Brazil's iconic capital becomes a site of wreckage. Plus, OCMA's messy building and our critic's sesh with Jonah Hill's shrink, in our 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] [Click to view images]Insurrectionists storm the Planalto Palace on Sunday. The building was one of Oscar Niemeyer's architectural triumphs. (Eraldo Peres / Associated Press) Jackie, the bald eagle who lives at Big Bear, has laid her first egg of 2023 â and she is [looking proud](. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, art and design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, and Iâm here with all your essential arts and raptor reproduction news: BrasÃlia overrun It felt like a grotesque re-imagining of Groundhog Day. Forty-eight hours after the anniversary of the Jan. 6 insurrection in the United States, in which right-wingers weaned on conspiracy theories about a presidential election stormed the U.S. Capitol, supporters of the outgoing, right-wing Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro [did much the same](. Over the course of Jan. 8, rioters dressed in the colors of the Brazilian flag overran the Modernist buildings that make up the government complex in the capital of BrasÃlia, an acclaimed [World Heritage site]( designed by Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer. Rioters then proceeded to [tear the place up](. [Forensic investigators, framed by a broken window, survey the damage in Brasilia's Supreme Court building. ]
Forensic investigators survey the damage to BrasÃliaâs Supreme Court building in the wake of an insurrection on Jan. 8. (Eraldo Peres / Associated Press) On Thursday, Brazilâs artistic heritage institute released a 50-page photographic report on the extensive damages. These included shattered windows at all of the cityâs architectural icons, crushed furniture, torn paintings and carpets soaked in water and urine. A desk used by former President Juscelino Kubitschek, the leader who oversaw the construction of BrasÃlia, was employed as a barricade. Among the countless smashed items was a rare 17th century clock fabricated by Balthazar Martinot and a stained glass window by Marianne Peretti, the only woman on the artist team that worked on BrasÃlia in the 1950s. The cost of the damages has yet to be tallied, but UNESCO, which manages the world heritage program, announced that it will join efforts to help Brazil [restore its cultural heritage](. In so many ways, an attack on these architectonic treasures reads like an attack on democratic ideals. The city is utopic in its design and embodies a unique strain of Latin Americanist thought, popular in the middle of the 20th century, when the continentâs elites were looking inward for solutions rather than simply parroting European ideas (a topic I wrote about [for Architect magazine]( upon Niemeyerâs death in 2012). But, like any construction, the story of how these buildings were created is complex â a story that is also about the ways power is wielded. The construction of BrasÃlia was a monumental undertaking run by a chosen few. There was Kubitschek, who managed the politics and scared up the funds (at times, fulfilling the role of Latin American strongman); Niemeyer, who designed all of the buildings; and Lucio Costa, who was in charge of the urban plan. As I noted in Architect, despite all of its stated ideals, âBrasÃlia wasnât designed with the intent of making life good for the little guy. Its large scale, Costa explained, communicated that âthe city isnât a province, but a capitalâ; the cross these axes carved into the savannah was an âact of possession.ââ [A police car is shown its nose tipped into a public fountain before Brasilia's space-age congressional buildings]
Supporters of Jair Bolsonaro storm BrasÃliaâs National Congress earlier this week. (Eraldo Peres / Associated Press) Brazilian writer Giovana Martino, in [a dispatch]( published in ArchDaily this week, elaborates on those ideas: âAs a space and object, [BrasÃlia] is a landmark of modernism and Brazilian architecture. However, it was built using exploited migrant, poor and racialized workforce. Politically, it is a city that was built upon the discourse of democracy and transparency. Yet, it is strategically located far, almost isolated, from the countryâs largest urban centers.â In his 1994 book, âOscar Niemeyer and the Architecture of Brazil,â historian David Underwood described the city as one âborn of imperial ambitions and as such could only reinforce the existing colonial structure.â Niemeyer embodied these contradictions himself. He continued to work on BrasÃlia after the Brazilian military seized power in 1964 â designing the capitalâs Ministry of Defense even as the military made his life hell. (Niemeyer was a communist who frequently found himself in the crosshairs of the regime.) Whatever the nuances of its creation, BrasÃlia is nonetheless the preeminent symbol of the Brazilian state and, ultimately, the will of its people â people who, incidentally, voted Bolsonaro out of office in October. Six decades out, Niemeyerâs structures retain an ebullient optimism. And their symbolism extends well beyond Brazilâs borders; to the world, they mark an era. ADVERTISEMENT
On and off the stage Times theater critic Charles McNulty [got a very hard-to-get appointment]( with shrink-to-the-stars Phil Stutz, who is the subject of a recent documentary by actor and client Jonah Hill titled âStutz.â And in a piece that is as much a working session as it is an interview, McNulty gets into the work of a psychiatrist who âpooh poohs Freudian protocol.â [Jonah Hill and Phil Stutz in Stutz are seen sitting next to each other in an office in a black and white photo.]
Jonah Hill, left, and Phil Stutz â as seen in the documentary âStutz.â (Netflix) John Rubinstein appears as the former president in âEisenhower: This Piece of Ground,â on view at the Hudson MainStage Theatre. [Itâs a role]( writes McNulty, that the actor assumes âwith such concentrated ease that itâs as if a figure known to some only through grainy news footage and the term âmilitary industrial complexâ (which he famously issued as a warning) has been allowed a temporary reprieve from death to talk some sense into a nation that has lost its way.â Design time I made a visit to Stone Mountain, Georgia, last May to get a gander at what is described as the largest Confederate monument in the world. Itâs a literal scar on the landscape: a supersize bas relief of Confederate leaders carved into a massive granite outcropping. In addition, its history is inextricably linked to the rise of the modern Ku Klux Klan. This week, the Atlanta History Center released a compelling new short doc that digs into the monumentâs troubled history â and [I had a look](. Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( The new Morphosis-designed Orange County Museum of Art has made headlines and kept social media tittering over its very sloppy finishes. (Think: foam core and artist tape.) Now the museum will close down for three weeks to work on the needed fixes. As I note in [my story on the debacle]( âwhen it comes to a structure with a $94-million price tag, itâd be nice if it vaguely resembled the glossy images that are being distributed to the press.â [A close-up of of a perforated aluminum ceiling panel shows "#19" scrawled in pencil on the trim.]
A perforated aluminum panel in the principal stairwell at OCMA reveals a contractorâs notations. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times)
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Classical notes Michael Tilson Thomas is in treatment for an aggressive cancer in his brain, but his illness hasnât kept him off the podium. Times classical music critic Mark Swed was in the audience at Disney Hall last week to see MTT, as he is known, lead Debussyâs âPrelude to the Afternoon of a Faunâ and Messiaenâs âTrois Petites Liturgies de la Présence Divine,â after which he sat down for [a wide-ranging interview]( with the celebrated conductor. âIâm still dying,â he says. âBut not as quickly as you would originally suppose.â [Michael Tilson Thomas, in a blue sweater, leads the L.A. Phil from the conductor's podium.]
Michael Tilson Thomas conducted a matinee concert with the L.A. Phil on Jan. 8. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times) At the Highland Park Ebell Club, Pacific Opera Project staged the U.S. premiere of Vivaldiâs âErcole Suâl Termodonteâ (Hercules on the River Thermodon) and it was [the sort of homegrown affair]( that gave a sense of âoperatic immediacyâ writes Swed. âThe production by Josh Shaw, who founded POP a decade ago, has some of his trademark jokiness that turns into gripping theatricality in a surprising instant.â ESPNâs College Football Playoff National Championship has an epic theme titled âOf Grit and Glory.â And it [is written by]( other than Oscar-winning composer John Williams, reports Jessica Gelt. Artistic controversy A Minnesota adjunct professor did not have her contract renewed after showing historic, centuries-old images of the Islamic prophet Muhammad in an art history class. Times columnist Robin Abcarian reports on how the charges of Islamophobia simply [do not wash](. Awards season As winners came forward to claim their Golden Globes on Tuesday, speeches were cut off by piano music. Except the music wasnât being produced by the eventâs pianist, Chloe Flower â it was taped. Even so, she took the heat for it on social media. She tells Jessica Gelt all [about the event](. Find all of The Timesâ Golden Globes coverage at [this link]( â including comedian Jerrod Carmichaelâs [pointed opening monologue](. [Chloe Flower dons a rouched white dress with a long train before a pink and grey step and repeat at the Golden Globes]
Pianist Chloe Flower arrives at the 80th Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton. (Amy Sussman / Getty Images)
Essential happenings My colleague Steven Vargas is kicking off the year with [his latest roundup]( for L.A. Goes Out, his weekly newsletter. This includes a dance festival at the Odyssey Theatre and painter Jim Shawâs latest at Gagosian. Want to be in-the-know on where to go? You can sign up for the newsletter [here](. Plus, Matt Cooper has [the latest edition of the culture guide]( up and itâs got everything in one handy map, including opera, dance, experimental film and retro swing. Moves The Andy Warhol Foundation has announced [the recipients]( of its fall grant cycle, which includes $4 million in grants to 48 arts organizations. They include the San Francisco Cinematheque, the 18th Street Arts Center in Santa Monica, and MOCA Los Angeles, which is teaming up with LAXART for the upcoming exhibition âMonuments.â The National Endowment for the Humanities announced $28.1 million in grants to [204 humanities projects]( including a Chinatown history project led by USC professor William Deverell and a project by Stanford historian Katy Long that will examine the deportation of Mexican Americans in the 1930s. The Mohn LAND Grants are [a new grant]( issued by Los Angeles Nomadic Division and funded by philanthropist Jarl Mohn to support emerging L.A. artists. This yearâs recipients are Star Feliz, [Maria Maea]( [Felix Quintana]( and Jackie Amézquita. [Maria Maea sits on a concrete step and makes notes in her family's patio.]
Maria Maea is one of several Los Angeles artists to receive one of the inaugural Mohn LAND Grants. (Samanta Helou Hernandez / For The Times) Jean Davidson [has been named executive director]( of the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C. She was previously the president and chief executive of the L.A. Master Chorale. Passages William C. Agee, an art historian and curator who led the Pasadena Art Museum in the 1970s (now the Norton Simon) and, later, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, has [died at 86](. Frank Galati, a Tony Award-winning writer and director known for his critically-acclaimed adaptation of âThe Grapes of Wrath,â is [dead at 79](. In other news â [The birth]( of Latin jazz.
â A Maori tribe in New Zealand has asked for [the return]( of various 18th and 19th century artifacts listed for sale by Sothebyâs.
â ProPublica has been taking [a close look]( at artifact repatriation under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act. The news isnât good: âA small group of institutions and government bodies has played an outsized role in the lawâs failure.â
â Plus, the U.S. has returned a looted Palestinian artifact [for the first time](.
â The Louvre has begun [capping daily attendance]( at 30,000 people per day in an attempt to provide a better visitor experience.
â A San Francisco gallery owner was caught on camera blasting a homeless woman [with a garden hose](. She has since [been hospitalized](.
â âA primal, glitter-fueled scream.â Hyperallergic has [a good story]( about the artistic legacy of Cyclona, the inimitable gender-bending character devised by L.A. artist Roberto Legorreta.
â n+1 on why [everything is ugly](. And last but not least ... An [hour of sun](. ADVERTISEMENT
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