"Carlos Almaraz: Playing With Fire" hits Netflix. Plus, plotting the future of theater and contemporary takes on the Black Madonna in our weekly arts newsletter
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
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October 3, 2020
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As I write this, we are exactly two days into October and it is already [full of surprises](. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with the weekâs essential culture news â and escapist Instagram accounts:
Art on the screen
It seems right in one pandemic to consider the life of an artist felled by another: Carlos Almaraz, the Mexico City-born, L.A.-raised painter whose expressionistic canvases of fiery car crashes found strange beauty in destruction and in L.A.'s indifferent, industrial landscapes. Almaraz [died in 1989 at the age of 48]( from AIDS-related complications. But his paintings have remained vital to the ways in which Los Angeles sees itself.
[In a black-and-white photograph, Carlos Almaraz holds a magnifying glass while standing before two painted figures.]
Artist Carlos Almaraz is surrounded by his work in an undated photograph. (Elsa Flores Almaraz)
The artist, who was the subject of [a major retrospective]( at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 2017, is now at the heart of a new documentary, âCarlos Almaraz: Playing With Fire,â directed by Elsa Flores Almaraz, [a painter]( who is also Almarazâs widow, and actor and filmmaker Richard Montoya, a founding member of the theater troupe Culture Clash.
The 85-minute doc [landed on Netflix this week]( and itâs a loving paean to an energetic painter who served as a locus of L.A.'s Chicano cultural scene. Yet it doesnât shy away from Almarazâs troubled periods, including the sexual abuse he suffered at the hands of an uncle, the struggles he had as a young man reckoning with his bisexuality and his bouts of excessive drinking.
The film features the bigwigs of the Chicano-gentsia â Edward James Olmos, Cheech Marin, Dolores Huerta â all commenting on his work and the time.
But it is at its best when focused on Almaraz and his work â examining how theater inspired his painting; how he infused chilly, grid-based minimalism with his own more buoyant language; and how in the activist-minded 1970s he sought a new way of working with Los Four, the collective that included painters Frank Romero, Gilbert âMagú" Lujan and Beto de la Rocha. (A curious omission from the film: painter and muralist Judithe Hernandez, who joined Los Four after it had formed.)
A wealth of archival video interviews with Almaraz, as well as access to his journals give the documentary an intimate touch â as does footage of the artist late in life, when AIDS had devoured his vigor. Ultimately, itâs a compelling tribute to an artist who lived fast and died young. But who left behind a rich visual legacy that was as informed by art history as it was by the singular landscapes of Los Angeles.
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Coronavirus and the arts
In L.A., small theaters have banded together into a new group, Alternative Theatre Los Angeles. [Its first public event]( âTogether L.A.,â is an online festival of 10-minute plays that debuted this week and continues through Oct. 17. The Timesâ Daryl H. Miller reports that actors filmed their performances at home; engineers then edited them together at home, sending âthe message that not only is theater still being made, but it continues to innovate.â
[Engineer Bree Pavey sits before a two-screen monitor laptop setup that capture Zoom feeds of actors. ]
Engineer Bree Pavey captures multiple live Zoom feeds of actors performing the play, âFork in the Middle,â stitching them together for broadcast. (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)
Theater critic Charles McNulty reports on how these small theaters have been [dealing with the devastation of remaining closed for seven months](. âThe festival is proof that something positive has emerged from an unprecedented crisis,â he writes. âWith mutual survival on the line, L.A.'s network of small theaters has strengthened its communal bonds, pooling resources and ingenuity and setting aside (at least for the time being) competition.â
The Center Theatre Group is [also pivoting to digital](. In addition to the Ahmanson, the Mark Taper and the Kirk Douglas, L.A.'s largest nonprofit theater company this week announced the creation of its newest venue: the Digital Stage, and artistic director Michael Ritchie tells The Timesâ Jessica Gelt that he would like to make it a permanent offering. Content will be produced by a newly formed group of theater artists dubbed the CTG Creative Collective.
Contributor Catherine Womack tells the story of [a collection of violins]( belonging to Jewish musicians that somehow survived World War II. These were to be played in a concert at the Soraya in March, then go on display at the Holocaust Museum Los Angeles. The pandemic, however, put an end to that plan. Last week, they were flown back to Tel Aviv â but not before a group of L.A. musicians got to play them.
[Seven violins are perched on their stands inside a concert hall.]
Violins from the âViolins of Hopeâ were to be employed in a concert at the Soraya. (Luis Luque)
For the first time in 42 years, the Pritzker Prize ceremony [will not be held in person](. Instead, the prizeâs organizers will be debuting a documentary-style video in honor of winners Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara.
Classical notes
Times classical music critic Mark Swed has been digging into âWagnerism: Art and Politics in the Shadow of Music,â New Yorker writer Alex Rossâ 784-page tome devoted to [the wildly influential and wildly complex German composer]( â a âpoisonousâ anti-Semite whose music has moved and influenced many. âUnderscoring Wagnerâs pervasive influence on culture and society, Ross makes his subject less Wagner himself â although he has plenty to say about the problematical man,â writes Swed, âthan the way we absorb ideas and attitudes, how they can grow into cancers or panaceas.â
[Alex Ross, the author of "Wagnerism," a tome devoted to the wildly influential and wildly complex German composer.]
Alex Ross, the author of âWagnerism,â a tome devoted to the wildly influential and wildly complex German composer. (Josh Goldstine)
Swed also continues his series on listening with a piece about composer Toru Takemitsuâs âNovember Steps,â a commission for the New York Philharmonic that premiered in 1967 and featured both Western and traditional Japanese instrumentation. But this is [no work of âpalatable musical fusion,â]( writes Swed. Instead, it is a âstrange and radical work,â a âdialogue that is no dialogue at all.â
Find Swedâs entire series [here](.
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About art
Walter and Louise Arensberg were important L.A. collectors who mixed pre-Columbian sculptures with works by L.A. painters such as Knud Merrild with international figures such as Marcel Duchamp and Diego Rivera. A new book by Getty Publications, âHollywood Arensberg: Avant-Garde Collecting in Midcentury L.A.,â catalogs that collection â down to the ways in which [those works were arranged in their home](. Times art critic Christopher Knight has a look at what these arrangements and this âcaptivating bookâ reveal about art and artists in L.A. in the 20th century.
[A black-and-white photograph shows paintings and sculpture surrounding a fireplace]
Floyd Faxon photographed the Arensberg living room in 1951, with works by Picasso, Braque, Duchamp and Brancusi mixed with pre-Columbian sculpture. (Getty Publications)
In Santa Monica, Mark Steven Greenfield has a solo show on view at William Turner Gallery that finds [fresh ways to interpret the image of the Black Madonna](. In Greenfieldâs hands, these maternal figures become contemporary icons that help vanquish white supremacy. âI was taking those classical paintings by Bellini and Raphael and Da Vinci, and I was Black-ifying them,â Greenfield tells me.
Carol Cheh [reviews the show]( for KCETâs âArtbound.â The works, she writes, âhold complicated visions â visions of Black perseverance and Black love in the face of unspeakable evil, visions of compassion even toward your worst enemy, visions of a future filled with more Black joy as white supremacy finally recedes into the background.â
[A Renaissance-style painting framed in gold leaf features a Pieta scene with Black figures.]
âCollateral,â 2020, by Mark Steven Greenfield. (Mark Steven Greenfield / William Turner Gallery)
Getting the band together
Times culture reporter Ashley Lee [goes behind the scenes]( on the filming of âThe Boys in the Band,â the new film version on Netflix of Mart Crowleyâs 1968 play, directed by Joe Mantello. Judy Becker, the filmâs production designer, talks about the apartment set in which much of the action takes place and what it reveals about Michael, a character who is âperpetuating a delusion of aspiration and fabulousness to the point that itâs practically encroaching him.â Lee also looks at the filmâs slightly revised ending. So ... spoiler alert!
[Jim Parsons as Michael stands in a doorway that leads to his apartment's terrace]
Jim Parsons as Michael in the film adaptation of âThe Boys in the Band.â (Scott Everett White / Netflix)
LACMA on my mind
Tom Christie, former arts editor at L.A. Weekly, in [an op-ed for The Times]( wonders what the deal is with all the carping about Peter Zumthorâs design, describing the old buildings as âpedestrian, vertical, confining.â He writes: âMy bet, and I believe a safe one, is that these high-functioning professionals have in fact got this, down to the door handles, and that the result will be as promised: sublime.â
Architecture writer Joseph Giovannini, however, says [there is good reason to carp](. âThere are two demolitions going on at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art,â he writes in the New York Review of Books. âOver the last several months, the museum has razed three of the four structures on the East Campus ... The second is the demolition of the museumâs very mission.â
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LACMA director Michael Govanâs house is getting downsized. I report on the sale of the 5,100-square-foot, Tudor-style home, owned by the museum, which is provided as a perk of employment. It is now on the market for [a cool $6.575 million](.
On the art front: LACMA has teamed up with the Vincent Price Art Museum [to acquire works]( by the late photographer Laura Aguilar and multidisciplinary artist rafa esparza â including a stirring painting on adobe that was shown at MASS MoCA last year. ([I wrote about that installation]( then.)
An act of remembrance
The Timesâ Daniel Hernandez profiles Roberto Lovato, author of âUnforgetting: A Memoir of Family, Migration, Gangs, and Revolution in the Americas,â about how he aims to bring nuance to [depictions of the Salvador]( experience]( in the U.S. âForgetting begets forgetting,â he writes in the book, and âbegets ongoing mass murder.â
[Author Roberto Lovato stands before MacArthur Park Lake]
Author Roberto Lovato in MacArthur Park in Los Angeles, which lies at the heart of L.A.'s Central American community. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
Lovato also [writes a piece]( for the San Francisco Chronicle about what it means to read Joan Didionâs âSalvadorâ as a Salvadoran.
Essential happenings
Matt Cooper rounds up the happenings both virtual and IRL. On [the digital front]( that includes a new video work by performance artist and Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors, which is premiering on the REDCAT website on Saturday. And his list of [in-person events]( include a series of walk-up and drive-up performances staged by the Heidi Duckler Dance company, which is celebrating its 35th anniversary.
Plus, on Monday, PBSâ âPOVâ series is screening Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarraâs [hybrid docu-feature]( about immigration activists who get themselves arrested as a way of investigating conditions inside a for-profit immigration prison. In [his review of the film]( published in May, Times film writer Mark Olsen commended the filmâs âaudacityâ and âunrestrained boldness.â
[In a scene from "The Infiltrators," a man named Beni is seen in orange jumpsuit inside a metal-walled cell.]
Juan Gabriel Pareja, center, as Beni in âThe Infiltrators.â (Oscilloscope Films)
Passages
JoaquÃn Salvador Lavado, the Argentinean cartoonist universally known as Quino, whose comic strip about a politically minded little girl named Mafalda, [has died at 88](. Lavadoâs[obit]( in the Spanish daily El PaÃs reported that the cartoonist, beloved all over Latin America and in Spain, was once asked in private what would have become of that little girl today. He responded that âshe would probably be dead because she would have been disappeared by the Argentinean military.â
[Argentine cartoonist Quino sits before a wall of stuffed flowers and a cut-out of his character Mafalda.]
Argentine cartoonist JoaquÃn Salvador Lavado, better known as Quino, poses next to his character Mafalda in 2014. (Natacha Pisarenko / Associated Press)
This week, Iâm pouring one out for Quino. Mafalda, a girl prone to asking many, many questions, has served as [my social media avatar]( for years.
In other news
â The Flora L. Thornton Foundation, an L.A.-based nonprofit known for its support of cultural causes, [also supports anti-immigration organizations]( according to a new report by Lexis-Olivier Ray in L.A. Taco.
â San Francisco Chronicle critic Joshua Kosman looks at what can be done to contend with [operaâs Orientalist tendencies](.
â The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra is [going virtual for its 2021-21 season]( with 16 episodes directed by artist and designer James Darrah.
â Ballet dancer Misty Copeland has [a new childrenâs book]( about how she came to be a dancer called âBunheads.â
â A cancellation of a traveling retrospective of the work of Philip Guston has [generated outrage]( among artists, curators and critics. Writer Martha Schwendener [examines Gustonâs artistic legacy](.
â Since 2018, Andres Serrano has been collecting hundreds of President Trump-related objects. Now [he has gathered them into a book]( titled âThe Game: All Things Trump.â
â David Adjaye, the architect behind the Smithsonianâs National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., [is the recipient of the RIBA Royal Gold Medal](.
â Landscape designer Mia Lehrer, founder of Studio MLA, is joining [the design team]( for billionaire Nicolas Berggruenâs mountaintop think tank, the Berggruen Institute.
â [This 2018 episode]( of âReply All,â about the likely origins of QAnon, is a must-listen.
And last but not least ...
Because we could all use some escapism: [âAccidentally Wes Anderson.â](
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