Lesson for UCSB: Daylight is recommended in prison design. Plus, SoCal inspires a composer, and Culture Clash revives 'Chavez Ravine,' in our weekly arts newsletter
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[Essential Arts] PRESENTED BY The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens* Why hello, fellow kids! I love me some [Lizzo as Baby Yoda]( but Steve Buscemi won Halloween this year for [dressing up as his own meme](. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, arts and urban design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, with your weekly culture newsletter â in which we cover everything from prison dorms to cheese. Dormzillaâs natural-light problem Question: What does it take to make architecture go viral? Answer: Design an 11-story mega-dorm in which an estimated 94% of the dormitory spaces have no access to windows, fresh air or natural light. Thatâs the story of Munger Hall at UC Santa Barbara. The university, facing a severe housing crunch, has accepted a take-it-or-leave-it proposal from 97-year-old billionaire Charles Munger, who has designed and aims to partially fund this travesty. As I noted in a column earlier this week, [the idea is a bad one](. Really bad. So bad, in fact, that Los Angeles architect Dennis McFadden stepped down from his longtime post on the universityâs design review committee and described the project as âunsupportable from my perspective as an architect, a parent and a human beingâ in a blazing resignation letter. He later wrote [an opinion piece for The Times]( on the proposed design he called âdangerous.â Student housing should be a place where âlife can unfold in multiple ways, places of emotional refuge that raise the spirit and dignify the individual,â he wrote. âMunger Hall is not one of those places.â Now a group of six architectural historians at the university have lunched [a petition]( in opposition to the project. (At the time of this writing, it had garnered more than 1,700 signatures.) It reads, in part: âJust because Munger Hall seeks to address a serious crisis is no justification for investing $1.4 billion in a monstrous project based on untested and, in many respects, highly disturbing design principles.â Naturally, the comparisons to prison design have been rife. It can seem trivial to compare a poorly conceived dorm, one stocked with a host of amenities, in which students are free to come and go, to architecture that is explicitly designed to be controlling and punitive. (Architecture, incidentally, that is [disproportionately wielded against people of color]( But since weâre going there, letâs go there. This week, I spent some quality time perusing the third edition of the â[Jail Design Guide]( Published in 2011, itâs a broad set of design recommendations established by the National Institute of Corrections, a division of the U.S. Department of Justice, for the design of new jails or jail renovation projects. It had interesting things to say about access to daylight. In the living areas, it notes that, under ideal conditions, âcells and dayrooms should have exposure to natural light. Natural light is valuable in that it contributes to good physical and mental health.â The report even discusses providing access to daylight, when feasible, in âadministrative segregationâ units â otherwise known as solitary. In jail design, access to windows is mitigated by a range of security concerns, so in many cases, daylight is provided through indirect means, such as skylights or clerestory windows. But the point is that daylight is a concern. And it should be a concern for UC Santa Barbaraâs leadership. Because the dorm, as proposed, is a horror show. What exactly would it be like to inhabit this dorm during one of Californiaâs regular [rolling blackouts]( [An overhead floor plan shows tiny bedroom areas centered around social spaces in the interior of a building.]
A detail of the dormitory floor plan for the proposed Munger Hall at UC Santa Barbara. Artificial lighting systems would purportedly make up for the lack of daylight. (Van Tilburg, Banvard & Soderbergh) Carl Allen, who runs a popular urbanism account on TikTok, noted that there are ways of achieving density that [donât sacrifice air and daylight](. These can come through a buildingâs form (tall and slender or long and narrow) or through the use of strategically placed courtyards. âIn this context, Munger Hallâs floor plan is especially dystopian,â he said. âAnd it doesnât have to be that way.â He is right. If a university â of all places â is going to experiment with architecture, it should be in favor of design that is better than basic jail design, not worse. Related: Fred Bernstein at Architectural Record has [an interview]( with Munger about the project, and it is full of doozies, starting with: âI expect these buildings to sprout up all over America.â God help us all. And Alexander Luckmann, a graduate student at UCSB, reflects on how Mungerâs philanthropy reflects [the creep of privatization on public space]( â comparing it to the Barry Diller-funded Little Island in Manhattan. âLittle Island lets a billionaire dictate what kind of public space a city should have, and where it should be,â he wrote. âMunger Hall is the ugly West coast twin of Little Island.â [A broad view shows the tulip-like concrete forms of Little Island Park emerging from the Hudson River under a blue sky.]
Munger Hall is like Little Island (seen above) but uglier, writes Alexander Luckmann. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times) ADVERTISEMENT BY The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens
[The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens](
Kehinde Wiley: A Portrait of a Young Gentleman A newly commissioned painting by renowned American artist Kehinde Wiley, A Portrait of a Young Gentleman, debuts in the historic Thornton Portrait Gallery at The Huntington, across from Thomas Gainsboroughâs iconic painting The Blue Boy (ca. 1770). [Buy Tickets]( End of advertisement Classical notes Since weâre on the subject of the California coast, itâs a good time to turn to the work of Kaija Saariaho. The Finnish composerâs new work, âVistaâ â which recently had its U.S. premiere courtesy of the L.A. Phil â was inspired by a drive she took from L.A. to San Diego. The piece [captures the nuances of the landscape]( writes classical music critic Mark Swed: âWhile âVistaâ is essentially an abstract study in the transformation of an ever-shifting musical landscape of melodic shapes, textures, timbres and harmonies, an inevitable sense of foreboding pervades its off-heated atmosphere.â [Susanna Malkki, dressed in black, is seen leading the orchestra at Walt Disney Concert Hall.]
Guest conductor Susanna Mälkki led the L.A. Philâs presentation of Kaija Saariahoâs âVistaâ at Disney Hall. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
On and off the stage Theaters may be reopening, but Times theater critic Charles McNulty says there are still [virtual offerings worth logging on for](. Namely, Culture Clashâs âChavez Ravine: In 9 Innings,â presented as part of the Center Theatre Groupâs Digital Stage, which reimagines the troupeâs play about the razing of Mexican American neighborhoods to make way for Dodger Stadium for the digital sphere. âThis production is as much a love letter to Center Theatre Group, which has supported this work through many iterations,â writes McNulty, âas it is a history lesson for our all-too-forgetful city.â Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( Chiara Atikâs âPoor Clareâ takes the Middle Ages tradition of the saintâs play (which were about religious miracles) and turns it into âan offbeat comedy millennials can believe in,â writes McNulty. And âmiracle of miracles, it almost works.â [The production,]( which is premiering at the Echo Theater Co. as a production of Atwater Village Theater under the direction of Alana Dietze, lacks suspense, he notes, but âthe charmingly daffy anachronistic dialogue compensates for a plot that feels like a fait accompli.â The Timesâ Ashley Lee writes about [why it matter]( that Cynthia Erivo has been cast as Elphaba in the film adaptation of âWicked.â The character is, at heart, âan activist who fights for the oppressed and is discriminated against because of the color of her skin,â writes Lee. Yet, over the years, the role has overwhelmingly gone to white actors. âCasting a Black actor as Elphaba is long overdue, and Erivo is more than suited to play her.â [Cynthia Erivo stands on a red carpet in a strapless gown with a voluminous, feathery skirt.]
Cynthia Erivo attends the L.A. Philâs Homecoming Concert and Gala at Walt Disney Concert Hall, where she also performed. (Ringo Chiu / For The Times) Meanwhile, behind the scenes: Williamstown Theatre Festival artistic director Mandy Greenfield [resigned this week]( following allegations of a toxic work environment and repeated safety hazards described in a February letter to leadership from 75 artists and others affiliated with the festival. Replacing her as interim artistic director is Jenny Gersten. A [Times investigation]( for which Ashley Lee interviewed 25 current and former festival staffers, documented accidents, 16-hour days, an inadequate system for reporting safety issues and a culture that kept workers from speaking out for fear of professional repercussions. ADVERTISEMENT
Art report The Timesâ Deborah Vankin checks in with LACMA to see [where things stand]( on its $750 million building project. Fossil finds have resulted in months of construction delays, and the museumâs fundraising on the project, which is centered on architect Peter Zumthor's building that will straddle Wilshire Boulevard, stands at $679 million â just $24 million more than where it stood a year ago. Moreover, the museum recently took on additional bond debt to finance construction, bringing total debt to a rather staggering $822 million. Director Michael Govan tells Vankin that things have picked up now that the pandemic is retreating: âThereâs huge, positive momentum thatâs returned, post-reopening.â Letâs hope so. [As Iâve reported in the past]( the additional bond debt is going to make the museumâs debt-to-assets ratio groan under the weight: thatâs $822 million in debt against the museumâs nearly $1.1 billion in assets, as reported in IRS 990 tax forms filed in 2020. Thatâs a debt-to-asset ratio of more than 78%. Even when you adjust that figure to count the annual subsidy LACMA receives from the county as additional endowment, the debt-to-asset ratio nonetheless reaches 50%. And as a professor of nonprofit financial management told me last year, ideally you want that ratio to reside below the 40% mark. Which means LACMA better pray that the building stays on budget. [A construction worker in a lift rests next to some of the last remnants of the William Pereira-designed buildings at LACMA.]
A sliver of LACMAâs old William Pereira-designed buildings remains standing during the demolition process in 2021. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times) Want more? Arts writer Hunter Drohojowska-Philp had [a good state-of-LACMA]( in Alta magazine. Being buchona vibes Beauty influencer Jenny 69 recently went viral for her corrido tumbado single âLa 69.â But I was more intrigued by her aesthetic: a look known as âbuchona,â a slang term that emerged as a way to describe the flamboyant girlfriends of 21st century narcos from Sinaloa but that has since evolved to include women who have active roles in the cartels or simply adopt the buchona style. As with anything narco, the defining trait is excess: designer labels, exaggerated hourglass figures and gobs of bling. Itâs a look that fuses rural traditions from northern Mexico with Kim Kardashian influencer culture â and thanks to the internet, it is [going global](. Need more buchona? Hereâs [a Spotify playlist](. (Hat tip to [Josh Kun]( for the link!) [A photo collage shows images of women, hair, lips, tight athletic pants and gold necklaces featuring an AK-47]
The buchona aesthetic is about excess and power. (Photo Illustration by Marylu E. Herrera / For The Times; Photos from Shutterstock/Getty Images/Unsplash) Speaking of internet aesthetics, the New York Timesâ Amanda Hess has a terrific piece on Mark Zuckerberg and Meta: âThe aesthetics of the metaverse, with its ghastly translucent holograms, evoke the specter of death. Its schedule of activities reads like an advertisement for a virtual retirement community where isolated millennials can live out their final days.â [Not terrifying at all](. Honoring the dead Day of the Dead was celebrated earlier this week and my colleague Daniel Hernandez profiled Ofelia Esparza, one of the cityâs most renowned altar makers. At 89 years of age, Esparza remains energetically committed to [preserving the meaning of this increasingly commercialized celebration]( honoring ancestors. âDoing the ofrenda itself is, for me, the main event,â she says. [Three women before a colorful altar covered in marigolds]
Ofelia Esparza (seated), with her daughters, Elena Esparza, left, and Rosanna Esparza Ahrens, in front of the community altar they made with volunteers in Grand Park. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times) ICYMI, The Times created [a digital community altar](. It has received hundreds of submissions. Holiday season The holiday frenzy has landed, and The Times arts team is here to lend a hand with the shopping. Christopher Knight comes through with [11 fantastic ideas]( for coffee table book gift ideas, including a compendium of African artists, a catalog devoted to the works of the late Hung Liu and a cookbook inspired by data leaks. Ordering now! Jessica Gelt and Craig Nakano in the meantime, combed [the various museum gift shops]( for some of the best shopping bets. Think: artist jars, California mugs, a Yayoi Kusama infinity scarf and some lovely ceramics from Peopleâs Pottery Project. [An earth-colored ceramic bowl with a blue-ish glaze is shown against a white background]
A serving bowl by Peopleâs Pottery Project. (Silvia Razgova / For The Times) [My gift guide is just six items]( but it involves a stylish butaca chair, an artsy cobija and a plastic dinosaur. In other words, pure class! Check out [the guideâs main page]( for many more wonderful gift ideas â including [all things made-in-L.A.]( and [the best gifts for stoners](. Essential happenings Matt Cooper, as usual, has [all the happenings]( including a dance work by the L.A.-based dance troupe Ate9 and a play by Inda Craig-Galván about a pair of Black women who form an unlikely alliance to fight racism. He also comes through with [an essential museum guide]( which includes the re-installation of the Huntington Library's American art galleries, centered on the idea of âBorderlands,â and the unveiling of Kehinde Wileyâs âA Portrait of a Young Gentleman,â a newly commissioned piece that responds to Gainsboroughâs âThe Blue Boy.â And because Wileyâs work is currently bookending Los Angeles: Also noteworthy are the portraits of Barack Obama and Michelle Obama that have landed at LACMA and go [on public view]( starting Sunday. I was excited to see them at the press preview this week because I missed the portraits when I was trotting through the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C., in July. The paintings â by Wiley (who painted the president) and Amy Sherald (the first lady) â have been widely reproduced in the media, but seeing them in person gives you appreciation for all the details that do not come across on an smartphone-sized screen. There is certainly their scale, but also the ways in which the artists were able to capture the way these figures bore the weight of their roles in their gazes. They are a perfect pairing with [âBlack American Portraits,â]( which was curated by LACMAâs Christine Y. Kim and Liz Andrews and is installed in the gallery right next door. Itâs an ebullient meeting of Black historical figures â sailors, artists, dandies, jurists, politicians â interspersed with characters that emerge from artist imaginations. Do not miss. [A woman wearing a black ensemble stands before large, colorful paintings of Barack and Michelle Obama]
A viewer takes in the Obamas at LACMA. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times)
Passages Mark Roglán, an expert in 19th century Spanish art who led the Meadows Museum at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, is [dead at 50](. Julie Green, an artist who memorialized the last meals of death row inmates on ceramic plates, [has died at the age of 60](. Ivy Nicholson, a top model who became one of the first superstars in Andy Warholâs Factory, is [dead at 88](. Pat Martino, an acclaimed jazz guitarist who could veer from bop to Eastern music, and who had to learn to replay the guitar after suffering from an aneurysm, [has died at 77](. Brazilian pianist Nelson Freire, who was known for his finesse as a musician, as well as his indifference to the trappings of success, has [died at 77](. âThere is a big difference between music and the music business,â he said in the early 1990s. âItâs a completely different language, and when I get too involved in talking it, I get a little bit sick. As for talking about myself, it actually bores me.â In other news â Max Pearl has [a great report]( on Miguel Fernández de Castro's border-inspired works: âBy cutting through the melodramatic or moralizing attitudes that prop up clichés about the border region, he forces viewers to question the story lines imposed on it by people who donât live there.â
â Iâm digging the wry humor in Ellsworth Kelly's [postcard collages](.
â William Poundstone [rounds up the recent acquisitions]( by the Huntington Library, including works by painter Thomas Cole, photographer Manuel Ãlvarez Bravo and quilt-maker Mary Lee Bendolph.
â [A look at the attempt]( to create some sort of influence-peddling safeguards around Hunter Biden's gallery show in New York.
â The Chargers are settling into L.A.: the team will [construct a new headquarters and training facility]( in El Segundo, designed by Genslerâs Ron Turner.
â What rising sea levels spell for Venice, Italy: [disaster](. And last but not least ... [The TikTok account]( devoted almost entirely to the act of slicing cheese. ADVERTISEMENT
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