Yolanda López gets a belated show at MCASD. Plus, Holland Taylor as Ann Richards and immersive Frida Kahlo in our weekly arts newsletter.
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 ZEGNA*
[Click to view images]Works from Yolanda López's 1978 "Guadalupe" series show her grandmother, left, her mother and herself with elements of the Virgin of Guadalupe's iconography. (Yolanda López) I missed the Oscars. (Did anything happen?) Thankfully, I was able to get all the Oscars fashion from University of Michigan public health professor Dr. William Lopez, who helpfully paired [2022 Oscar outfits with corresponding public health graphs](. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, arts and urban design columnist for the Los Angeles Times, and Iâve not only got the latest art and design news, but Iâm also up to date on vaccine hesitancy rates in the U.K.: Bringing humanity to the Virgin Yolanda López didnât live to see her first solo museum exhibition. The artist, who was born and raised in San Diego and later relocated to the Bay Area, [died]( early September]( at the age of 79. Her solo show, âYolanda López: Portrait of the Artist,â opened at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego six weeks later. This is bittersweet. For âPortrait of the Artist,â which was organized by MCASD curator Jill Dawsey, is a stirring tribute to the artistâs matrilineal lineage, an astute deconstruction of colonial and religious iconography, and an artistâs reclamation of agency over her own body. And itâs indicative of the narratives that institutions have, for so long, overlooked. [As Dawsey told]( New York Times contributor Jori Finkel upon Lópezâs death: âAll of the work in our show was borrowed directly from the artist, not galleries or museums, and that tells you something.â [A woman in running shorts and holding paintbrushes stands before a backdrop typical of the Virgin of Guadalupe.]
Yolanda López put herself in the Virgin of Guadalupeâs place in the series âTableaux Vivant,â 1978. (Susan Mogul / Yolanda López.) The show is small â occupying one of the galleries in MCASDâs downtown branch â and is focused primarily on two bodies of work from the 1970s. The first is her âGuadalupeâ series, in which the artist takes on one of Mexicoâs most venerated cultural figures and gives her a feminist tweak. In a trio of large-scale paintings, López depicted her grandmother Victoria Franco sitting on the Virginâs starred mantle, her mother Margaret Stewart sewing it, and the artist herself clutching it as she jogs â as if it were a runnerâs thermal blanket or a superhero cape. [A vertical painting by Yolanda López shows a smiling woman running with a blue mantle surrounded by a luminous aureola.]
Yolanda López, âPortrait of the Artist as the Virgin of Guadalupe,â 1978. (Yolanda López ) The [Virgin of Guadalupe]( couldnât be a more complex icon to tackle. She was a tool of Catholic colonial proselytizing, intended to help convert the Indigenous masses to Christianity. Frequently rendered in painting with brown skin, her creation myth involves an apparition in 1531 to an Indigenous man named Juan Diego (original name: Cuauhtlatoatzin). But the Virgin is also a syncretic figure, one who embodies Indigenous belief in female Aztec deities variously known as [Tonantzin or Coatlicue](. She is also indicative of the impossible gender standards to which women in Catholic society are expected to aspire: virginal, pure, maternal. It was daring for López to reimagine this figure â turning a myth into womanly flesh. And it was not without controversy. The artist received death threats; strangers vandalized her work. I was particularly moved by the myriad small-scale studies the artist created as part of the project, showing the Virgin reimagined as Aztec deities, everyday women and even Botticelliâs Venus. Also on view at MCASD are paintings the artist made when she was a student at UC San Diego. Part of a series called âA Dónde Vas, Chicana? Getting Through Collegeâ â more informally known as the âRunnerâ series â they show her running around campus, putting a Chicana female figure against the angular geometries of the universityâs modernist buildings. The figure she cuts is strong, joyful, athletic. Her legs are muscular, her gaze determined. This is no passive muse. López has power. So much that it took the art world decades to catch up to her. [The figure of a young Mexican-American woman is seen running on a hillside over the UC San Diego campus.]
Yolanda Lópezâs âRunner: On My Own!â from 1977 was recently acquired by MCASD for its collection. (Yolanda López) âYolanda López: Portrait of the Artistâ is on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diegoâs downtown branch through April 24; [MCASD.org](. ADVERTISEMENT BY ZEGNA
[ZEGNA]( Rediscover the iconic Triple Stitchâ¢ï¸ Sneaker in a sophisticated spectrum of colours and materials. End of advertisement On and off the stage âA folksy firebrand feminist once sat at the helm of the Lone Star State, and Holland Taylor is determined that we wonât forget it,â writes Times culture columnist Mary McNamara about âAnn,â Taylorâs [one-woman show]( about former Texas Gov. Ann Richards. Directed by Benjamin Endsley Klein in a staging at the Pasadena Playhouse, Taylor, writes McNamara, âdoesnât play Richards so much as she channels her.â [A woman in a conservative skirt suit and brooch is reflected in a dressing room mirror over a table filled with makeup.]
Holland Taylor prepares for a full dress rehearsal of âAnnâ at the Pasadena Playhouse late last month. (Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times) At the Kirk Douglas Theatre, Jon Robin Baitzâs âIâll Be Seeinâ Yaâ has landed and theater critic Charles McNulty reports that it could have used â[a few more workshops]( The play centers on Alice Murchow (played by Christine Lahti), a strung-out antihero who bemoans the Hollywood career she never had as calamity descends on the outside world. âThis ersatz character study,â writes McNulty, âstarts sounding like an earnest grant proposal when contemporary political issues are raised.â âBhanginâ It: A Banginâ New Musical,â which just premiered at the La Jolla Playhouse, showcases multiple styles of Indian dance in a narrative set [amid intercollegiate bhangra competitions](. Written by playwrights Rehana Lew Mirza and Mike Lew, the show, reports The Timesâ Ashley Lee, took great care with the ways not only in which Indian culture was portrayed but also with how it was produced. âComing back to work after the shutdowns, thereâs a different level of expectation of how weâre going to approach theatermaking differently,â says Ari Afsar, who plays Mary in the musical, âand this company took that very seriously.â [A group of barefooted people lift up a knee and clap their hands onstage.]
Cast members perform in âBhanginâ It: A Banginâ New Musicalâ at La Jolla Playhouse. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times) Deaf West Theatre recently announced plans to develop the Oscar-winning âCODAâ [into a stage musical](. And Deaf Westâs artistic director, DJ Kurs, can imagine the filmâs actors, like Troy Kotsur, who won the Academy Award for supporting actor for his role as fisherman Frank Rossi, reprising the role on stage. âYes, please!â he tells my colleague Jessica Gelt via email. âHeâs been in four musicals, and he brings so much life to the stage.â Closed for two years by the pandemic, the Actorsâ Gang is back with Dario Foâs âCanât Pay? Donât Pay!â â the work that was on view when COVID-19 put the kibosh on live theater. And after two years of watching theater on a small screen, writes contributor Margaret Gray, itâs a shift to see theater that bears [the Gangâs stylized, mannered imprint](. For Tim Robbins, the theaterâs artistic director, the production is also a return of sorts: âDarioâs kind of the ground zero of inspiration for me wanting to write and create theater.â Classical notes Simon Rattle led the London Symphony Orchestra in one of the annual community concerts staged by the Music Academy of the West [in Santa Barbara last week](. And Times classical music critic Mark Swed says that it was âa joyous, stupendous community event in a real concert hall celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Music Academy.â The orchestra was joined by a band of young alumni for a program that included Percy Graingerâs âgoofy brilliant âLincolnshire Posyââ and a âpatience-demanding Bruckner symphony.â Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber](. Swed also checked out a performance by the L.A. Phil at Disney Hall. On the docket was Mahlerâs Seventh Symphony, the composerâs â[most enigmatic, least-played symphony]( led by American conductor David Robertson. The music and the performance, writes Swed, seemed a âvisceral acknowledgment of war and its implications.â Robertson brought to âMahlerâs funereal marches, eerie night music and decaying Viennese waltzes a shocking end-of-history fervor.â ADVERTISEMENT
Visual arts âWhen people would ask me, âWhat do you shoot?â I used to say âeverything,ââ L.A.-based artist Adam Davis tells contributor Evangeline Barrosse. âBut now, I just tell them: âBlack people.ââ Davisâ portraiture consists of elegant tintype works that he repurposes as playing cards. These appeared last fall in a show titled âBlack Magicâ at the Byrd Museum in Mid-City and will now be [at the heart of a tour]( that will make stops in Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago and Tulsa. Expect tintype portrait sessions at each stop. [A woman with natural hair and floral shirt is seen in a vintage-style tin-type portrait by Adam Davis.]
Sydney N. Sweeney in a tintype portrait by Adam Davis. (Adam Davis) Times art critic Christopher Knight reviews [the group-curated]( âLifesâ at the Hammer Museum, organized by Aram Moshayedi and Nicholas Barlow. They began with four texts by authors Fahim Amir, Asher Hartman, Rindon Johnson and Adania Shibli, and then engaged other artists until they had about 50 collaborators. This led them to an installation that features a mix of physical objects, kinetic works and programmatic elements that come to life once an hour. The show, writes Knight, is âcommendableâ for the institutional risks it takes but ultimately âdoesnât pan out.â Sort of related: In that piece, Knight refers to the Ulysses Jenkins show at the Hammer, an exhibition âwhich sets off sparks.â Well, thereâs [a good interview]( with co-curator Erin Christovale about the show on the Modern Art Notes podcast. My colleague Deborah Vankin, in the meantime, [dared to set a toe]( in the new âImmersive Frida Kahloâ experience, where she gives us all the dish on the on-site yoga (weird), the lounge area with âcustom artworks designed by the showâs creative directorâ (weirder) and the pineapple margarita (okaaaayyyyy). Was that Frida saying âno mamesâ from beyond the grave? Yes. Yes it was. [People are seen in silhouette standing in front of a large black and white portrait of Frida Kahlo projected on a wall.]
Thin on art, âImmersive Frida Kahloâ instead focuses its energies on the artistâs biography. (Kyle Flubacker)
Art, war and the internet As Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine extends into its sixth week, Generation X has been dipping into the culture of the late Cold War and recycling it on social media platforms such as TikTok. As I note in my column this week, bomb drills, âRed Dawnâ and German-synth pop hits about annihilation have all become grist for the meme mill. That school desk? Itâs not a desk. [Itâs a Gen X bomb shelter](. Sort of related: Mother Jones editor Clara Jeffery has [an epic Cold War â80s playlist](. [Men in long coats and holding rifles stand next to a tank in front of a McDonald's.]
Actors playing Soviet soldiers guard a McDonaldâs in Colorado in the Reagan-era action flick âRed Dawn.â (MGM / UA) My colleague Kate Linthicum looks at another aspect of social media: namely, how the war in Ukraine is [playing out live on various platforms]( âThey offer a quick-pulse stream of consciousness in a morality play where ancient brutality meets raw, digitized immediacy.â For years, a small group of protesters in the U.S. called the Signerbusters has protested artists supportive of Vladimir Putin. Their message is now [getting traction](. A dystopian Russian novel from 1986 [predicted a leader like Putin](. Essential happenings Matt Cooper has [the six best culture picks]( for the weekend, which includes a gig by the Gay Menâs Chorus at Royce Hall and four performances of Mozartâs unfinished Mass by the L.A. Phil, led by conductor emeritus Zubin Mehta. [A man in tails sits on a stool and lifts a baton as he conducts an orchestra.]
Zubin Mehta, who once led the L.A. Phil, is back for a Mozart Mass. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times) Cooper also rounds up all the [museum shows to see in April]( including a show about Buffalo Soldiers at the California African American Museum and reinstallation of MOCAâs permanent collection galleries in its Grand Avenue space. âAdobe Punk,â a short musical currently playing at Plaza de la Raza imagines the intersecting lives of three young punk musicians in the early â80s who are squatting in an abandoned house â a creaky historic adobe that has its own stories to tell. The show was co-created by Theresa Chavez and Gabriel Garza and features original music written by Chavez and musician Nina Diaz, with musical direction by Sage Lewis. This is a new play, and the characters are in need of definition and the dialogue, refining. But I was intrigued by the intersecting narratives of architecture, L.A. history and punk. The smart staging â the show was directed by Chavez, with set design by Dorothy Hoover â gives âAdobe Punkâ an added dimension. On view [through April 3](. [A man behind a drum set wearing red suspenders squints his eyes as he yells into a microphone.]
Isaac Cruz (as Manny) in âAdobe Punk,â a punk musical set in the â80s, co-created by Theresa Chavez and Gabriel Garza. (Rob Aft)
Moves James Florio, whose photographs [link landscape and architecture]( has been named the recipient of the Excellence in Photography Award by Woodbury Universityâs Julius Shulman Institute. Karen Hofmann has been named [the new president and chief executive]( ArtCenter College of Design, the first woman to take on the role in the collegeâs history. She will assume the post on July 1. Chicago has an architecture critic again: Critic Lee Bey [will have a monthly column]( in the Chicago Sun-Times starting in April. Passages Anne Parsons, who shepherded the Detroit Symphony Orchestra for about two decades as its president and CEO, has [died at 64](. Christopher Alexander, a Viennese-born architect and theorist who was a fierce anti-Modernist, and whose writings helped give rise to the principles of New Urbanism, is [dead at 85](. In other news â Two administrators at SCI-Arc have been [placed on administrative leave]( after students and former alumni alleged poor working conditions in their design studios, as well as possible abuses of power. In a statement announcing the suspensions, SCI-Arc director Hernán DÃaz Alonso said that the school would retain an independent investigator to look into the allegations.
â L.A.âs asphalt-covered schoolyards are [an environmental injustice](.
â Shealah Craighead, a White House photographer during the Trump administration had plans to publish a book of her images. Trump [had other ideas](.
â How the work of dancer Storyboard P points to [a âmissing laneâ in American dance](.
â The Baltimore Museum of Art has a new show titled âGuarding the Artâ curated by [17 members of its security team](.
â M.H. Miller examines the archetype of the [troubled artist-addict](.
â The Chinese Peruvian restaurant Chifa in Eagle Rock is serving candy jewelry that [looks like jade](.
â Because I was born in Wyoming, I am here for [any and all stories]( about jackalopes. And last but not least ... [This]( slaps. ADVERTISEMENT
Thank you for reading the Los Angeles Times Essential Arts newsletter.
Invite your friends, relatives, coworkers to sign up [here](.
Not a subscriber? Get unlimited digital access to latimes.com. [Subscribe here](.
[Los Angeles Times]
Copyright © 2022, Los Angeles Times
2300 E. Imperial Highway, El Segundo, California, 90245
1-800-LA-TIMES | [latimes.com]( *Advertisers have no control over editorial decisions or content. If you're interested in placing an ad or classified, get in touch [here](. We'd love your feedback on this newsletter. Please send your thoughts and suggestions [here](mailto:newsletters@latimes.com).
The Essential Arts logo was created by Alfredo Ponce. You received this email because you signed up for newsletters from The Los Angeles Times.
[Manage marketing email preferences]( · [Manage newsletter subscriptions or unsubscribe]( · [Terms of service]( · [Privacy policy]( · [Do Not Sell My Personal Information]( · [CA Notice of Collection]( FOLLOW US [Divider](#) [Facebook]( [2-tw.png]( [Instagram]( [YouTube](