A report on Dallas' freedman's town prompts a look at Los Angeles' own urban inequities. Plus Charlie Chaplin's favorite painter at the Laguna Art Museum, digital theater and art for the COVID-19 dead in our weekly arts newsletter
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
September 27, 2020
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We are barreling toward [the most insane election ever]( so may I recommend some comfort carbs in the form of this very wonderful recipe for [Amatriciana Estiva](. (Hint: easy-to-find bacon is almost as good as guanciale.) Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with the weekâs essential culture news â and Stanley Kubrick-inspired spoofs.
Urbanismâs racial reckoning
It is with great interest that I read architecture critic Mark Lamsterâs [epic report]( on Joppa (pronounced jop-ee) in the Dallas Morning News this week â about a freedmanâs town founded in 1872 by the formerly enslaved that was later absorbed into the city of Dallas. The district lies just six miles from the cityâs downtown but is isolated from the larger urban framework by its location: wedged between the Trinity River, a railyard and a row of industrial sites.
Lamsterâs lengthy report takes the reader back to the neighborhoodâs origins and details a catalog of planning decisions â both mindless and premeditatedly terrible â that have led to Joppa having a life expectancy that is a staggering 13 years lower than in other Dallas neighborhoods and a poverty rate of 34.2%.
Among the list of urban wrongs: In 2018, the city cut off the neighborhoodâs one reliable pedestrian access point with barely any discussion. And even that reliable access point was questionable, consisting of a trek across nearly a dozen railroad tracks.
Joppaâs isolation is also its curse, writes Lamster. âFor more than a century, it has allowed Dallas to exploit, neglect, terrorize and otherwise abuse Joppa and its residents. The neighborhood serves as a disturbing case study in the systemic racism faced by Black communities nationwide.â
[A marching band in yellow t-shirts marches down a residential street, followed by high school graduates in gowns]
Members of the Joppa community in Dallas honor recent high school graduates with a second-line parade led by members of the Unfaded Brass Band in May. (Lynda M. González / Dallas Morning News)
Certainly, itâs a lens through which we could easily view the Los Angeles landscape.
Our freeway system pretty much [built segregation into the landscape]( as my colleague Matthew Fleischer has written. And it did so extra-destructively: When Caltrans plotted the route of the 10 Freeway, it did so [right through the Black enclave]( of Sugar Hill in historic West Adams. A freeway quite literally runs [through Hollenbeck Park]( in predominantly Latino Boyle Heights â a neighborhood that bears the environmental burden of 135 acres of freeway. Boyle Heights also contends with [lead contamination from the now-shuttered Exide plant]( which was permitted to operate on temporary permits for more than three decades. And the promised environmental cleanup is still [patchy and incomplete](.
Lamsterâs report, which has been in the works for more than a year, and features some terrific images by photojournalist Lynda M. González, is an incredible examination of urban planningâs role in maintaining a de facto separate and unequal urban space for Black people. As Lamster says in [the related podcast interview]( itâs âthe idea of white supremacy built into the very fabric of the city.â
An absolutely essential read.
Now, on to our other business...
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California landscapes
Turn-of-the-20th-century artist Granville Redmond was a talented painter. He also has a curious backstory: He was a friend of Charlie Chaplinâs and appeared in eight of his films â including the 1931 classic âCity Lights,â in which he played a sculptor. Times art critic Christopher Knight [digs into a show of the artistâs landscapes]( and their myriad influences. Itâs on view at the Laguna Art Museum, which is open with COVID-19 precautions in place. âThe optical fireworks of the thickly daubed surfaces are held in check by almost mathematically charted compositions,â he writes. âItâs as if a smooth, placid, sepia-toned picture were being infused with thick color.â
[An impressionistic painting shows yellow wildflowers and a tree against a scrubby hillside]
Granville Redmond, âGolden Wildflowers,â 1920 â his works played with tone and order. (Laguna Art Museum)
Plays and players
The Timesâ Charles McNulty has been checking out a slew of online theatrical offerings, including David Israel Reynosoâs interactive âPortaleza,â as well as digital stagings of Aya Ogawaâs âZero Coast House,â Ifa Bayezaâs âThe Ballad of Emmett Tillâ and Madhuri Shekarâs âIn Love and Warcraft.â He reports that technological bells and whistles do not make up for [work that highlights the human condition]( âDigital performance will be in a better place when it worries more about human contact than superficial spectacle.â
In addition to his computer, McNulty is also watching TV. Specifically, Mart Crowleyâs âThe Boys in the Bandâ â which he describes as [âthe granddaddy of gay playsâ]( â which is about to land on Netflix. The production reunites the cast of Joe Mantelloâs Tony-winning 2018 Broadway revival and is directed by Mantello. âThe work is both dated and eternal,â writes McNulty, âa period piece that still has something urgent to say.â
[A scene from "The Boys in the Band" shows Zachary Quinto as Howard receiving a birthday cake. ]
Zachary Quinto as Harold, seated, in the new film version of âThe Boys in the Band.â (Scott Everett White / Netflix)
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Culture and representation
The Ford Foundation has launched [a $156-million initiative]( called Americaâs Cultural Treasures to support arts organizations of color. Among the early recipients are L.A. organizations such as the East West players theater company and the Japanese American National Museum, each of which will receive at least $1 million. A second wave of grants will land in 2021 in support of regional arts groups.
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Soraya Nadia McDonald has a great read in the Undefeated about what it will take to put on more [plays by people of color on Broadway](. Like every other area of culture, it is plagued by systemic challenges, among them: the small number of gatekeepers who decide what gets seen in Broadway theaters, what theaters are even considered Broadway theaters and who is doing all of the critical analysis after productions open.
A Riverside home once owned by the Japanese American Harada family â which connects to [a legal case tied to citizenship rights]( â has been declared one of the 11 most endangered historic places in the U.S. by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. The house, says Rep. Mark Takano, âis curiously relevant to today, with all the anti-immigrant feeling and questions about who is an American and who is not.â
[A frontal view of a wooden, clapboard house painted in putty shade.]
The Harada House in Riverside. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
Arts and coronavirus
For a new work titled âMAYDAY! MAYDAY! MAYDAY!â Los Angeles artist Susan Silton is asking volunteers to write the name of someone who has died of COVID-19 on a slip of paper and mail it off to the White House. It is one of several works by the artist that [touch on our moment](. In another, she uses vintage news clippings to track Hitlerâs rise to power in the 1930s. Silton says she is intrigued by the âquotidian banalityâ of news. âYouâre looking at a front page and thereâs something about a farm bill and something about banks and something about crime,â she tells me, âand something about German fugitives telling of atrocities at the hands of the Nazis.â
[A collaged image shows vintage New York Times covers from the 1930s]
Susan Siltonâs âA potentiality long after its actuality has become a thing of the pastâ gathers vintage copies of the New York Times from the 1930s. (Susan Silton)
Essential happenings
Matt Cooper rounds up all [the latest cultural happenings online]( including the L.A. Philâs new series of filmed concerts, shot at an empty Hollywood Bowl. The first one, titled âLove in the Time of COVID,â features mezzo-soprano JâNai Bridges and selections from works by Gustav Mahler, George Walker and Peter Lieberson. Itâs free to watch for 30 days!
[Gustavo Dudamel conducts the Los Angeles Philharmonic on the stage of the Hollywood Bowl]
Gustavo Dudamel and the Los Angeles Philharmonic perform at an empty Hollywood Bowl in August. (Natalie Suarez / L.A. Phil)
If you see some crazy-looking cars on Santa Monica Boulevard this weekend, thatâs because Deitch is [staging a rally]( of Kenny Scharfâs âKarbombz!,â the everyday vehicles Scharf emblazons with his colorful, alien-like characters. This is a good event for the kids â with the rally ending up at Deitchâs Hollywood gallery, where [a show of Scharfâs work]( is on view. Vehicles get rolling at 1 p.m. on Saturday. Naturally, pandemic protocols will be in place inside the space.
Passages
Juliette Gréco, the French chanteuse who had Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre write songs for her, and later landed a starring role in Jean Cocteauâs âOrpheus,â [has died at 93](.
San Francisco philanthropist Ann Getty, known for her support of the arts and sciences, and baptized âRavishing Redâ by columnist Herb Caen for her fiery red hair, is [dead at 79](.
In other news
â Chris Buckley and Austin Ramzy of the New York Times have written [a must-read]( on the destruction of mosques and Islamic shrines in China.
â Four international institutions announced they would postpone a Philip Guston retrospective over concerns about âpainfulâ images of Ku Klux Klan characters in some of the artistâs paintings. The move was not well received by curators or critics, one of whom decried it as [âpatronizing.â](
â The Huntingtonâs âBlue Boyâ has gotten a freshening up and is now hanging [back in his gallery](.
â The Getty has an interesting digital presentation on Google Arts & Culture about Balthazar, the Black African magi frequently depicted [in Medieval and Renaissance art](.
â Marla Berns, director of UCLAâs Fowler Museum, [will retire after 19 years in the role]( â and more than 170 exhibitions, 44 publications and thousands of programs.
â A San Diego mural by Salvador Roberto Torres, who helped create Chicano Park in Barrio Logan, [was demolished]( despite protests from the community.
â San Francisco galleries have teamed up to create [a communal online platform]( called 8-bridges.
â If you read Spanish, Juan Manuel Heredia has a terrific piece in Arquine (from 2014) about how L.A. architecture critic Esther McCoy critiqued the work of Mexican architect Luis Barragán for the ways in which his purportedly Modern buildings echoed the age-old tradition of [allocating little habitable space]( for domestic staff.
â Alex Ross looks at how Black scholars are examining the [white supremacy embedded in classical music](.
â Do you need [a $395 water bowl]( for your dog made in the form of Marcel Duchampâs âFountainâ? Yes, yes you do.
And last but not least ...
Lydia Cambronâs â2020: An Isolation Odysseyâ is [the short film for our moment](.
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