Sacha Halona Baumann photographed downtown on daily walks for eight years. Plus, 'Ava' casts a spell and the Hammer biennial announces its lineup.
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[Essential Arts] [Click to view images]Sacha Halona Baumann has collected her images of downtown L.A. in her artist book, "Step and Repeat." (Sacha Halona Baumann) I am officially addicted to [Boon Sauce]( chili crisp, which can be generously deployed in this beyond-easy recipe for [cold spicy noodles](. (Youâre welcome.) Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, art and design columnist at the Los Angeles Times, and Iâve got all the art world spice: Walkabout âI like walking because it is slow, and I suspect that the mind, like the feet, works at about three miles an hour,â wrote Rebecca Solnit in her 2001 book [âWanderlust: A History of Walking.â]( âIf this is so, then modern life is moving faster than the speed of thought, or thoughtfulness.â For artist Sacha Halona Baumann, walking is not only locomotive, it is where she clears her mind by examining the cityâs ever-changing landscape. Thatâs downtown Los Angeles, the neighborhood she has inhabited since the early 1990s and assiduously recorded â first with cameras, now an iPhone. âIâll often walk randomly,â she says. âIâll turn when a light changes. I take the subway three times a week. And my eyes will drift to something repeatedly and Iâll notice changes.â That shifting downtown landscape is at the core of her book, âStep and Repeat,â published last year, which gathers hundreds of images captured between 2014 and 2022 exclusively on a smartphone. [Palm trees rise above a concrete wall trimmed in barbed wire as a stretch of elevated roadway runs overhead]
Sacha Halona Baumann often captures the unexamined corners of the city. (Sacha Halona Baumann) These are not grand images of the L.A. skyline with its recognizable architectural icons. Instead, they are quickly snapped smartphone pics that zero in on the small details that Baumann observes on her walks: the pattern of a brick wall, the shadows cast by a fire hydrant studded with an array of knobs, a faded graphic of roasted chickens, a hand-painted sign laced with eyes that offers gold barato barato â cheap cheap. Some of these details might seem mundane. But as you pore over her book, the forms begin to repeat â like those knobby fire hydrants or the baroque facade of the Los Angeles Theatre, the faded-yet-glamorous 1931 movie palace designed by S. Charles Lee and S. Tilden Norton. Though the subjects of her photos reoccur, they are never the same. Sometimes the light is stark; other times it has been diffused by morning fog. At times, the shadows are long; at others, barely perceptible. Here you might see the facade of a theater; elsewhere youâll find the industrial backside. One repeating theme is the image of scorpion pendants in jewelry store windows. Baumann, who is a Scorpio, says , âScorpios are sort of like vegans â they like it when everybody knows it.â (As a fellow Scorpio, I can confirm this.) [A handmade sign with eyes drawn throughout reads "Se Vende Oro Laminado Menos de Mayoreo â Barato Ojo Barato"]
A handmade sign advertises the sale of gold in downtown Los Angeles in a photograph by Sacha Halona Baumann. (Sacha Halona Baumann) The artistâs images do not obscure downtown L.A.âs more brutal aspects: the inhuman scale of its loading docks or the myriad architectural barriers that are erected to purportedly protect the city from its people. But neither do they exploit or fetishize the cityâs grit. The pictures are straightforward and sympathetic. As Baumann puts it: âI think of them as being generous.â In the same way that she lets certain limitations shape some of her walks downtown â such as simply turning if she is unable to cross a street â she likewise set a series of arbitrary conditions for âStep and Repeat.â One, she only selected photos dating back to 2014 because thatâs how far back she has smartphone images warehoused on her iCloud account. And the bookâs length â 480 pages â was determined by the maximum allowable by Blurb, the service she used to publish the work. Images were then chosen at random, though once these were selected, she organized them in ways that create interesting juxtapositions of color and form. âYou can open it up to any page and you can find a story,â she says. Baumann also works as a curator, art consultant and graphic designer. For two years, she published the arts broadsheet [âFull Bledeâ]( featuring the work of artists â mostly imagery, but also short stories, essays and poems. On Saturday, 17 images from her downtown series â devoted to orange traffic cones â will be on display at the Brand Library and Art Center in Glendale as part of the group show âDonât Believe Everything You Think.â Also on display will be a copy of the book. [Paired images show an L.A. Theatre sign surrounded by blue ventilation tubing and a boarded window with torn blue paper]
Images are paired by color in a spread from Sacha Halona Baumannâs âStep and Repeat.â (Sacha Halona Baumann) But itâs worth hanging out with her book beyond the gallery, sitting with it, revisiting it and letting the little corners of L.A. engage in their relentless chatter. Appearing more than once in Baumannâs book is an image of a dental billboard that features a smiling mouth rising from a buildingâs rooftop. Itâs Cheshire Cat-like grin is unconnected to any face and depending on the angle, the mouth can feel friendly or strained â L.A.âs answer to [the eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg]( the fictional billboard that plays an all-seeing role in F. Scott Fitzgeraldâs âThe Great Gatsby.â The dental billboard â for the practice of one Dr. Lee â is one Iâve long been fascinated by and have, in fact, [photographed]( in the past. What is the mouth trying to tell us? The answer to that depends on when or how you look. âDonât Believe Everything You Think,â curated by Galia Linn, opens at the Brand Library 6 p.m. Saturday. Find details at [brandlibrary.art](. You can find Sacha Halona Baumannâs âStep and Repeatâ available for purchase at [sachabaumann.com](. ADVERTISEMENT
On and off the stage Premiering this week at the Geffen Playhouse was âAva: The Secret Conversations,â a play adapted from the book, âThe Secret Conversations,â which [captures the closing chapters]( of the life of the mercurial Ava Gardner, played by Elizabeth McGovern (of âDownton Abbeyâ fame). âNot many contemporary actors could summon to the stage Gardnerâs radiance and decrepitude simultaneously,â writes Times theater critic Charles McNulty. âThe characterâs flirtatious ploys have an air of desperation, but a spell is nonetheless cast so that the audience canât help falling into a romantic trance.â [An elegant woman in a black off-the-shoulder dress and sunglasses holds a drink and lit cigarette in the same hand ]
Elizabeth McGovern as Ava Gardner in the Geffen Playhouse 2022/2023 Season production of âAva: The Secret Conversations.â (Justin Bettman) The nontraditional, ethnically diverse revival of the Tony-winning â1776,â directed by Ryan Cantwell, is now on stage at the Ahmanson, more than 50 years after its original debut â with an all-female-identifying, nonbinary and transgender cast (basically everyone that wasnât in the room when it happened). This intriguing musical â I caught it last week â tells the story of how U.S. independence came to be and offers a more honest appraisal of the role that slavery played in that equation than âHamiltonâ (to which it is inevitably compared). âThe message, that the American experiment failed before it even began, isnât a radical take on history at this point,â writes contributor Margaret Gray in her [review of the show.]( âWhat feels fresh, and heartening, is the reminder that we donât have to be limited forever by the errors of history. We can invite more people to the meeting.â [Gisela Adisa, seen in Colonial-style ensemble of knee socks and ruffled blouse, performs on stage in "1776."]
Gisela Adisa as John Adams in the touring production of â1776.â (Joan Marcus) âPhantom of the Operaâ has concluded after [the longest run in Broadway history](. Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber [dedicated the final performance]( to his late son Nicholas Lloyd Webber. âThis has been a season of goodbyes, personal and public,â Webber wrote in [a guest essay]( for the New York Times. âWith the curtain now fallen in New York on the musical that has been the biggest of my career, I passionately pray that Broadway rediscovers the appetite for new scores and original work.â New York Times culture writers Joshua Barone, Alexis Soloski and Elisabeth Vincentelli parse [the showâs legacy](. In and out of the galleries Artist Sherrill Rolandâs exhibition at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery is [inspired by his journey]( through what he describes as the âbroken American criminal justice system.â The show, reports The Timesâ Deborah Vankin, features works made out of the materials he had access to or saw while incarcerated â such as an etched wall piece that employs Kool-Aid in lieu of pigment or paint. Others evoke the architecture of the prison system. As he tells Vankin: âI couldnât see a bird, I couldnât see a cloud.â [An installation view of an art exhibit in a gallery shows large fans on the floor and a painting made of colorful dots]
An installation view of Sherrill Rolandâs âdo without, do within,â at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery. (Jeff McLane / Tanya Bonakdar Gallery) Vankin also reports that the Hammer Museum has announced its lineup for the fallâs âMade in L.Aâ biennial. The show is being organized by independent curators Diana Nawi and Pablo José RamÃrez with Ashton Cooper, and the final list includes painters Joey Terrill and Marcel Alcalá, performance artist Jibz Cameron (better known as Dynasty Handbag), multimedia artists Young Joon Kwak and Sula Bermúdez-Silverman, the musical collective Más Exitos and [maaaany more](. Hereâs hoping the show features [a performance]( by Dynasty Handbag. MOCA had its annual gala fundraiser over the weekend and The Timesâ Steven Vargas was at [the techno-inspired party]( which helped raised more than $2.7 million. There was lamé, there were fishnets and there were some thumping beats â courtesy of artist and DJ Carl Craig, who currently has a sound-based installation on view in the museumâs Little Tokyo space. [A close up reveals an obscured image of a woman's legs and a waft of a pink tulle skirt that floats in the breeze]
On the scene at the MOCA gala: Did I mention the pink tulle? (Chloe Pang / For The Times) The Timesâ Laurie Ochoa, general manager of food (and my former boss!), writes about the Norton Simonâs new exhibition âAll Consuming: Art and the Essence of Foodâ which [contrasts images of excess with poverty](. âThe hunger and excess juxtaposition from past centuries is, of course, just as relevant today in a city where people living on the streets are sometimes a few yards away from restaurants serving tasting menus costing hundreds of dollars,â writes Ochoa. L.A. artist Lauren Halsey has brought a monument to Black life to the rooftop of the Met in New York. New York Times critic Holland Cotter describes it as [âone of the bestâ]( in the Metâs series of roof garden commissions. (She presented an [earlier version]( of the concept at the Hammer Museum back in 2018.) Plus, photographer Camilo José Vergara digs into one element that has appeared in Halseyâs work: a hand-painted sign for [braids by Jade]( that he photographed in the â90s. ADVERTISEMENT
Classical notes For years, Rachmaninoff was a no-go zone for the classical avant-garde. [That has changed]( writes Times classical music critic Mark Swed. âRachmaninoff has gone from being widely viewed as a musical archconservative to a protomodernist.â Of a recent concert by Conrad Tao at the Soraya, Swed notes that the pianist marked the 150th anniversary of Rachmaninoffâs birth with a show that presented the composer in combination with music by figures such as Stephen Sondheim and Irving Berlin. [Conrad Tao, in a black suit, is seen playing a black grand piano on stage.]
Pianist Conrad Tao plays Rachmaninoff at the Soraya at CSUN. (Luis Luque / Luque Photography) âChevalierâ is [a new film]( directed by Stephen Williams that explores the life of Joseph Bologne, an 18th century composer born to a French plantation owner and an enslaved Senegalese woman. Itâs an incredible story: about a mixed-race musician who went on to work with the Paris Opera and forge a friendship with Marie Antoinette. Unfortunately, the screenplay upon which the film is based, writes contributor Katie Walsh, is ârather trite and predictable.â Essential happenings Steven Vargas rounds up [all there is to see and do]( including a show of Alake Shillingâs buggy pieces at Jeffrey Deitch and a Sondheim Celebration at the Pasadena Playhouse. And Matt Cooper rounds up events around the Greater L.A. area [by neighborhood]( including a semi-staged production of âRigolettoâ at the Segerstrom and American Contemporary Balletâs immersive âHomecomingâ in downtown L.A. Moves The National Endowment for the Humanities has announced [$35.63 million in grants]( for 258 humanities projects across the country, including funding for a traveling exhibition on Mesoamerican approaches to color organized by LACMAâs Diana Magaloni. Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( The Seattle Art Museum has received [a major gift]( of 48 works by Alexander Calder, accompanied by a $10-million endowment, from former Microsoft president Jon Shirley. In 2014, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco was also on the the receiving end of a transformative gift: a collection of Indigenous art from Thomas W. Weisel. This month itâs releasing [a 432-page volume]( of 206 objects from that collection â written and photographed in consultation with Indigenous cultural advisers. Passages Emmy-winning set designer John Iacovelli, known for his ability to create stage environments that channeled spectacle and âBeckettian minimalismâ for both the stage and the screen, has [died at the age of 64](. Todd Haimes, who helped steer New Yorkâs Roundabout Theatre Company from near-bankruptcy into a Tony-winning theatrical force, is [dead at 66](. Ryuichi Sakamoto, an avant-garde musician and composer whose â70s-era techno-pop band Yellow Magic Orchestra made him an unlikely pop star, has [died at 71](. [Ryuichi Sakamoto, in white shirt and black suit jacket, wearing tortoise shell glasses, looks over his left shoulder.]
Ryuichi Sakamoto at the Venice Film Festival in 2017. (Domenico Stinellis / Associated Press) Eric Lloyd Wright, a Southern California architect who was also a grandson of Frank Lloyd Wright, is [dead at 93](. Loren Cameron, a transgender portraitist who captured some of the quotidian aspects of trans life, [died late last year at the age of 63](. In the news â In honor of 4/20, design critic Alexandra Lange reports on the design of [cannabis packaging]( with nods to brutalist architecture and Luis Barragán.
â L.A. Weeklyâs Shana Nys Dambrot looks at the âwild, sometimes outright visionary, and frequently hilariousâ art and design from [the days in which cannabis was not yet legal](.
â [A short but very interesting primer]( on Tony Hill, a pioneering, L.A.-based Black ceramicist who became known for his innovative lamp designs at mid century.
â Brad Pittâs foundation [still owes]( Hurricane Katrina victims settlement money.
â Remember how I was [blabbing last week]( about Hilma af Klint and ecologies of ideas? Well, it turns out that Af Klint had [a raft of collaborators]( for her series âThe Paintings for the Templeâ â among them, painter Anna Cassel.
â Vulture has [an interesting profile]( of Jaune Quick-to-See Smith.
â Nancy Baker Cahill has created an augmented-reality piece, [âState Property,â]( that shows a uterus exploding over the U.S. Supreme Court building.
â The FBI has launched [a stolen art app](.
â During the early days of the pandemic, I caught a live broadcast of Miguel Gutierrezâs cabaret show âSadonnaâ and was enthralled. Since then, he has joined the faculty at UCLA and has [a rack of choreographic projects]( in the works.
â I really appreciated [this episode]( of the podcast âOur Opinions Are Correct,â that looks at the roots of our cultureâs obsession with the lone genius, a trope rooted in the inventor/madman of science fiction. And last but not least ... This week also marks Earth Day. Be respectful of [the elder trees](. ADVERTISEMENT
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