The High Museum ruminates on love â platonic, romantic, spiritual. Plus, Persian art at the Getty and a tenor takes a final bow, 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 Metro Art*
[Click to view images]A still from Rashid Johnson's "Hikers," 2019 â on view in the group show "What Is Left Unspoken, Love," at the High Museum in Atlanta. (Rashid Johnson / Hauser & Wirth) How to open any missive in a week of agonizing tragedy? Perhaps by taking a breath, listening to [a 14th century mass]( and reflecting on what gives our lives real meaning. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, arts and urbanism columnist at the Los Angeles Times, with the weekâs essential arts news: Love is a many-splendored thing
[A sheet of paper in a typewriter reads, "But you loved my back," and the response, "I still do."]
Akram Zaatariâs 2010 video âTomorrow Everything Will Be Alrightâ conveys a text-message-style exchange on a typewriter. (Akram Zaatari / Kurimanzutto Gallery) The film begins with four words on a piece of ruled paper embedded in the carriage of a typewriter. âHello sexy,â it reads. âhello u.â Over the 11 minutes that follow, a conversation proceeds to unfold on the page, one that draws on the conventions of text messaging and emailing, with their abbreviated, rapid-fire exchanges, but presents them as they are ploddingly tapped out, letter by letter, on an old typewriter. The conversation is a fraught one â between two men, old lovers. One has materialized out of nowhere after disappearing a decade prior. Now they gingerly reestablish a connection, one filled with deep yearning, unspoken recriminations and the echoes of a dormant familiarity that has now come roaring back to life. âTomorrow Everything Will Be Alright,â 2010, by Akram Zaatari, conveys the thrill of love, the pain of love, materializing on a page one achingly typewritten letter at a time. And I havenât been able to stop thinking about it since I saw it at the High Museum in Atlanta early this week in [a group exhibition]( âWhat Is Left Unspoken, Love,â that examines love in its many facets. In fact, I havenât just thought about Zaatariâs film, Iâve rewatched it multiple times. (His gallery, Kurimanzutto, has [helpfully posted it to Vimeo]( In a week and month sullied by the senseless violence of [mass shootings]( âWhat Is Left Unspoken, Love,â couldnât be more timely â more needed. Organized by Michael Rooks, the museumâs curator of modern and contemporary art, the exhibition takes as its subject not trite romance but the many loves that permeate our lives: our romantic unions, but also our connections to family, to community, to art and to greater cosmic forces â loves that demand generosity, abnegation, spiritual surrender. The exhibition by no means attempts a comprehensive cataloging of art about love. That would be exhausting â and impossible. Instead, it reads more like meditations on the different ways love can manifest in our lives. Works dating from 1990 to the present are organized thematically. The show opens on the concept of âThe Two,â the union of couples in their myriad forms, and from there proceeds to other definitions of love: âThe School of Love,â which considers the ways we learn to love; âThe Practice of Love,â in which it is expressed through acts of intention or self-discipline; âLoving Community,â inspired by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s visions of brotherly love and social justice; âThe Poetics of Love,â on how itâs put into words; and âThe Love Supreme,â which considers love in the context of union with God or with nature. The show includes direct invocations of love, such as Zaatariâs poignant short film. But it also includes more abstract and philosophical interpretations, including Andrea Galvaniâs video installation âThe End (Action #5),â 2105, which shows a sun that never quite sets over the ocean. The looped video, shot from a military aircraft flying at supersonic speeds against the Earthâs rotation, shows the sun over a watery horizon. Because of the planeâs speed, the sun never slips below that horizon. The speed and power of the aircraft feel thunderous, even as the sun remains frozen in its un-set state. The sensation is that of something inconclusive, unconsummated, unrequited. [A woman sits motionless at a table with a book open in front of her; a young women and two girls are seen as blurred.]
A detail from Carrie Mae Weemsâ âThe Kitchen Table Series,â 1990, a work that captures Black domesticity and the joys and frustrations of romantic and familial love. (Carrie Mae Weems / Jack Shainman Gallery) Throughout the exhibition, works ricochet off one another in this way â concrete depictions of love amid others that leave you mulling the exact meaning. Felix Gonzalez Torresâ âUntitled (Perfect Lovers),â 1987-1990, features a pair of synced wall clocks that un-sync over time, as humans are wont to do, while Rashid Johnsonâs video âThe Hikers,â 2019, captures a pair of figures who joyously revel in the mutual recognition â bonded by Blackness. Carrie Mae Weemsâ celebrated âThe Kitchen Table Series,â from 1990, tugs at many threads in the show. In it, the artist renders herself in fictionalized form over a sequence of photographs that capture her with a lover, with friends, with her children, by herself â love and its absence are present in so many ways. Painter Kerry James Marshallâs âSouvenir I,â 1997, shows a winged figure inhabiting a tidy living room framed by civil rights leaders and other activists who died in the 1960s â a way of recording love and its loss. In that same vein are the graphic pieces produced by the collective General Idea in the 1990s, at the height of the AIDS epidemic, that reproduced the word âAIDSâ in the style of Robert Indianaâs âLOVEâ graphic. AA Bronson, one of the founders of General Idea, is quoted in [the catalog]( describing the ways in which the indiscriminate death visited upon gay men during the AIDS pandemic shaped notions of love: âOn a personal level, I was forced to acknowledge my love, a love that would have been shameful a few years before.â [A painting shows the word AIDS in a blocky serif font stacked within a canvas in bold shades of red, green and black.]
General Idea, âGreat AIDS (Pyrrole Orange),â 1990-2019, acrylic on linen. (Adam Reich / General Idea / Mitchell Innes & Nash) The exhibition concludes with âPulse Room,â an electric (literally) installation by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer: The ceiling is lined with incandescent lightbulbs. Grab a set of handheld sensors in one corner of the room and, for a few seconds, the lightbulbs will beat in sync with your heart, after which they seem to devolve into a more chaotic pattern. That pattern is set by each successive visitor, who adds their heartbeat to the beats that came before â each registered by individual lights. Hearts beating in a room. Like a couple holding hands in a movie theater. Like a room full of worshippers at a Mass. Like the kids in that classroom in Texas. Love is joy. It is also terrible grief. âWhat Is Left Unspoken, Love,â is on view at the [High Museum]( in Atlanta through Aug. 14. ADVERTISEMENT BY Metro Art
[Metro Art]( Call to Arts & Cultural Organizations Create innovative, mobile arts and cultural programs with Metro Art! The Arts & Cultural Organization Pool builds on Metro Artâs long history of collaborating with community-based organizations in support of innovative, community-responsive, arts and cultural programs for transit. Arts and cultural organizations that meet the eligibility and successfully submit to the Pool will be considered for a range of future art opportunities with Metro. For information, and to read the Request for Qualifications, go to: [metro.net/artsorgpool]( End of advertisement Visual arts The pandemic has marked a challenging time for Takashi Murakami. There were the personal losses: the death of his father, and his friend designer Virgil Abloh. And there were the professional ones: Shows were postponed, and his company, Kaikai Kiki, almost went bankrupt. Like so many others, the artist spent the pandemic hunkered behind a screen â which has [led him down new paths artistically](. The Timesâ Deborah Vankin hung with Murakami on the eve of the opening of his new one-man show at the Broad museum. âItâs no surprise,â she writes, âthat heâs now emerging in this late stage of the pandemic with new work, both a physical painting and a foray into augmented reality and other digital realms.â [Takashi Murakami, in a hoodie covered in his cartoon flowers, is seen against a white wall looking at his phone.]
Takashi Murakami gives one of his digital works a test run at the Broad museum. (Michelle Groskopf / For The Times) Times art critic Christopher Knight reviews âPersia: Ancient Iran and the Classical Worldâ at the Getty Villa. Itâs a thousand years of history [covering three Persian empires]( â a lot to fit into the museumâs three small rooms. Think of it, writes Knight, as âa thumbnail sketch of a thumbnail sketch.â Even so, âthere are wonderful individual objects to see,â he writes. The exhibition, the first major museum show of its kind, also serves to integrate the narratives of Persian history into an institution known primarily for its Greek and Roman artifacts. On and off the stage Numerous musicals â such as âDear Evan Hansenâ and âPublic Domainâ â have taken on [the internet as subject and character](. But a new musical by Dave Malloy titled âOctet,â which is on view at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre through the weekend, âmanages to capture a life lived Too Online in a way that no stage show has before now,â reports The Timesâ Ashley Lee. âWithout romanticizing its prospects, satirizing its users or villainizing its makers, the show is an honest, nuanced exploration of how much of our daily lives are now lived on the internet â and how our institutions, our social norms and our very brains are paying for it.â [A man in a gray T-shirt and hoodie stands on a darkened stage with two other people.]
Justin Gregory Lopez in Dave Malloyâs âOctet.â (Kevin Berne / Berkeley Repertory Theatre) The Timesâ Kristina Garcia reports that Melinda Lopezâs play âMalaâ is returning to San Diegoâs Old Globe next month â and this time will include performances in Spanish as well as a presentation in Tijuana. The play, about caring for the dying, was inspired by Lopezâs own experiences [caring for her dying mother](. âThe play â although itâs beautifully structured and itâs an elegant story â itâs a story of chaos,â says director David Dower. âItâs a story of careening from one mistake to another mistake, basically, told with a great deal of humor.â Antaeus Theatre Companyâs production of âHamletâ opened last week at the Kiki & David Gindler Performing Arts Center in Glendale. Times theater critic Charles McNulty reports that director Elizabeth Swainâs interpretation of Shakespeareâs classic [is modest](. âThe focus is on beats, acting moments, rather than more sweeping arcs,â he writes. âScenes, scrupulously played, succeed each other without a fresh understanding of the tragedy coming into view.â Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber](. McNulty also talks to Randy Rainbow about his new memoir, âPlaying With Myself.â Rainbow, who rose to social media fame with raucous musical-theater-inspired spoofs of the Trump presidency, turns a frank lens on his upbringing [at the hands of a Trump-like father](. âIt was an interesting insight for people who have been following me all these years to find out that the guy who became known as Trumpâs nemesis at least on social media is the spawn of a clone of Donald Trump,â he tells McNulty. Plus, Times photographer Robert Gauthier has a stirring photographic portfolio of the performers appearing in a new production of the musical âThe Braille Legacy,â which will take the stage at Inglewoodâs Miracle Theater on June 24. The show was inspired by the story of Louise Braille, the inventor of an alphabet for the blind. The new staging represents the first time that the musical, which first premiered in London in 2017, will be presented with [a visually impaired cast](. [Side by side photos show a man in a top hat and neck scarf and the same man in a T-shirt, smiling.]
Actor Kenny Lee, who plays Dr. Pignier, in âThe Braille Legacy.â (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
ADVERTISEMENT
Classical notes On June 12, when âAidaâ comes to a close on the L.A. Opera stage, [so will another chapter in the companyâs history]( Tenor George Sterne will step down from his post after more than 150 performances, more than any chorus member in the companyâs history. âSterne has been with the L.A. Opera since before there was an L.A. Opera,â writes contributor Jordan Riefe. âHeâs seen it all: the revolving door of big-name guest directors â Julie Taymor, William Friedkin, Franco Zeffirelli. The divas and dilettantes. Heâs taken the spotlight and taken pratfalls. Now, heâs taking his final bow.â [A man in military costume sings onstage.]
Tenor George Sterne performs onstage during a dress rehearsal of âAidaâ at the L.A. Opera earlier this month. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)
Essential happenings Matt Cooper has [six essential culture picks]( for the weekend, including a performance of âSleeping Beautyâ by the Los Angeles Ballet and a performance by the L.A.-based Numi Opera that pays tribute to 20th century composers, such as Erich Wolfgang Korngold and Kurt Weill, whose works were suppressed by fascist regimes. That performance goes down at the Broad Stage on Sunday evening. Moves The Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles has named Clara Kim as chief curator and director of curatorial affairs. Kim, who was born in Seoul and grew up in the L.A. area, joins the museum from Londonâs Tate Modern, where she had served as senior curator of international art since 2016. Kim talks to Deborah Vankin about [her ambitions for the museum](. Passages Colin Forbes, a co-founder of the influential design shop Pentagram and the designer behind the brand identity of companies such as Nissan and Pirelli, [has died at the age of 94](. Knox Martin, a New York painter whose work expressed Abstract Expressionist, Pop and color field influences, and who served as mentor to artists such as Robert Rauschenberg, is [dead at 99](. In other news â A planned expansion of the 710 Freeway has been canceled after L.A. Metro [approved a âNo Buildâ alternative](.
â Is it [a tipping point]( for the labor movement in architecture?
â At the Getty, a once-stolen work by Willem de Kooning [goes on view](.
â [A cache of personal letters]( that Frida Kahlo wrote to a doctor are at the heart of a show at the MSU Broad Museum in Michigan.
â A former director of the Louvre [has been charged]( in France in connection with an antiquities trafficking investigation.
â As cryptocurrencies hit a roadblock, many NFTs are [losing value](.
â But arts writer Amy Castor reports that their value [may have been illusory]( to begin with.
â âThe NFT producers have accomplished something great, and outdone the 1970s land artists. With minimal labor, no pretense of theory or contextualization, no aesthetic clarity, and no object to speak of, they have set off exponential extractions. Itâs not new; itâs just worse.â [This essay]( by Elisabeth Nicula in Momus is really good. And last but not least ... After mass shootings, the trope about gunmen is that they âacted alone.â Clara Jeffery at Mother Jones points out that in fact mass shooters have a lot of help â [from Congress](. 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](