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[Essential Arts] PRESENTED BY The Folio Society*
[Click to view images]Remember going out? We've got our spangly chanclas on and are ready to go! (Michelle Groskopf / For The Times) Greetings from Scorpio season! Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, art and design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, and Iâm here with the weekâs essential art news â and absurdist TikToks: L.A. Goes Out This fall marks the first real arts season since the before time. And I donât know about you, but I am struggling to keep up with everything. (Did every delayed art show, museum, concert and performance need to land all at once?) Thankfully, my colleague Steven Vargas is here to guide you through the morass. Vargas â who has a background in dance and has written for USA Today, the L.A. Sentinel and Buzzfeed News, among many other publications â joined The Timesâ arts team in August. Among his many, many duties, he is launching a new newsletter called L.A. Goes Out, and the first issue lands next week. [Orange logo on navy blue background reading L.A. Goes Out.]
L.A. Goes Out is the new Times newsletter that will be the go-to missive for everything culture. (Anne Latini / Los Angeles Times ) On a weekly basis, Vargas will pore over all of the latest happenings â from major works of theater to underground art shows â to bring you the best L.A. has to offer. He will also include suggestions from the rest of the arts team (yours truly included) as well as short dispatches on the events that are catching his eye. L.A. Goes Out is scheduled to land in inboxes on Wednesdays, giving you plenty of time to plan your weekend! A little bit about Vargas: He is originally from Texas, but heâs been digging into the L.A. scene for half a dozen years. (He moved here in 2016.) And he joined The Times first as an intern before coming on board full time over the summer. (If you didnât catch the story he wrote for our LA Vanguardia [package]( on Viktor Manoel and punking, a dance style that has its roots in L.A.'s queer underground clubs, then [get over there now]( Itâs really good.) He tells me that of all the works he has been marinating in as of late, he was particularly moved by Benjamin Benneâs âAlma,â which was [recently staged]( at the Kirk Douglas Theatre. He was especially floored by a moment in which âAlma looks up at the night sky rupturing past the apartment walls as she claws out and voices the unforgettable truth that freedom, respect and space were taken away from her and her ancestors, forcing her to earn back what was rightfully hers.â How would he describe himself in 280 characters or less? âDisplaced Texan living in L.A., constantly dancing and writing about dance. Has the special ability to only communicate through TikTok sounds.â Iâm super excited to count him as a colleague. You can find his writings [here]( and sign up for L.A. Goes Out at [this link]( â itâs free! And, as always, you can continue to find listings maestro Matt Cooperâs [online guides]( to a range of happenings and events on our website. [His latest]( contains everything from a show of photography about the Rolling Stones to a dance theater fable about a hurricane survivor at the Odyssey Theatre. ADVERTISEMENT BY The Folio Society
[The Folio Society]( Two of Haruki Murakamiâs best-loved titles, the tender and nostalgic Norwegian Wood and the mesmerising Kafka on the Shore, are now available in exquisite hard back editions from The Folio Society featuring award-winning illustrations by Daniel Liévano. The perfect gift. [FIND OUT MORE]( End of advertisement Musical notes The Israel Philharmonic performed last week at the Soraya â part of [its first tour]( under new musical director Lahav Shani, a protégé of Zubin Mehta (who served as music director until 2019). Featuring symphonies by Gustav Mahler and Paul Ben-Haim, the show was âexceptional,â Times classical music critic Mark Swed reports. âMehta is not an easy act to follow,â he writes, âyet Shani is clearly the right guy â tough and terrific â at the right time and place for this famously ungovernable orchestra.â [Lahav Shani is seen leading an orchestra from a conductor's podium]
Lahav Shani conducts the Israel Philharmonic at the Soraya. (Luis Luque | Luque Photography) In Boyle Heights, a storied ballroom is coming back to life: The Paramount Ballroom, the historic musical hall which has hosted a raft of legendary acts â Count Basie, Benny Goodman, Don Tosti, Celia Cruz and Tito Puente â and also served as home to a Jewish bakerâs union (in the 1920s) and a soup kitchen (the â30s). Times reporter Selene Rivera hangs with Frank Acevedo, who has revived the hall as a community gathering space and [humming musical outpost](. On and off the stage Horror isnât just for the movies. â2:22 â A Ghost Story,â written by Danny Robins, recently opened at the Ahmanson Theatre. Directed by Matthew Dunster, Times theater critic Charles McNulty reports that the staging is âas slickly modern as it is unapologetically sensationalisticâ and that âthe scare tactics can get a little campy,â though âlaughter isnât incompatible with fear.â But how does it all hold together? Well, there are problems, writes McNulty â and they have to do with [the writing](. Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( Playbill is leaving Twitter: âIn recent weeks, Twitter, Inc. has greatly expanded its tolerance for hate, negativity and misinformation. As a respected news outlet for the Broadway community, it would be irresponsible for us to continue to utilize platform where we and our readers cannot legitimately decipher actual news from [insidious rhetoric]( ADVERTISEMENT
In and out of the galleries Iâve been panic-reading Joan Didion essays, lurking the Joan Didion estate sale online and spending some quality time in the exhibition inspired by the author at the Hammer Museum, âJoan Didion: What She Means.â Organized by New Yorker critic Hilton Als in collaboration with Hammer chief curator Connie Butler and curatorial assistant Ikechukwu Onyewuenyi, the show is an unusual one â not so much about Didion as inspired by her. It has some moments of poetry, but this is a show that, curiously, [takes its subject at her word](. [Two graphite drawings of a desert floor by Vija Celmins are shown side-by-side.]
Vija Celmins, âUntitled (Double Desert),â 1974, is one of the works on view in a show at the Hammer Museum inspired by Didionâs writing life. (Ian Reeves / Collection of Mary Patricia Anderson Pence) LACMA held its 11th annual Art + Film Gala last Saturday night, and my colleague Deborah Vankin was there to capturing the air kissing and the speechifying. The nightâs honorees were artist Helen Pashgian and filmmaker Park Chan-wook. Find Vankinâs report on the nightâs proceedings â and all the hot lewks â right [here](. Iâve twice been caught on Google Street View â drinking beer on my porch and riding my bike through Brooklyn, N.Y.â and am always intrigued by the stories that artists make with the images they find on this rather singular system of mapping (not to mention surveillance). L.A. artist Felix Quintana harvests images of L.A. landscapes with personal significance (including a street view image that captured his father) and uses them to create cyanotypes, reports Sarah Quiñones Wolfson. The work is a tribute to his roots and [L.A.'s Salvadoran diaspora](. [A cyanotype image shows a view of the old 6th Street Viaduct in shades of blue, with a streak of red down the roaddway]
Felix Quintana, âEl puente de ayer (ode to the old 6th Street bridge),â 2021. (Felix Quintana) The New York Timesâ Jori Finkel profiles L.A. artist Narsiso Martinez, [currently the subject of a solo show]( at the Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach. His works, which various painting traditions with the sunny optimism of fruit box design, pay tribute to the workers who harvest our food. âI also wanted to ask questions about what it means to be legal,â he says. âIs your food illegal if itâs picked by someone who is so-called illegal?â Moves The Getty Museum and Getty Research Institute have announced [the acquisition of a 60 photographs]( by the artists of the Kamoinge Workshop, including images by Anthony Barboza, Louis Draper, Ming Smith and Shawn Walker. Five Bay Area artists â Binta Ayofemi, Maria Guzmán Capron, Cathy Lu, Marcel Pardo Ariza and Gregory Rick â have been named the recipients of 2022 SECA Art Award. A show of their works will go on view at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art [in mid-December](. Passages Dagny Janss Corcoran, an intrepid reader who founded the legendary Art Catalogues, died on Wednesday at the age of 77. âArt Catalogues is her unique legacy, an extraordinary compendium of gallery and museum monographs and other books on hundreds, and maybe thousands, of artists,â writes art critic Christopher Knight in [an appreciation](. âSome were rare, others were signed by the artist or writer, and all were worth having. She considered art books to be cousins to art objects.â [Dagny Janss Corcoran, wearing a loose blue dress, sits before a shelf of art catalogs]
Dagny Janss Corcoran, founder of Art Catalogues, was an âendless font of informed opinionâ writes Christopher Knight. (Derek Kinzel) Lee Bontecou, whose enthralling, machine-like works melded painting with sculpture, has [died at 91](. In [an appreciation]( New York magazine critic Jerry Saltz writes: âShe pulverized form, reshaped and rebuilt it; created her own abstract language and sculptural cosmos; and cleared so much space around her that her art stands mighty and alone in the great art forest of late-20th-century art.â In other news â Ed Roski, who has an art school named after him at USC, was [a major donor]( to Texas Gov. Greg Abbottâs campaign.
â Ukrainian composer Mykola Leontovychâs âCarol of the Bellsâ is serving as soundtrack for a projections-based installation in Chicago by Kyiv-based studio Photinus that will be [on view through Nov. 17](.
â Zachary Small of the New York Times sat down with the Mexican businessman who [burned a drawing]( that he claims was created by Frida Kahlo for the purpose of shilling NFTs.
â âWhen I was 14 or so, I went down into my fatherâs basement and poured Jell-O into a pie pan rotating on a phonographic turntable and it formed a parabola which cast light, like mercury would.â Fred Eversley, who currently has a show on view at Orange County Museum of Art, tells Artforum about [one of his earliest parabolas](.
â An âexceptionalâ trove of [24 ancient statues]( were found in a network of old baths designed by the Etruscans in Tuscany.
â [A fascinating story]( in Urban Omnibus details the ways in which New York Cityâs commercial and residential architecture is adapted to function as mosques.
â I was quite taken with this online exhibition of [19th century photographs]( of Kandahar, Afghanistan, taken by a British military doctor who was member of the British-Indian forces that invaded the city.
â âYou consider yourselves as independent people; we, as the original inhabitants of this country, and sovereigns of the soil, look upon ourselves as equally independent, and free as any other nation or nations.â From [a really interesting book review]( by David Treuer on Indigenous histories. And last but not least ... How to dismember every Hollywood trope in [one easy TikTok](. ADVERTISEMENT
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