A sculpture by Rodney McMillian turns the White House into a superficial front. Plus artists and the election and L.A. and roller skating, in our weekly arts newsletter
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[Los Angeles Times]
Essential Arts
PRESENTED BY HANOVER SQUARE PRESS*
October 31, 2020
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Welcome to these monstrous days between Halloween and Election 2020: End of Days. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, arts and urban design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, and Iâve got lots of essential arts.
A flimsy front
It is a week in which all talk is about the White House and who gets to inhabit it next, so it seems right to pay the White House a visit. Not the actual White House in Washington, D.C., but the facsimile that L.A. artist Rodney McMillian has on display at Vielmetter Los Angeles.
This White House is all facade: a scrim crafted out of scraps of white vinyl sewn together by hand to create a crude, one-dimensional approximation of the U.S. presidentâs home. It is a newer version of a piece that McMillian constructed for his first solo exhibition in 2018 at the Contemporary Austin in Texas.
[A wide shot shows the facade of the U.S. White House made out of thread and black and white pieces of vinyl.]
âWhite House II,â 2018-2020, by Rodney McMillian, shows the building crafted out of vinyl and thread. (Jeff McLane)
On that occasion, [I spoke with the artist]( about the work and what it reveals about our political system: a graceful, idealistic facade behind which resides the ugly residue of our history. (The actual White House was built, in part, [by enslaved laborers]( Structures such as the White House represent important sites of âpower and indoctrination,â he said at the time.
As we careen toward the election, âWhite House II,â as the installation is titled, takes on added significance. There is its almost fragile nature: a symbol of power transformed into something pliable, something that could be easily torn apart. It also comes amid a fierce debate on the [nature of monuments]( and what those monuments represent â both overtly and through their aesthetics.
Scholar Lyra D. Monteiro published [a must-read essay]( earlier this week examining the nature of our monument design and what those designs convey. It is a rigorous examination of the ways in which Neoclassical architecture and Classical sculpture have been used to define a United States born and representative of whiteness, and by extension, white supremacy.
McMillianâs White House raises those same issues â albeit in sculptural form. And to stand before it is to viscerally come to terms with those legacies.
His solo show âBody Politicâ at [Vielmetter Los Angeles]( is on view through Dec. 5. Visits are by appointment [via this link](. Do not miss.
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Art and the election
Since weâre on the art and politics beat: âRegardless of the outcome of the 2020 election, the fabric of the nation must be repaired,â writes Times theater critic Charles McNulty, âand no one is excused from this necessary work.â
In [a pre-election essay]( for a special issue of Sunday Calendar he looks at the role art and artists can have in this process. âNot everything need be about Trump,â he adds. âBut if this figure of obsession cannot be resisted, letâs at least adopt a wider focus, one that recognizes him as more of a symptom than a cause.â
In the meantime, I look at how the foundational U.S. myth of rugged individualism has morphed into something that better resembles toxic individualism â evident in the ongoing disdain for masks in some sectors (such as the White House!). Perhaps itâs time to center our national ethos around [foundational stories of a more collective nature]( such as barn-raising. âBecause weâre not getting through this pandemic as individuals. Like it or not, weâre in this together.â
[Theodore C. Teepleâs (1835-1913): Jacob Rohr Barn Raising]
Theodore C. Teepleâs photo of âJacob Rohr Barn Raising,â 1888, from the collection of the Massillon Museum in Ohio. (Theodore C. Teeple / Collection of the Massillon Museum)
Other essays in the issue ask âCan we bridge our cultural divide?â Film critic Justin Chang looks at [democracy and the movies]( â how these acts of solidarity that thrive on public togetherness are under threat. TV critic Robert Lloyd [provides a field guide]( to the internet comedians who made their names poking Trump and anticipated what will happen after the election. Game critic Todd Martens examines how politics have [invaded the game space]( â itâs not just AOC on Twitch; even Joe Biden's campaign has his own âAnimal Crossingâ island. And Company Town reporter Stephen Battaglio looks back at Rock the Vote on [its 30th anniversary]( and the state of the youth vote today.
[Illustration: Can we bridge our cultural divide?]
(Ahoy There / For The Times)
Art in the time of coronavirus
Because we could all use a little bit of delightful reading at this moment, Times art critic Christopher Knight comes through with [10 artsy coffee table books]( to get us through the pandemic. Itâs got a pinch of Goya, a sprinkling of Guerrilla Girls, a dash of Anni and Jose Albers, and plenty of sensuous Bernini. ¡Ay mamá!
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Times classical music critic Mark Swed reports that the pandemic has sorely tested the L.A. Phil. (By next summer it will have lost an estimated $90 million in projected revenue.) But in the intervening months, the orchestra [has been testing other outlets]( for its music: radio, TV, streaming video, DVD/Blu-Ray and even vinyl. âEach in its own way reminds us of what weâre missing,â he writes. âBut each also adds a dimension.â
The Finnish National Opera is back to doing live opera â and thankfully for the rest of us, its new show, directed by Esa-Pekka Salonen, is [available for free streaming](. In a nod to the pandemic, it is an operatic spoof of âCosi Fan Tutteâ called âCovid Fan Tutte.â And it is âbrilliant,â writes Swed, a âtranscendent Mozartean spoof ... unlike anything else that the coronavirus has wrought.â
[Six performers are seen on stage while another is suspended in a circular structure above in "Covid fan Tutte"]
Karita Mattila, center, in a scene from Finnish National Operaâs âCovid Fan Tutte.â (Stefan Bremer / Finnish National Opera )
Plus, Swed â who, pandemic or no pandemic, remains relentless â has [the latest dispatch]( in his series on listening: This week, he takes on Gustav Mahlerâs âEighth Symphonyâ â the âmost extravagant, most rapturous, most ecstatic, most blissful, most all-consuming symphony.â (Find the whole series [here](
COVID-19 has resulted in the advent of the drive-in dance show. The Timesâ Makeda Easter [goes behind the scenes]( on a new show by L.A. Dance Project that was choreographed by a pair of former members of the Batsheva Dance Company. The safety procedures were rigorous, she notes. But âSolo at Dusk,â as the piece is titled, âfelt like stumbling into a secret ritual.â
[A male dancer performers in a parking lot against an industrial backdrop]
L.A. Dance Projectâs drive-in performances are held in the parking lot of the companyâs downtown studio. (Benjamin Millepied)
And even though most theaters in the U.K. remain closed, Britainâs delayed Laurence Olivier Awards were staged as [a prerecorded event streamed online](. Actors Ian McKellen, Andrew Scott (aka the hot priest on âFleabagâ) and Sharon D. Clarke were among the acting winners.
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Skate land
While others were making sourdough, Makeda Easter has been [re-learning to roller skate](. The process has connected her to a long-running culture of Black skaters in L.A. âAs an L.A. transplant, learning to skate and spending time with Black skaters in particular has made me feel more connected to this city and to a unique culture and style,â she writes, âone that has been popularized by social media but whose origins are not always properly acknowledged.â
[A vintage black and white photo shows a young Black woman skating before a crowd in Venice.]
A skater does her thing in 1986 in Venice Beach. (Cassy Cohen / Los Angeles Times / UCLA Library Special Collections)
In the museum world
With just two hours to go, the Baltimore Museum of Art put plans to sell three valuable canvases by Andy Warhol, Clyfford Still and Brice Marden on pause. The proposed sale led two prominent former board chairmen to rescind verbal pledges and two artist trustees to step down, and it drew a public statement from the professional organization that governs deaccessions. The Timesâ Deborah Vankin [has all the deets](.
In [an earlier column]( art critic Christopher Knight had described the move as redolent of a âcringe-inducing carelessness.â
[A view of Andy Warhol's "The Last Supper," 1986, at the right hand side of a gallery]
Andy Warholâs 1986 work âThe Last Supper,â at right, was one of the items that was pulled from auction by the Baltimore Art Museum. (Washington Post / Getty Images)
Still, the Palm Springs Art Museum sold Helen Frankenthalerâs âCarouselâ at Sothebyâs for $4.7 million â which was [over the high estimate](. And the Brooklyn Museum unloaded seven works by various artists, including Matisse, Monet and Joan Miró, raking in $20 million. The New York Timesâ Hilarie Sheets explores why that latter sale [hasnât generated as much controversy](.
Since too much controversy is never enough: After four museums announced that they would postpone a traveling Philip Guston exhibition until 2024, generating a public backlash, they have shifted position and announced that the show [will now open in 2022](. In addition, the Art Newspaper reported that Tate Modern curator Mark Godfrey [has been suspended]( after making public comments critical of the postponement.
Leaders at various New York City museums are wondering [how long theyâll be able to function]( at 25% capacity. In L.A., The Timesâ editorial board says itâs time to [reopen museums](.
In the galleries
This week, Christopher Knight checks out Kahlil Josephâs âBLKNWS®,â which is [on view in various locations around Los Angeles]( as part of the Hammer Museumâs âMade in L.A.â biennial, in collaboration with Los Angeles Nomadic Division. âLike the collaged newspapers on a Cubist cafe table painted next to a cup of coffee or a glass of wine,â writes Knight, â âBLKNWS®' invites contemplation, which is something CNN and Fox rarely summon.â
Contributor Mimi Zeiger has a look at the [more than 50 toilet paper holder designs]( at Marta in Echo Park, which range from elegantly functional to downright bizarre. The show may be whimsical, but it has a message, she writes: âIt takes 37 gallons of clean water and a cocktail of bleach and formaldehyde to produce that quilted white roll weâve come to expect next to the toilet â and nearly a third of the market is controlled by Koch Industries, according to the gallery.â
[An upside down toy figure painted white holds a roll of toilet paper with an extended leg]
A.H.O.F. (Chase Biado + Antonia Pinter) created this design for âUnder/Over.â (Marta)
The Art, Design & Architecture Museum at UC Santa Barbara has [an interesting online presentation]( about California Modernist Walter S. White (1917-2002), known for his saddle-shaped roofs and an interest in creating affordable and D.I.Y. housing to contend with the post- World War II housing crunch.
Essential happenings
Matt Cooper has all the latest digital cultural happenings, with [16 culture picks]( that include a performance by jazz saxophonist and composer Kamasi Washington, who is performing his score for a recent documentary about Michelle Obama as part of the LA Philâs âSound/Stageâ series.
[Kamasi Washington performs on his saxophone, surrounded by other musicians.]
Kamasi Washington performing in 2015. (Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles Times)
He also comes through with a lengthy list â [18 events!]( â for how to celebrate Halloween and DÃa de Los Muertos, both virtually and IRL. This includes a haunted hayride in San Dimas that opts for automobiles instead of hay wagons and the essential Day of the Dead altars in Grand Park.
Plus, Mark Swed highly recommends taking 40 minutes to watch the Kronos Quartetâs âTestimony,â a film that is being presented by Stanford Live. In addition to music, the film features spoken-word performances by various poets and, as Swed reports, âis an extraordinary look at our moment â racially, politically, socially and musically.â Starting with the wild opening performance of âThe Star-Spangled Banner,â it will grab you by the ear buds and not let go. [âTestimonyâ streams for free through Monday](.
In other news
â The L.A. Times has [a new newsletter]( The Latinx Files will be stewarded by my colleague Fidel Martinez and will cover all things Latino.
â Everybody: We want a more equitable art world! Newfields in Indianapolis: What if we take out all of the contemporary art and replace it with [an Instagram-friendly, immersive Van Gogh installation](
â Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion have [macaroni in a pot](. Rich Orange County-ites have a Dale Chihuly in a net. Get ready to read [the most insane rich-people neighbor squabble of all time](.
â Sahra Sulaiman has an interesting report at Streetsblog about how a lot in South L.A. will be turned into [a supportive boarding school]( for underserved youth in partnership with Metro and L.A. County.
â It took Hollywood 13 years to open a Target store, and Curbedâs Alissa Walker has [things to say]( about its design: âThis Target is a giant, life-size time capsule of everything that was wrong with L.A. in 2007 and everything thatâs still wrong with L.A. in 2020.â
â L.A. architect Michael Lehrer, founder of Lehrer Architects, a firm known for its [institutional designs]( as well as community projects such as the [Aetna Street Bridge Home]( in Van Nuys, is the winner of the AIA LAâs [Gold Medal]( for 2020.
â Chilean architect Alejandro Aravena [has been named chair]( of the Pritzker Architecture Prize jury.
â MLB merch is getting fancy: [A minimalist poster]( shows off the architecture of Dodger Stadium. #GoDoyers
â Since itâs [decorative gourd season]( here are some Getty-inspired [pumpkins](.
â Also, The Timesâ music team has come up with the ultimate [Halloween-in-quarantine playlist](.
And last but not least ...
Not on the playlist, but should be: Pacoima Techno with [some plushie Goth techno](. Youâre welcome, art world. Youâre welcome.
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