This week our most essential composer, Ludwig van Beethoven â unless you care to call him Louis van Beethoven, as a new German biopic does â marks what would have been his 250th birthday.
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 PRESENTED BY Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra* December 19, 2020
[View in browser]( Hello, Iâm Times music critic Mark Swed, this week giving our irreplaceable Carolina A. Miranda a break before Christmas as we keep arts essential. Iâm here just in time to point out that this week our most essential composer, Ludwig van Beethoven â unless you care to call him [Louis van Beethoven]( as a new German biopic does â marks what would have been his 250th birthday. So Beethoven is where weâll start. [A woman looks at a sculpture of Beethoven surrounded by flowers.]
A sculpture of Beethoven in Kamp-Lintfort, Germany. (Martin Meissner / Associated Press)
Music for our times In his [review]( of the German TV film, Times contributor Robert Abele found it âelegantly tailoredâ but ânever exactly stirring,â which sounds more Louis-like than the Ludwig we all know. I havenât seen it because Iâve been too busy trying to catch up with all the other things Beethoven. Itâs been a full plate. But then, the Beethoven plate is always full. No matter where you are, no matter what you listen to, Beethoven molecules might be in the ether. It was a late Beethoven string quartet with which I happened to begin my coronavirus-centric [âHow to Listenâ]( series, because it deals directly with disease and recovery, which is an extraordinary feat for a string quartet. In my discussion about Beethovenâs political significance with William Kinderman, filmed at the [Thomas Mann House]( the noted UCLA scholar reveals a striking breadth of Beethovian relevance. The 250th birthday has easily become all about inclusiveness. A [big birthday concert]( televised by the Beethoven Haus in Bonn, Germany, found Irish step dancers stomping, a mime making Beethoven goofy, George Floyd memorialized and the premiere of Quincy Jonesâ soulful, joyously jazzy version of the âOde to Joy.â Iâm âstoked and woked,â an exuberant Jones said, calling Beethoven an âinspiration until the end of time.â ADVERTISEMENT BY LOS ANGELES CHAMBER ORCHESTRA A sublime Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 from Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra Episode Four of the ensembleâs new series â âClose Quartersâ â features a passionate and masterly performance of Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 set to images and art created in a first-of-its-kind digital studio at Wilhardt + Naud. Music Director Jaime MartÃn and Creative Director James Darrah have partnered with prominent Los Angeles-based mixed media artist Ardeshir Tabrizi to create a genuinely exciting artistic work that celebrates collaboration in an age of isolation. Close Quarters is a Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra original series and you can find it for free on Youtube, Facebook and LACOâs website. [Watch It Now.]( End of advertisement Zooming with Hockney In his 17th century lockdown cottage in Normandy, France, David Hockney imaginatively sketched Beethoven on his iPad (which the Daily Mail in London imaginatively hailed as âscroll over Beethovenâ). It perfectly illustrated my own birthday take on the [Beethoven effect](. Meanwhile, Barbara Isenberg [caught up with Hockney]( via a video call to France and found the 83-year-old artist contentedly scrolling and strolling far beyond Beethoven. Drawing his surroundings daily, he intends to finish the year with 220 pieces that will be exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts in London next year. [David Hockey's iPad portrait of Ludwig van Beethoven to celebrate his 250th birthday.]
David Hockeyâs iPad portrait of Ludwig van Beethoven to celebrate his 250th birthday. (David Hockney / Apple) Although he has lost most of his hearing, Hockney retains his love for music. He says heâs thankful that, unlike performing artists, he can stay inside and work and thrive (and, alas, smoke). A Beethoven-Orozco connection? What does Beethoven have to do with the Museum of Latin American Artâs controversial auction of works from its permanent collection, a move the chief curator said was to diversify holdings? Not much, on the surface. Times art critic Christopher Knight, who has been closely following the effort, called it a [flimsy excuse](. âMuseum collections are strengthened by the addition of important art, not by its subtractions,â he contends. [Reporting]( by staff writer Deborah Vankin led to commentary by Knight in which he declared the online sale âpretty much a fiasco.â There is, though, a connection between Mexican murals and Beethoven. In writing about the Whitney Museum of American Artâs revelatory exhibition [âViva Americana: Mexican Muralists Remake American Art, 1925 to 1945,â]( Carolina A. Miranda reminds us of the importance of the gripping mural âPrometheus,â which José Clemente Orozco painted at Pomona College in 1930. The greatest of Beethovenâs neglected major works is his only ballet, âCreatures of Prometheus.â Esa-Pekka Salonen has revived it with the Philharmonia in London as a marvelous video undertaking that includes fanciful animations by Hillary Leben and commentary by Stephen Fry, and itâs being streamed for free on the [orchestraâs website](. ["Prometheus" by Jose Clemente Orozco]
The mural âPrometheusâ painted by Jose Clemente Orozco in 1930 for Pomona College. (San Diego Museum of Art) If you know me, youâll know that I interject John Cage into the conversation whenever possible. So, hereâs a new fun fact about the Pomona âPrometheusâ: In order to get his students more personally invested in the making and meaning of art, the collegeâs art historian, José Pijoán, had them raise the $300 to commission the mural. One of those students was a sophomore who fashioned himself a writer and, upon watching Orozco work, decided he needed to see the world. This rebellious dropout got Pijoánâs help getting a job working for an architect in Paris. That lasted about 10 minutes â just long enough to convince Cage that music proved a stronger passion. Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( ADVERTISEMENT
From Long Beach to D.C. Following the MoLAA auction, it was [Mirandaâs turn]( to question efforts to diversify, or not diversify. Utah Sen. Mike Lee blocked a bill to create the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Latino in Washington, D.C. Lee argued that the museum stood not for diversity but for divisiveness, his term being âbalkanization.â Miranda said, âThe guy calling out cancel culture proceeded to cancel the museum.â In the process, she noted, Lee also canceled another institution tied to the bill, the National Womenâs History Museum. Armenia artists respond Miranda also reports that the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan has inspired [new politically minded art]( in L.A. and Glendale, home to a large Armenian community. The intention of the new public art, which includes performance and protest songs by L.A. artists of Armenian descent, is to draw attention to the destruction of Armenian culture by Azerbaijani loyalists in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. [A row of women in white gowns bearing the image of a rifle]
She Loves Collective performing âThe Rifles Our Ancestors Didnât Haveâ in downtown L.A. (Liana Grigoryan) Iâll note that L.A.âs community of prominent Armenian musicians, including violinist Movses Pogossian and members of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, have recently released one of the yearâs most wondrous recordings, âCon Anima,â a survey of haunting chamber music by Tigran Mansurian, [the cult-worthy dean of Armenian music]( exquisitely produced on ECM. What next? As if we know The pandemic has inspired no end of speculation about the future. Theater critic Charles McNulty reveals some of the unmet potential of virtual theater in his [review]( of magician Helder Guimarãesâ âThe Future,â which the Geffen Playhouse is presenting via Zoom. Unable to capture the moment as he did in [âThe Presentâ]( in May, Guimarães gives us a future here that comes across as elusive as cappuccino art drawn in the foam. [Helder Guimarães points to a photocollage in his show. width=]
Helder Guimarães in the Geffen Stayhouse production of "The Future," directed by Frank Marshall. (Julie Ann Renfro) McNulty was back on Zoom speaking with Donald Trump impersonator J-L Cauvin about his future. The president may not have had such a hot year, what with COVID-19 and the election, but heâs been a boon to humorists. â[Iâve had a great year]( Cauvin says, though not without some Twitter spats. In this week when the Electoral College made Joe Bidenâs presidential win official, the award for the best critical prognostication goes to Times television critic Robert Lloyd, who wrote a magnificent [column]( about why he didnât need to watch the results on election eve and how meaningful that was. Consolations for the Season of Scrooge Speaking of the future, itâs impossible to make plans for the week ahead other than to cancel everything, now that weâre in the throes of a terrible COVID-19 surge. No, you canât go check out the âPrometheusâ in Pomona just now. [No âMessiah,â no âNutcracker.â]( Staying home is the only reasonable option during these holidays, when what we want most from Santa is a vaccine jab. Last week, listings coordinator Matt Cooper provided [suggestions](. Iâd like to offer a few more. The Canadian experimental opera company Against the Grain Theatre and Toronto Symphony have filmed a version of [an all-Canada âMessiah.â]( Beethoven doesnât have a monopoly on inclusivity. This is Handel in Arabic (âHe is despisedâ sung in a mosque), Dene, French, Inuktitut, Southern Tutchone and, yes, thereâs still some English. The singers are phenomenal, and so is the filming from First Nations northern lands to Torontoâs Graffiti Alley. This deserves to become a holiday classic, and it can be seen for a month on the Against the Grain website. A too-seldom-heard alternative to âThe Messiahâ is Bachâs âChristmas Oratorio.â Couldnât you use a couple of hours of uplift? A new recording conducted by Jordi Savall with his usual Catalan forces may be slightly less jubilant than most (who isnât these days?), but it has a spiritual glow that is exactly what we need. Here is a great musician who really can read the future: The [recording]( was made in Spain at the end of 2019. [Conductor Jordi Savall ]
Jordi Savall (Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)
More culture to catch Staff writer Makeda Easter writes about a compelling virtual art exhibition aimed at [humanizing the incarcerated](. If you havenât yet seen Viola Davis and the late Chadwick Boseman in the Netflix version of âMa Raineyâs Black Bottom,â stream it now and then read staff writer Ashley Lee as she [digs into the ending](. Reviews of Center Theatre Groupâs [âElephant Room: Dust From the Starsâ]( and [âEstella Scroogeâ]( imply some pandemic amusements, but donât count on [âMuseum Town,â]( a superficial new documentary about MASS MoCA, or on the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, whose opening date initially had been set for this week. On Friday the Academy Museum, citing rising COVID-19 infection rates in L.A. County, [postponed the opening]( again, this time to Sept. 30. And last but not least ... A New Yearâs suggestion: Go to the website of the Komische Oper in Berlin and [see what operetta irreverence]( director Barrie Kosky is up to. Kosky is the worldâs master of chorus lines, so expect to be mouthing OMGs after each chorus line proves more outrageous than the last. Check out what ever is on. Itâs the best opera entertainment out there. Essential Arts will be on holiday next weekend, but the newsletter will be back with Carolina A. Miranda in the writerâs seat Jan. 2. ADVERTISEMENT
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