SFMOMA acquires a prized capsule from metabolist architect Kisho Kurokawa's legendary building.
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[Essential Arts] [Click to view images]Demolition teams start to take down Tokyo's famed Nakagin Capsule Tower last spring. (Eugene Hoshiko/Associated Press) Iâd rather be having tea at [the Prada Caffè at Harrodâs]( in London. Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, art and design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, and instead Iâm in L.A., rounding up the weekâs essential arts news: A capsule, a concept When demolition crews in Tokyo began to [pry apart]( the Nakagin Capsule Tower last spring, it felt like the end to one of architectureâs more curious experiments. The tower, designed by architect Kisho Kurokawa and completed in 1972, was perhaps the most prominent example of the short-lived Metabolism movement of the 20th century, which sought to create buildings and megastructures that could be more organic or cellular in nature â structures that could expand, contract or mutate on demand. Nakagin consisted of two central 13-floor service cores, onto which 140 prefab pods were attached. (From the street, the building resembled a massive sci-fi honeycomb.) Each of these capsules sported a bed, a fold-out desk and a reel-to-reel tape player, and they were marketed toward businessmen who regularly overnighted in Tokyo. The idea was that capsules would be replaced and upgraded over the years â and that the owner of any given capsule could relocate it to other towers that might ultimately be built. Time and neglect, however, intervened. And this quirky yet beloved tower was demolished last year. (For months, I watched the entire dismantling process on [social media]( [A view of a tiny room with blue carpet and a circular window in the Nakagin Capsule Tower]
A renovated pod inside Kisho Kurokawaâs Nakagin Capsule Tower prior to demolition. (Carolina A. Miranda / Los Angeles Times) Thankfully, the demolition isnât the end of the story. Preservationist Tatsuyuki Maeda, who led the Nakagin Capsule Tower Preservation and Restoration Project, and for years fought valiantly to prevent the demolition, did manage to preserve 23 capsules. (A number of them were [displayed]( outside of the Museum of Modern Art, Saitama, also designed by Kurokawa, last May.) Now the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is set to announce that it has acquired Capsule A1302, which was owned by Kurokawa himself. (The architect died in 2007.) The capsule joins other important Japanese architectural holdings in the museumâs collection, including work by Fumihiko Maki, a fellow Metabolist whose firm [designed]( the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, located right across the street from SFMOMA. The museum has also collected a series of photographs by Noritaka Minami that documented [life inside the tower]( in the decade before its demolition. Jennifer Dunlop Fletcher, SFMOMAâs curator of architecture and design, says the capsule is a major score. âItâs so rare to collect a 1-to-1 scale piece of architecture,â she says. The podsâ size â only 104 square feet â makes their display in a museum feasible. âIt can fit inside, outside and thatâs phenomenal for us.â More significantly, the capsule fits the museumâs broader collecting aims: architecture that leans into the conceptual and is âfuture-facing,â explains Dunlop Fletcher. âThe Metabolists fit well with [Lebbeus Woods]( and [Archigram]( which are also in the collection. ... But itâs generally hard to find material related to Metabolism on offer.â [A white capsule apartment with a circular window is displayed in a garden space.]
One of the Nakagin capsules on display last year at the Museum of Modern Art, Saitama, north of Tokyo. (Hiro Komae / Associated Press) Dunlop Fletcher had been intrigued by the building for some time. She traveled to Tokyo as the tower was coming down and gathered with Maeda and others who owned capsules within the building. âThey were these interesting characters who each had a capsule and they rented an apartment across the street and they would get together every day to watch the building being dismantled. It was a range of emotions for them. And it was very special that they invited me to that space. ... It was an incredible experience.â Through their efforts, Maeda and the others have helped keep the concepts that gave rise to the Capsule Tower alive. Kurokawaâs architecture connects with a host of contemporary concerns: tiny homes, sustainability and density. âInstead of tearing down a whole building, can you repair a piece of it?â asks Dunlop Fletcher. âHow do we live more efficiently?â âI like the [nomadic idea]( the challenge to land ownership,â she adds. âWhat if you just had your pod and you could plug it into this core or that core?â The dismantling of the Nakagin Capsule Tower was painful to watch. (I have an inexplicable fondness for the building, which I toured in 2019.) But in some ways, it also marked an opportunity. One capsule is coming to San Francisco; others are likely to materialize in other locations around the world â spreading Kurokawaâs ideas in the process. âItâs not just the physical form we need to hold on to,â says Dunlop Fletcher, âitâs the concept.â SFMOMA completed the acquisition of the capsule late last month; an exhibition date has not yet been set. ADVERTISEMENT
On and off the stage âA Transparent Musical,â the show inspired by Joey Solowayâs TV series about a patriarch who comes out late in life as transgender, is having its world premiere at the Mark Taper Forum. Times theater critic Charles McNulty found the production lacking. âIf someone had blindfolded me and brought me to this production, I would have assumed that I was watching a performance by a talented and extremely well-funded amateur troupe in residence at an LGBTQ+ community center.â And [it goes on from there](... [Liz Larsen and Daya Curley wearing a blazer and a yellow sweater respectively perform a scene on stage.]
Liz Larsen and Daya Curley in the world premiere of âA Transparent Musicalâ at the Mark Taper. (Craig Schwartz ) With the Tony Awards coming this Sunday, McNulty says itâs time to give a prize to a key constituency of live theater: [the core audiences]( â who have endured COVID, inadequate bathroom facilities and concession-stand gouging to go see performers make magic onstage. âA special award to the stalwart Broadway theatergoer, without whom all of the yearâs celebrated excellence would be as meaningless as the proverbial tree falling in a forest with no one around to hear it.â In the galleries At the Broad museum, Times art critic Christopher Knight reviews the show of Keith Haringâs art â work made during the culture war of the â80s that connects to battles flaring today. Haringâs work, writes Knight, [covers a wide range of themes]( giving âprominence to pleasurable fun, like using loud Day-Glo paints that would interrupt the contemplative quiet of a typically hushed art gallery with the vivid exuberance found on a packed gay barâs liberating dance floor. Others were sober â imagery linked to political repression, the perpetual threat of nuclear annihilation, apartheid cruelty, Reagan-era greed, culture war incited by hate from the religious right, apathy toward the exploding AIDS crisis and more.â [ A detail of a cartoonish work by Keith Haring shows figures dancing under a green tree against a pink background.]
A detail of Keith Haringâs âTree of Life,â 1985, on display at the Broad. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times) New York gallerist James Fuentes opened a space in Hollywood last month and the debut show features more than a dozen paintings by Philadelphia-based painter Didier William. Iâve been running into Williamâs work in group shows for a number of years and was [excited to see]( this intriguing solo presentation. His canvases often feature faceless figures covered in eyes as well as graphic elements that draw from the spiritual traditions of his native Haiti. Itâs in its final week, do not miss! At the Wende Museum in Culver City, thereâs a show of photographs by Geoff MacCormack of David Bowieâs travels through the Cold War-era Soviet Union. The show [captures a journey]( made by the artist after his tour of Japan in 1973, when he headed overland through the Soviet Union to Europe â a trip that included a week on the Trans-Siberian Express. âThis exhibition is basically holiday snapshots,â guest curator Olya Sova tells The Timesâ Deborah Vankin. âNot David Bowie in the studio, no makeup or posing with lights.â [An overhead shot shows David Bowie sleeping in a narrow train cabin next to a tray of food and drinks.]
David Bowie sleeping in his train cabin. (Geoff MacCormack / Wende Museum)
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Musical notes Recent Pulitzer Prize-winner Rhiannon Giddens is music director of the Ojai Music Festival this year; she talks to contributor Tim Greiving about [busting through genres]( in her work and in this yearâs festival. âThere is an element of uncertainty about a program like this,â she tells him, âwhich is the point. There will be years where everything has been written out, and every concert has all pieces programmed, and theyâve been practiced and everything. This is not that year. ... I think everybody will have moments of, like, âIâm not sure whatâs going to happen right now.â But I think thatâs powerful.â [Rhiannon Giddens, her hair pulled back into a knot, rests her chin in her hands]
Rhiannon Giddens is a singer, banjo player and violinist who is also organizing this yearâs Ojai festival. (Rick Loomis / For The Times) The Timesâ Reed Johnson reported on the oldest attraction at the Hollywood Bowl: the annual Mariachi USA festival. An industry trope is that mariachi doesnât sell records. But as Johnson shows, it has sustained [a long-running L.A. tradition](. Design time Itâs 1971 and an aspiring movie director is trying to make it in the business. The business? Cheap grindhouse flicks that deliver a steady stream of nudity and gore. The aspiring director is an Iraqi Jew named Seymour, who, in addition to his all-consuming job in the lower rungs of Hollywood, is also contending with prickly marriage and a new infant. I review Sammy Harkhamâs [new graphic novel]( âBlood of the Virginâ â an intriguing story of â70s-era L.A. [A vertical comic book panel shows a large Spanish Revival house at night and the word "yep" in a speech bubble]
Sammy Harkhamâs âBlood of the Virginâ features remarkable scenes of Los Angeles in its art. (Sammy Harkham / Pantheon) The School of Architecture, which for decades was based at Taliesin outside of Phoenix, relocated to Paolo Soleriâs Arcosanti, also in Arizona, during the pandemic. Metropolisâ Sam Lubell checked in to see [how things are going](. âWith six semesters in the books (including a couple made very complicated by the pandemic),â he writes, âTSOA appears to be thriving in its new home.â Essential happenings My colleague Steven Vargas has [his list of culture picks for the week]( including the revival of the Pulitzer Prize-winning âA Soldierâs Playâ at the Center Theatre Group. Plus, Matt Cooper has [all of the greater L.A. happenings]( for Pride month. Moves Tim Griffin has been named [the executive director]( of the experimental opera company the Industry. A contributing editor at Artforum, he also recently served as executive director at the experimental New York art space the Kitchen. Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( Selena Preciado has been named [the new curator and director of programs]( at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions. She joins the organization from the Getty Foundation, where she helped manage the Getty Marrow Undergraduate Internship Program and support the Pacific Standard Time initiative. Robert W. Lovelace, an executive with the Capital Group, [has been named chair]( of the J. Paul Getty Trust. Passages Artist Jim Melchert, who created elegant, conceptual work in a range of media and served as a beloved mentor to generations of students at UC Berkeley, has died at 92. Contributor Sharon Mizota [pays tribute]( to her former teacher: âIt was in Jimâs class that I first felt the inkling that there was more to being an artist than simply expressing yourself. It was also about paying attention â looking closely and curiously â and being open to where it might take you.â [Jim Melchert, an older man with a beard, sits in a chair before a lamp wearing a striped sweater. ]
Among his many roles, artist Jim Melchert worked at the National Endowment for the Arts. (Griff Williams / Gallery 16, San Francisco) Robin Wagner, a Broadway set designer who fabricated the stage environments of âA Chorus Line,â âAngels in America,â âHairâ and many more, has died at 89. Wagner, as contributor Barbara Isenberg writes in [his obituary]( never formally studied theater design. Instead, he once said, âI was taught by directors.â In the news â Several theatrical productions canceled shows in New York City due to [the smoke conditions](. Among them: Jodie Comer [halted a matinee]( of Broadwayâs âPrima Facie.â
â A number of arts institutions also [closed temporarily due to wildfire smoke]( including the Noguchi Museum and the outdoor Socrates Sculpture Park in Queens.
â A good time for climate protesters to [harangue]( MoMAâs board of directors.
â Architect Harry Gesnerâs Malibu âWave Houseâ is on the market [for $49.5 million](.
â SFMOMAâs facade is looking [grungy](.
â Amid sky-is-falling reports about San Francisco, Claudia La Rocco writes about a bloom of [grassroots cultural happenings](.
â Joan Acocella reviews Jennifer Homansâ very hefty biography of George Balanchine â so hefty that the review is broken up into [two]( [pieces](.
â I really appreciate Ben Davisâ [take]( on the Warhol/Goldsmith copyright case, which notes that the Warhol in question â well, itâs not very good.
â Alice Procter at Hyperallergic also has [a terrific review]( of Hannah Gadsbyâs âPablo-maticâ show at the Brooklyn Museum, which has been causing [kerfuffles](.
â [The curious legacy]( of North Korean monuments in Africa.
â A stone sarcophagus from the 2nd to 3rd century Yayoi period was [opened]( in southwestern Japan. What could possibly go wrong? And last but not least ... Crashing Henry Kissingerâs [100th birthday](. ADVERTISEMENT
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