L.A. and Juneteenth, why Erik Satie remains relevant, a Patti LuPone Q&A, the liberation of Aunt Jemima â all the week's essential culture news.
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
PRESENTED BY HANOVER SQUARE PRESS AND BROKEN PEOPLE BY SAM LANSKY*
June 20, 2020
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Welcome back! Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with the weekâs essential culture news â and artsy Twitter bots:
Marking Juneteenth
Juneteenth marks the day in which enslaved people in Texas belatedly learned of their freedom â two and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation. The Timesâ Gustavo Arellano looks at [how the holiday has been historically celebrated in Los Angeles]( â turning up in 19th century clips from The Times and the Los Angeles Herald that note early celebrations.
[A blurb about Emancipation Day (Juneteenth) festivities in the Nov. 14, 1885 edition of Los Angeles Times]
A blurb in the Los Angeles Times notes Juneteenth festivities on Nov. 14, 1885. (Los Angeles Times)
Plus, the California Historical Society has [an informative post]( about how the celebrations came to California. Times TV critic Lorraine Ali [examines how]( Black TV creators â Donald Glover with âAtlantaâ and Kenya Barris with âblack-ishâ â have brought Juneteenth into cultural consciousness.
And Steven Nelson, the incoming dean for the Center of Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art (who was until very recently at UCLA), writes about how Juneteenth brings to mind the words of Booker T. Washington: it [âstands for effort, not for victory complete.â](
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Art in our time
As people in cities around the world took to the streets to protest systemic racism, German pianist Igor Levit sat down at his keys and performed Erik Satieâs âVexationsâ 840 times over 15½ hours. Times classical music critic Mark Swed reports that Satie has become [the go-to composer during this troubled time]( âIn his strange music, his irreverent prose, his inexplicable mannerisms, his radical attitudes and his incomprehensible inconsistencies, Satie may just be what we need: With the insight of a genius and an oddballâs mischievous wit and miraculous wisdom, he turned everything on its head.â
Times theater critic Charles McNulty [spent quality Q&A time]( chatting with Broadway star and two-time Tony Award-winner Patti LuPone. In a highly enjoyable, freewheeling conversation, they talk about the pandemic, #MeToo, the collective nature of stage craft, her most beloved roles and the political moment. âI am in awe, inspired and moved to tears by the protesters in this movement/revolution,â she tells him. âItâs overdue.â
[Patti LuPone stands behind a pool table in her home]
Patti LuPone at home. (Joshua Johnston)
The city and civil rights
The protests against George Floydâs killing have raised issues of structural racism across society, including the world of design and urban planning â a field that shapes public space through design and policy. I spoke with nine urbanists, architects and advocates about [how we can make public space more equitable]( for Black people. Part of that will comes from reckoning with the past, says Columbia University architectural scholar Mabel O. Wilson: âThe built environment, it emerges from European encounters of colonialism. In the West, thatâs what architecture is â the European project that reached out and developed a kind of system of domination economically, politically and racially.â
[The Rev. Al Sharpton walks with demonstrators during a march to end New York's stop-and-frisk program in 2012.]
The Rev. Al Sharpton, center, walks with demonstrators during a silent march to end New Yorkâs stop-and-frisk program in 2012. (Seth Wenig / Associated Press)
Many urbanists have also written pieces that list numerous ideas for how to make public space more equitable.
Amina Yasin, who works on development and policy planning in Vancouver, [has a list of four points]( that includes abolishing âcommunicideâ â planning that destroys a cohesive community and disperses the tenants.
Destiny Thomas, a planner and cultural anthropologist from Oakland, suggests [including environmental justice]( as a tenet of city planning. And architect Bryan Lee Jr., who is the design principal at the New Orleans-based firm Colloqate, recommends that architects â[stop supporting the carceral state]( through the design of prisons, jails and police stations.â (The latter point was echoed in [a column]( by New York Times architecture critic Michael Kimmelman.)
Susan A. Phillips, a professor of environmental analysis at Pitzer College, writes about [the significance of graffiti]( during the Black Lives Matter protests: âProtest graffiti is a critical intervention in urban space, especially as municipalities and police attempt to shut down the streets.â
[A droneâs eye view]( of the âAll Black Lives Matterâ sign painted onto Hollywood Boulevard.
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Monuments falling
Statues around the country continue to come down. The Asian Art Museum in San Francisco is [removing a bust]( of patron Avery Brundage, who has been suspected of being a Nazi sympathizer. The museum has also pledged to examine his legacy.
In New Mexico, [a man was shot]( at a protest over a public monument to Spanish colonizer Juan de Oñate. Among his various brutal acts as governor in the early 16th century, Oñate ordered his men to cut off a foot of Acoma men. In 1997, activists sawed off a foot of an Oñate statue in Alcalde as symbolic retribution. (Simon Romero had [a good story]( about it in the New York Times in 2017.)
Related: archeologist and historian Kurly Tlapoyawa compares the impetus to maintain the statue of Oñate to [the desire to maintain Confederate symbols]( in an essay from 2018.
Madge Dresser has a look at the history of how the statue of notorious slave trader Edward Colston in Bristol, England, [came to be](.
[A A sign taped onto the statue of Edward Colston is dedicated to "the slaves that were taken from their homes"]
A sign taped onto the statue of Edward Colston is dedicated to âthe slaves that were taken from their homes.â (Associated Press)
Art critic Philip Kennicott of the Washington Post has an idea for all those plinths: [leave them empty](.
Coronavirus and the arts
The A+D Museum will [shut down its Arts District gallery]( and instead focus on pop-up and virtual programming, reports The Timesâ Deborah Vankin. Moving forward, A+D will present architecture and design exhibitions throughout Los Angeles, as well as in other cities. The focus, explains executive director Anthony Morey, is âcommunity-based exhibitions and events where people donât have to come to us, but we come to them.â
[The A+D Museum building in the Arts District.]
The A+D Museum building in the Arts District. (A+D Museum)
The Center Theatre Group will [remain dark until the spring of 2021](. L.A.âs largest nonprofit theater company will not resume productions until late April (with âTo Kill a Mockingbirdâ), reports Ashley Lee. âShould health officials become more optimistic about a safe timeline to resume large gatherings, we will work as quickly as possible to return to the stage sooner,â says artistic director Michael Ritchie.
Related: Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center have [canceled all fall shows](. New Yorkâs two major classical music organizations will likely not have any large-scale performances until 2021.
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The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures is [delaying its opening]( to April of 2021 due to âthe unprecedented and devastating pandemic.â
In addition, the Joffrey Ballet has [canceled all performances]( through the end of 2020.
The Getty Foundation has [awarded $2 million in grants to 80 L.A. arts organizations]( affected economically by the pandemic. The foundation has also awarded $700,000 in relief grants to 400 Los Angeles artists.
The Timesâ Makeda Easter [surveyed 18 performing arts organizations in L.A.]( to find out what percentage of audiences have donated the cost of their tickets from canceled shows as a way of supporting these arts groups. The totals vary by organization. For example: for canceled Disney Hall shows, 11% of ticket income was donated, while the Antaeus Theatre Company in Glendale had 40% of ticket holders donate their ticket fees. Itâs âan interesting time to think about what certain economics performing arts are functioning under,â says Edgar Miramontes, deputy executive director at REDCAT, âand envision this other model that doesnât rely necessarily so much on ticket revenue.â
[REDCAT deputy executive director Edgar Miramontes sits in his organization's empty theater]
Edgar Miramontes, deputy executive director and curator at REDCAT. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)
In the cultural arena
Galleries are creeping open with timed visits and safety precautions. Times art critic Christopher Knight pays a visit to Michael Tedjaâs installation of painted paper works at Chimento Contemporary, which had been briefly on view before the safer-at-home orders landed. The works, produced on 210 sheets of commercial card stock, make for an environment that â[erupts into a boisterous visual cacophony]( playfully mad.â
[A close-up view of a few of Michael Tedja's 210 drawings at Chimento Contemporary]
Michael Tedjaâs are on view at Chimento Contemporary. (Christopher Knight / Los Angeles Times)
You may know Kimberly Drew as [@museummammy]( on social media. (She founded the Black Contemporary Art blog on Tumblr.) She now has a book out, âThis is What I Know About Art,â that is geared at a teen audience, but offers valuable lessons about art, race and empowerment. Writes Knight in [his review]( âCall this a meaningful, profoundly personal lesson in scale and complexity, themes essential to any deep understanding of works of art, museum cultures and how they operate in American life.â
The best arts online
On Sunday evening, Los Angeles Nomadic Division is [streaming a series of video and performance works]( organized by L.A. artist Guadalupe Rosales. The project, titled âChannel Flip, Meet Me at the Edge of the Sun,â will explore questions of violence and how it is experienced and released by the body. It was a theme that happened to coincide with the protests, which began as she was filming her piece.
Matt Cooper has been staying on top of the countless number of online offerings. On his rundown is [a virtual, socially distant performance]( of a long-lost work by the Martha Graham Dance Company that served as a response to the cruelties of the Spanish Civil War.
Dance writer Gia Kourlas [has an interesting piece]( about how Grahamâs lost choreography was unearthed. The piece, titled âImmediate Tragedy,â dates to 1937 and was reassembled using archival sources such as photography. Composer and conductor Christopher Rountree of Wild Up created the new score and it will air courtesy of the Younes and Soraya Nazarian Center for the Performing Arts and the Martha Graham Dance Company.
FWIW, I caught the Friday premiere of the work while writing this newsletter and it is very stirring. Hereâs a link to the performance on [YouTube](.
[Martha Graham dances, arms extended, in "Immediate Tragedy."]
Martha Graham performs âImmediate Tragedy,â 1937. (Robert M. Fraser / Martha Graham Resources)
New Yorkâs Goodman Gallery has helped organize [a mini-festival]( of the films of Shirin Neshat (who recently had [a solo show at the Broad](. Starting Saturday, her films will each be available online for 24 hours, one of them in collaboration with the Art Newspaper.
And the La Jolla Playhouse has launched an online program called Digital Without Walls (WOW). [The first episode is available online]( and Iâm here for it: Culture Clashâs âThe Totally Fake Latino News.â Somebody please give Bob Raza a show. Find other episodes at [this link](.
Find more listings at our [Things to Do: Culture]( page.
Passages
Manuel Felguérez, an abstract artist who was part of a generation of 20th century Mexican painters who broke with the muralist movement (known as la Generación de la Ruptura), [has died at the age of 91]( of COVID-19.
[In a tribute]( (in Spanish), that covers the artistâs life and career, Gerardo Antonio MartÃnez writes that Felguerezâs raw materials were geometries and colors and that his work always displayed a âfidelity to experimentation.â
Essayist Elena Poniatowska, who was a longtime friend of the artist, writes that [he brought âa breath of fresh airâ and ârebellionâ]( to Mexican art.
[A man stands before two large abstract paintings by Mexican artist Manuel Felguérez at MUAC in Mexico City.]
A visitor stands before two large abstract canvases by painter Manuel Felguérez at MUAC in Mexico City in 2019. (Associated Press)
Ralph Caplan, a scholar and critic who explored the nature of industrial design in accessible ways, has died at 95. Best anecdote from [the New York Times obit]( âHe said his most daring editorial innovation was to send his out-of-work actor friends to design events as a cost-saving measure. Paid in snacks and cocktails, they brought back press kits for the magazineâs tiny staff to review.â
In the news
â Betye Saar became known in the 1970s for a mixed-media assemblage titled âThe Liberation of Aunt Jemimaâ that featured a mammy figurine brandishing weapons. After Quaker Oats announced that it is discontinuing the Aunt Jemima brand, [Saar issued a statement]( in response: âSheâs liberated! Finally at long last!â
â L.A. painter Mark Steven Greenfield â who has an interesting background both as protester and, later, a police artist â [reflects on the political moment](.
â The National Museum of African American History and Culture is [launching a collection initiative]( called âRendering Visibleâ that aims to gather work by Black architects.
â Dancewear companies are reckoning with the implicit bias of [the color ânudeâ]( â which by default means white.
â Glenn Adamson on [the myths of Japanese minimalism](.
And last but not least ...
Follow @boschbot, [a bot that Tweets]( bits of Hieronymus Boschâs âThe Garden of Earthly Delightsâ throughout the day. Pairs well with news.
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