Artist Pablo Helguera brings a Spanish bookstore to VPAM. Plus, Basquiat at the Grand L.A. and an immersive 'Tempest,' in our weekly arts newsletter.
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[Essential Arts] [Click to view images]Pablo Helguera's pop-up "LibrerÃa Donceles" at VPAM is named for a Mexico City street that is lined with bookshops. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times) Itâs Friday, and Iâm thinking about [bourekas]( and [crispy tacos]( and the small matter of a certain [indictment](. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, arts and design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, with the weekâs essential arts news and Pedro Pascal memes: A hidden bookshop I love nothing more than a used bookstore. Cluttered shelves. The smell of musty paper. An owlish owner who happens to know whatâs in that teetering tower by the door. So, as I was making the rounds last weekend, I was very pleasantly surprised to run into Pablo Helgueraâs âLibrerÃa Doncelesâ at the Vincent Price Art Museum at East L.A. College. (Yes, Iâm still frantically catching up on all the art happenings I missed while on leave!) Helguera is a New York-based artist and educator who produces one of my favorite newsletters, âBeautiful Eccentrics,â which ruminates on an array of cultural themes. (His most recent missive is about staging an event and [having no one show up](. It is poignant, as always.) Iâve been reading about his âLibrerÃa Doncelesâ project for years: a socially driven art installation that is essentially a roving Spanish-language bookstore. [A LibrerÃa Donceles bookshelf is topped with flowers, old family pictures, a vintage washboard and the sign "Referencia."]
Pablo Helgueraâs âLibrerÃa Doncelesâ features all the little touches you might find in a small, independent used bookshop. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times) âLibrerÃa Doncelesâ has previously materialized in cities such as San Francisco, Boston and Indianapolis. In many locations, it is often the only Spanish-language bookstore in town. On the Eastside of Los Angeles, where it is currently installed, it has the company of great shops such as [Libros Schmibros]( in Boyle Heights (which is also a lending library) and [Other Books]( (also in Boyle Heights), which I love for the selection of artist books. But neither outpost is exclusively Spanish-language, which makes âDoncelesâ unique. Helguera writes that he is inspired by books â not just the knowledge they contain, but as physical objects. âTo me the relationship with the object of the book was not only educational and practical,â he wrote in 2017, âbut also emotional and symbolic.â The name âDoncelesâ is drawn from the Mexico City street known for its cluttered used bookshops. âAs a student, I frequented the Donceles bookstores in particular,â he adds, âboth because books were cheap and because I enjoyed the thrill of the chase, the hunting expedition through a labyrinth of books that would eventually yield a gem, a book so valuable that even the bookseller would not know what it was.â The installation at VPAM channels the vibe of those dusty shops found in Latin American capitals: from the wildly eclectic tomes (self-help, literature, outdated sci-fi) to the chess boards that visitors are welcome to employ for matches to the soundtrack (which was a combination of boleros and Peruvian landó when I happened through). You are welcome to browse, hang out and can buy a book by donation (funds go to the great Libros Schmibros) or, conversely, you are invited to donate your Spanish-language books. I managed to pick up a great tome on Frida Kahlo by [esteemed Mexican critic]( Raquel Tibol during my visit. A terrific score. Read more about why Helguera created the work in his essay [âA Vicarious Learning.â]( The installation is on view at the Vincent Price Art Museum through June 24, [vincentpriceartmuseum.org](. ADVERTISEMENT
In the galleries That time Madonna drove Jean-Michel Basquiat and Larry Gagosian around L.A. because no one else could drive. Or the regular visits Basquiat made to Gemini G.E.L. to watch Robert Rauschenberg work on prints. As âJean-Michel Basquiat: King Pleasureâ opens in downtown L.A., The Timesâ Deborah Vankin digs into [the time Basquiat spent in L.A.]( She also talks to his sisters, Lisane Basquiat and Jeanine Heriveaux, who organized the show. âHe wasnât just this dude who sprung up from the streets, like his story began when he left home,â says Lisane. âHe actually came from a family. And there was a lot of love in our home.â [Lisane Basquiat and Jeanine Heriveaux in silhouette before a painting by brother Jean-Michel Basquiat rendered on planks]
âJean-Michel Basquiat: King Pleasure,â now open at the Grand L.A., was produced by his sisters, Lisane Basquiat, left, and Jeanine Heriveaux. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times) I dig into the issue of museum seating with my first-ever museum seating report card: âSome beckon the sitter with backrests and velvety upholstery; others offer all the comfort of a Calvinist pew, demanding that you sit ramrod straight â apparently the ideal posture for experiencing the wrath of God or contemporary video artists.â Find out who got an A and [who is getting held back for the year](. If, like me, you are a seating geek, may I highly recommend the Instagram account [@museumseats](. Times critic Christopher Knight had a look at the freshly revamped and expanded Hammer Museum, which over the course of the last two decades, as he writes, âhas dramatically transitioned from a vanity-fueled embarrassment to [a vibrant cultural institution]( He has a look at their permanent collection show, âTogether in Time: Selections From the Hammer Contemporary Collection,â which was organized by a curatorial team led by the Hammerâs director, Ann Philbin, and chief curator Connie Butler. [A view, from below, of a towering classical sculpture in bronze wearing a large African mask and holding a torch ]
Sanford Biggersâ âOracle,â 2021, occupies a new terrace at the Hammer Museum. (Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)
Classical notes Debussyâs 1902 opera âPelléas et Mélisande,â writes Times classical music critic Mark Swed, is âa study of obfuscation and its consequences, an opera not of buoyant âLa Bohèmeâ Parisians with fantasies of greatness in their miserable garrets but [characters disillusioned by fantasies]( in the presence of fate and nature.â Though this production by L.A. Opera was imported from Scottish Opera, he writes, this is âa decidedly American âPelléasâ in its own right.â [Two women in lush gowns have their backs turned to each other as they perform opera on a dimly lit stage.]
Geneviève (sung by Susan Graham), left, and Mélisande (Sydney Mancasola) in a scene from Debussyâs âPelléas et Mélisande.â (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times) Composer Reena Esmail has been artist-in-residence with the Master Chorale, and [her first commission]( appropriately enough, is all about water. âA Requiem for Waterâ is inspired by Californiaâs water crisis â and synthesizes Western classical music with Indian ragas. âHer work,â writes Tim Greiving, âis a duet between traditions, where classically notated orchestral and chamber ensembles dance with improvised, microtonal Hindustani vocals, sitars and violins.â ADVERTISEMENT
On and off the stage My colleague Jessica Gelt spent her 20s touring in indie rock bands. (Hereâs her bandâs [MTV Spain debut]( So she has a true insiderâs perspective on the Geffen Playhouseâs world-premiere musical âThe Lonely Few,â which is about indie rock musicians. Some things were immediately different from a true rock show â like the usher who hands patrons earplugs. âWhen you show up at a real dive bar to see a real indie band, nobody hands you earplugs,â she writes, âand the person at the door taking your money could not care less if your ears bleed.â But how else does the show stack up? Well, youâll have to [read her report]( to find out. ICYMI, here is theater critic Charles McNultyâs [review]( of the show. Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( As Gelt was rocking out, McNulty was [immersing himself in an immersive production]( of âThe Tempest,â a collaboration between the Shakespeare Center of Los Angeles and After Hours Theatre Company. Visitors can wander about the set, but there are sit-down portions of the action too. Directed by Ben Donenberg, the show âallows political interpretations to arise through the particular qualities and life experiences of his actors. The approach is pluralistic.â [Actors Jin Maley and Chris Butler, who is wearing a green button-down shirt, are seen performing onstage.]
Chris Butler, right, brings a âruthless unsentimentalityâ to the role of Prospero, writes McNulty. (Brian Hashimoto)
Design time The amount of water featured in [the architectural renderings]( for the Disney community in Rancho Mirage is giving me agita. Have we learned nothing? [An architectural rendering for the Disney community Cotino shows a development with a massive pool.]
The designers of Cotino, the Disney community planned for Rancho Mirage, appear not to have heard of this phenomenon called a megadrought. (Walt Disney Imagineering) The Times is unveiling a new newsletter called [âYou Do ADUâ]( that is all about how to conceive, design, permit and build an ADU â one of the more common forms of new housing in L.A. â and it will be hosted by my colleague Jon Healey. Design writer Lisa Boone, in the meantime, has a look at [an ADU project]( that has helped bring a Chilean Ukrainian family together â and served as emergency housing for refugees fleeing the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Essential happenings Matt Cooper has [all the happenings]( organized by neighborhood, including a ballet inspired by Laura Esquivelâs novel âLike Water for Chocolateâ at the Segerstrom in Costa Mesa and a new showcase from L.A. Dance Project in downtown L.A. Steven Vargas has the [essential going-out guide]( with dance theater, Haitian âdrapoâ tapestries and a play centered on Vietnamese cooking â and all the politics that implies. [A brilliant tapestry showing a celebratory scene in a village is trimmed in sparkling elements in purple.]
A drapo tapestry by Myrlande Constant, Baron Lakwa and Met Jan Simon at the Fowler Museum. (George Echevarria / Myrlande Constant / Central Fine)
Moves L.A. author Carribean Fragoza was [one of 10 writers]( to be bestowed with a Whiting Award this week. To mark the occasion, she and I had a terrific conversation about writing and female interiority. âI am fascinated by the scowl, the unsmiling aspect of little girls, when theyâre young enough that they canât be made to smile if they donât want to,â she tells me. âIâm interested in protecting that.â Passages Ann Wilson, the last of the Coenties Slip artists of Lower Manhattan, a group that included painters such as Agnes Martin and Ellsworth Kelly, has [died at 91](. The L.A.-based designer Suzanne Rheinstein, known for the classic interiors she designed for the patron class, is [dead at 77](. Ethiopian pianist and composer Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou, who spent much of her life in a monastery, and whose music has appeared in Oscar-nominated films, has [died at 99.]( In the news â Matt Pearce has a terrific essay on the death of Twitter, which he likens to [a dead mall](.
â Speaking of dead malls, Iâm belatedly catching up on âThe Last of Usâ and really enjoyed the episode that takes place in a mall. Slateâs Nadira Goffe wrote on why this was [a poignant location](.
â If I had to synthesize architecture critic Oliver Wainwrightâs review of Eric Owen Mossâ â(W)rapperâ building in Culver City in only four words, itâd be: [âhell to the no.â](
â Pro-Putin artists shunned by Western institutions are finding an audience in places such as [China, Serbia and the United Arab Emirates](.
â A Roman statue of Septimius Severus [has been seized]( from the Metropolitan Museum after investigators said it had been stolen from an archaeological site in Turkey. Other items were also seized.
â In much happier news, the Compton Art & History Museum opened last month. And William Poundstone [paid a visit](.
â The obsessive Greg Allen catalogs [all the artworks shown]( in a well-known photograph of a young Robert Rauschenberg.
â Henri Cartier-Bressonâs [photographs]( of New Jersey. And last but not least ... Pedro Pascal as [mushrooms](. ADVERTISEMENT
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