâs early responses to the AIDS crisis, [has died at the age of 70](.
In other news
â âItâs time to [take California back]( from Joan Didion,â writes Myriam Gurba.
â A new doc, âMarius Petipa: The French Master of Russian Ballet,â explores the legacy of [the legendary 19th century choreographer](.
â [The Huguenot smallpox doctor]( who was an early librarian at the British Museum. With shout-outs to Voltaire and a murderous portraitist.
â The Getty Research Institute has [acquired the archive]( of Rachel Rosenthal, a key player in the theater, feminist and performance art scenes in 20th century L.A.
â Alex Beam on how Mies van der Roheâs Farnsworth House got built. (Hint: [Very contentiously](
â And walker David Ulin writes on books about [walking](.
Last but not least ...
Iâm here for any comedy routine that somehow brings the Sinaloa Cartel and Amazon labor practices together into [one punchline](.
ADVERTISEMENT
Thank you for reading the Los Angeles Times
Essential Arts newsletter.
Invite your friends, relatives, coworkers to sign up [here](.
Not a subscriber? Get unlimited digital access to latimes.com. [Subscribe here](.
[Los Angeles Times]
Copyright © 2020, Los Angeles Times
2300 E. Imperial Highway, El Segundo, California, 90245
1-800-LA-TIMES | [latimes.com](
*Advertisers have no control over editorial decisions or content. If you're interested in placing an ad or classified, get in touch [here](.
We'd love your feedback on this newsletter, please send your thoughts and suggestions [here](mailto:newsletters@latimes.com).
You received this email because you signed up for newsletters from The Los Angeles Times.
[Manage marketing email preferences]( · [Unsubscribe from this newsletter]( · [Terms of service]( · [Privacy policy](
[Do Not Sell My Info]( . [CA Notice of Collection](
FOLLOW US [Divider](#) [Facebook]( [2-tw.png]( [Instagram]( [YouTube](