L.A. curator Pilar Tompkins Rivas dives into the underrepresented legacy of Latino photography. Plus, art and Omicron and Sidney Poitier's theatrical legacy.
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[Essential Arts] âYou can be moody, Scorpio, and intrigued by sex, death and rebirth.â How does Lisa Booneâs [plant horoscope]( know me so well? Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, arts and urban design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, and my zodiac plant is the California poppy, and Iâm here, feeling golden, with the weekâs essential culture news: Picturing the unseen In 1990, my friend José Galvez, who was then working as a photographer for The Times, took me to UCLA to check out an exhibition at the universityâs Wight Art Gallery. I had no idea what we were going to see, only that José had a couple of images in the show and that afterward weâd go grab dinner. That exhibition ended up being transformative. âChicano Art: Resistance and Affirmation, 1965-1985,â known as CARA, was [a traveling exhibition]( of art, photography and graphics â what was then one of the largest group shows ever dedicated to work by Chicano artists. On the lineup were key figures such as Judy Baca, Yolanda López, Gilbert âMagú" Luján and Asco. I was particularly compelled by the photography, including portraiture, street photography and conceptual pieces by Ricardo Valverde, Harry Gamboa Jr. and, of course, José, who was showing images from the â70s. I am not Chicana â I am South American â but in that exhibition I felt as if I was finally seeing, within the context of an art gallery, people whose culture, experiences and aesthetics in some way resembled mine. People whom I knew and saw every day in L.A. [A magazine cover shows two young women embracing and the word "Latinx"]
âLatinx,â Aperture No. 245, was edited by L.A. curator Pilar Tompkins Rivas. (Aperture Foundation) Iâve thought a lot about CARA and the importance of presence as Iâve pored over [issue No. 245]( of Aperture magazine, which was guest edited by Pilar Tompkins Rivas, chief curator at the under-construction Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. The magazine, which is published by the Aperture Foundation, a New York-based arts organization devoted to showcasing photography in its gallery and in standalone publications, has taken for its most recent issue the theme of âLatinx.â The issue is compelling for a lot of reasons, but itâs particularly insightful for the ways in which it highlights how Latino visual culture has been maintained not by institutions but by so many individuals. As Tompkins Rivas notes in her introduction, vernacular photography has played a critical role in recording a community whose presence in mainstream culture remains evanescent. When asked to edit the issue, she writes, âthe first pictures that came to my mind were not the many artworks and documentary images that I have had the fortune of working with as a curator, but rather the personal photographs that have helped me piece together the story of my familyâs history as Latinos in the United States.â In recent years, archives amassed by Latinx artists have been key to illuminating aspects of American culture that have been overlooked elsewhere. I think of L.A. artists such as Guadalupe Rosales, whose Instagram account Veteranas and Rucas chronicles the [â90s party crew scene]( (she was covered in a [2018 issue of Aperture]( or Vincent Ramos, who maintains an extensive archive of Latino themes in mass media. In the current issue, Ramosâ collection is highlighted over six pages, accompanied by an essay by LACMA curator Rita Gonzalez, and features everything from the El Pollo Loco chicken mascot to a member of the Monkees dressed up as a bandido. (I would love to hang out in his files.) Especially illuminating is the article devoted to the personal collection of Ken Gonzales-Day. An artist who has long engaged photography and the history of California in his work (and who currently has [a show on view]( at Luis De Jesus Los Angeles). Gonzales-Day has spent years gathering vernacular images of Latinos in Southern California in the period that spans the 1850s to the 1950s. California seems only to exist in the U.S. public imagination after becoming a state in 1850. Gonzales-Dayâs collection reveals who was here when the U.S. military rolled in. The artist showed fragments of this collection in the group exhibition âImagen Angeleno,â which was [on view]( at the Museum of Art and History in Lancaster in 2017 during PST: LA/LA. But hereâs hoping we get to see much more of it closer to home. (If I were a photography curator at the Getty Museum or the Huntington Library, Iâd be burning a path to his door.) [A family of four Latina women is seen sitting on an ornate white bed.]
Steven Molina Contreras, âMujeres Celestiales (Celestial women),â 2021, from the series âAdelante.â (Steven Molina Contreras) Throughout âLatinxâ are portfolios of work by names familiar and not: Bibs Morenoâs saturated images of artist Gabriela Ruizâs flamboyant personas. Louis Carlos Bernalâs stark and elegant images of Mexican Americans in the Southwest during the 1970s. Reynaldo Riveraâs cinematic chronicles of the intersecting circles of L.A. subcultures in the â70s and â80s. And Steven Molina Contrerasâ tender photographs of his Salvadoran milieu. I was riveted by Dominican American artist Joiri Minayaâs photographic collages, which take the tropes of tropical travel imagery and subvert them with the ugly colonialism that precedes and informs them. âLatinxâ is a thoughtful introduction to photography by Latino artists â a place to start looking into histories that have been neglected. There are too many. I, for one, have a long-running wish list of photography exhibitions. These include an examination of the photography of Asco member Patssi Valdez, who was key to chronicling L.A. bohemia in the â70s and â80s in deeply chromatic ways, or Nuyorican painter Juan Sánchez, who used photography to record the Puerto Rican presence in the New York streetscape â not to mention [José]( who for years has been chronicling the Mexican American presence in the American South. âLatinxâ will, with hope, serve not as an end but a fertile beginning. There is so much that remains to be seen. [A collage shows a Black woman in tropical dress whose skin has been replaced with an image of workers in a cane field]
Joiri Minaya, âThe Upkeepers,â 2021. (Joiri Minaya) âLatinxâ is available for purchase at the [Aperture website](. On Tuesday at 4 p.m. PT / 7 p.m. ET, guest editor Pilar Tompkins Rivas and writer Elizabeth Ferrer will discuss Latinx imagery as part of a [free online program]( hosted by Aperture. ADVERTISEMENT
Art and Omicron Omicron has inundated us like a tidal wave, and the performing arts have been especially hard hit, with some organizations postponing or canceling performances and others becoming more stringent about vaccination requirements. Classical music critic Mark Swed recently [attended a performance]( by the L.A. Phil led by Michael Tilson Thomas, the conductorâs first since he began treatment for a brain tumor last year. The concert, Swed writes, was âphenomenal.â But he is conflicted about promoting live entertainment at this time: âIs it a good or an ethical idea to go to a concert in the vortex of this unprecedented surge, what with local hospitals overwhelmed and understaffed and worse certain to come in the next weeks?â [Michael Tilson Thomas stands on a podium â with soloists Sasha Cooke and Dashon Burton seated on either side of him.]
Michael Tilson Thomas with soloists Sasha Cooke (left) and Dashon Burton at Disney Hall. (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times) In the meantime, The Timesâ Jessica Gelt reports that the Center Theatre Group is [pushing forward with live shows]( including the North American premiere of the musical âEverybodyâs Talking About Jamieâ at the Ahmanson, which kicks off Jan. 16. Even as other organizations, such as the Pasadena Playhouse and the Soraya, pivot to streaming, Gelt writes, the CTGâs âoptimism remains intact.â One interesting note: The pandemic conditions are making the role of understudies critical. On Broadway, Omicron has led to numerous shutdowns â permanent and temporary. The Daily Beast looks at how [the industry and its trade unions]( are trying to figure out how to contend with questions of pay and vaccinations for productions that may have to go on and off as variants emerge. Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( In the museum world, MOCA is now requiring that visitors wear upgraded surgical, N95, KF94 or KN95 face masks, reports Deborah Vankin. Cloth masks will [no longer be allowed](. Stage on screen Joel Coenâs âThe Tragedy of Macbeth,â which stars Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand, plus stage veteran [Kathryn Hunter]( as the Three Witches, landed this week on Apple TV+. [In his assessment]( Times theater critic Charles McNulty digs into the ways in which this film is inspired by others that have adapted Shakespeareâs play to the screen â including turns by Roman Polanski and Akira Kurosawa. âCoenâs moviemaking instincts,â he writes,â guide him in ratcheting up the intrigue in a meticulously art-directed black-and-white film that is deeply indebted to other movie versions of Shakespeareâs tragedy.â [In a black and white film still, Denzel Washington is seen looking serious while in costume]
McNulty writes that Denzel Washingtonâs Macbeth is âmore piercing in his sighs than in his utterances.â (Alison Rosa / Apple) Coen [tells former Times film critic]( Kenneth Turan that when he homed in on the idea that the play âwas really a murder story, about a couple plotting a murder, I felt like I was on comfortable ground.â In his review â [written in five acts]( â Times film critic Justin Chang describes a picture in which âscenes flow into one another with a swiftness and elegance that builds in its own momentum. Rarely have these nightmarish events seemed more inevitable.â ADVERTISEMENT
Design time The Wilshire Boulevard Temple was supposed to hold a grand opening for its new Audrey Irmas Pavilion this month, but that plan has been put on hold due to Omicron. The structure, designed by the Rem Koolhaas-co-founded Office for Metropolitan Architecture, consists of a 55,000-square-foot event space housed in a three-story parallelogram draped in a honeycomb pattern. Designed by partner Shohei Shigematsu, the building represents OMAâs first major L.A. structure, but as I note in my review, itâs a design that ultimately [fails to cohere](. [A piece of the slanted Audrey Irmas Pavilion is seen before the Byzantine-style Wilshire Boulevard Temple sanctuary]
The Audrey Irmas Pavilion, left, touches down before the historic sanctuary of the Wilshire Boulevard Temple, completed in 1969. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times)
Remembering Sidney Poitier Sidney Poitier, an actor who elevated the form and an activist who helped tear down barriers, [died last week at the age of 94](. Times theater critic Charles McNulty [examines Poitierâs theatrical work]( â specifically, his appearance in Lorraine Hansberryâs âA Raisin in the Sun,â a play that âhas become a canonical work of 20th century drama,â and a role that Poitier later reprised for film. Poitierâs âpresence on stage and screen,â writes McNulty, âlifted us all.â [Sidney Poitier, with hands clasped, stands before a seated Claudia McNeil in a black and white image.]
Claudia McNeil and Sidney Poitier in âA Raisin in the Sun.â (Columbia Pictures) Plus, in [a highly informative overview]( that made me want to line up every Poitier film available on a streaming service in a single queue, Justin Chang examines the actorâs cinematic roles â and the ways in which, even early in his career, Poitier was able to express ârepressed pain, controlled fury and a wholly understandable, deeply human fear.â Essential happenings As always, my colleague Matt Cooper comes through with [all the things to do]( including a drag salute to âThe Golden Girlsâ and a tango spectacular. [Ivana Ayala, in a flowing red dress, dances the tango with partner Pedro Sanchiz.]
Ivana Ayala and Pedro Sanchiz in âTango Argentina.â (Segerstrom Center for the Arts)
Passages Opera singer Maria Ewing, a mezzo-soprano known for versatility and for her daring performances, has [died at 71](. Of her work, former Times classical music critic Martin Bernheimer once wrote: âShe phrases thoughtfully, expressively. She colors the text knowingly. She sustains tension in the grand lines, paces herself cannily in the violent outbursts.â [In a black and white image, Maria Ewing is seen posing next to a mirror in costume and stage makeup]
Maria Ewing poses for a photographer in her costume as Melisande from the opera âPelleas et Melisande.â (Ira Nowinski / Corbis / VCG via Getty Images) Musician Judith Davidoff, a proponent of early music who mastered historical stringed instruments, some of which had not been played for centuries, is [dead at 94](. Terry Teachout, a theater critic for the Wall Street Journal who also wrote biographies of prominent jazz musicians (Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington), as well as plays and librettos, is [dead at 65](. Catalan architect Ricardo Bofill, who in a career that spanned more than half a century designed unusual buildings that managed to conjure forces both futuristic and primitive, has died at 82. The Guardianâs Oliver Wainwright has [a thoughtful obit]( of an architect whose structures âhave enjoyed a renewed appreciation as part of the ongoing pomo revival.â Among the many people they have inspired? The set designers who created [the labyrinthine, candy-colored stairs]( for âSquid Game.â The Marble Arch Mound, an 82-foot-high artificial hill designed by MVRDV architects in central London â a structure whose balding profile never lived up to its sylvan renderings and was therefore widely mocked by critics and the architecture nerds on social media â is [dead at the age of 7 months](. In other news â Southwest German Radio has been opening its vaults of recordings, in the process [resuscitating the reputation]( of Hans Rosbaud, a precise conductor with little taste for fame but âwho had music in his blood.â Thankfully, there is [a playlist](
â Thomas Dausgaard, director of the Seattle Symphony, has [abruptly stepped down mid-season](. His departure comes amid tensions between the conductor and the symphonyâs administrator that [spilled into public view](.
â Victoria Siddall, the longtime global director of the Frieze art fair, who was instrumental in launching the Los Angeles fair, is [leaving after 18 years](.
â Dancer Tamara Rojo, artistic director and lead principal of the English National Ballet, is [headed to the Bay Area]( Sheâll serve as the new artistic director for the San Francisco Ballet.
â The Metropolitan Museum of Art is increasing the salaries of its security guards to [ease staffing shortages](.
â Rethinking one of the [tragic female stories of myth]( in the opera âEurydiceâ and the musical âHadestown.â
â Washington Post critic Philip Kennicott examines [the intersection]( between French Rococo and Walt Disney.
â Da Vinciâs âMona Lisaâ is [going to get the immersive treatment]( and the experience is being designed by the Louvre itself, in partnership with the Grand Palais. God help us all.
â The first [spans are in place]( for Michael Maltzanâs 6th Street Viaduct.
â San Franciscoâs Millennium Tower continues to [sink and lean](.
â Viking helmets are [not really Viking](. And last but not least ... Pageant of the Masters [but better]( and in a museum. ADVERTISEMENT
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