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L.A. History: A Mexican Perspective. Los Angeles, California, 1981. Artist: Barbara Carrasco (b.1955). Acrylic and wood on Masonite panels. Courtesy California Historical Society/LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes; photo: Sean Meredith, 2017.

Dear DnA Readers,

I hope you’re doing well, especially after last week's political earthquake. There is much to discuss in connection with that. But for now, how about a walk in the park... 

This Sunday, the Natural History Museum welcomes Angelenos with a Celebration & Block Party for a new addition — the "modern and inviting front porch” at the West end of the building, serving visitors entering from the South, and making a more direct link to the entrance to the emerging Lucas Museum.

The architect Frederick Fisher designed an understated new wing, complete with a multi-purpose 400-seat theater, a shop, a cafe, and a Welcome Center with views out into the park, which has been landscaped by Studio Mia Lehrer (below).

4. NHM Commons, photo courtesy of the Natural History Museums of Los Angeles County © Undine PröhlExterior of NHM Commons, photo courtesy of the Natural History Museums of Los Angeles County © Undine Pröh.

The long lobby features three linear elements: Gnatalie, a 70-foot sauropod dinosaur skeleton, a wavy wall with a rib-like structure designed to echo the skeletal objects on display; and, perhaps the star attraction, Barbara Carrasco’s landmark 1981 mural L.A. History: A Mexican Perspective, a depiction of Los Angeles landmarks and personalities, commissioned by the now defunct Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA), and then censored over objections at the artist including imagery of the 1871 Chinese massacre, the wartime internment of Japanese Americans, and the Zoot Suit Riots. Now it is on permanent display, in its entirety. (A portion of the mural, from a photo by Sean Meredith is shown top of page). 

NHM Commons Welcome Center Looking WestRendering of the Judith Perlstein Welcome Center looking West. Image courtesy Frederick Fisher & Partners.

The "NHM Commons" may also go a small way toward improving the general experience of Expo Park, once described by Sam Lubell as a "remarkable compilation of attractions" that are ill-served by the parkland they sit on because it "remains broken, chopped, blocked and diced — a slew of largely car-oriented puzzle pieces interspersed with more than half a dozen outsized parking lots, several faceless access roads and some ugly fences and patches of dirt." Lubell followed up with the recent news of a masterplan for the entire site that will even bury some of those parking lots.

The new building also brings you right up close to the Lucas Museum — whose completion is delayed but expected next year. It's interesting to be in the NHM lobby with its skeletal remains of Gnatalie and stare out onto the looming biped of a building, designed by MAD Architects, that appears to be part alien object touching down, and part huge pavilion floating over a park.

OTM_28-29The Lucas Museum, photographed for Of The Moment by Jasmine Park

Elevating the form is not unlike another emerging museum, LACMA's David Geffen Galleries, designed by Peter Zumthor.

Peter Zumthor’s LACMA and Other Impossible Ideas

Speaking of the new LACMA building, you may be witnessing its emergence astride Wilshire Boulevard. Perhaps you wonder, is this concrete behemoth going to be a stunning art environment, with soulful and meticulously crafted space, materials, and play of light, traversing a desert garden and LA's most prominent street? Or will it be a giant blunder that feels like a freeway overpass?

The jury has been out on this project for the years it has been in process and along the way, many of the features that would have made it quintessentially Zumthor (like chapel-like natural light in the galleries) got cut out. Not to mention there has been a controversy over its size and its curatorial direction, dispensing with the encyclopedic museum model in favor of shows organized around themes.

LACMA, photo by FA, IMG_8441The David Geffen Galleries at LACMA arise, October 2024. Photo by Frances Anderton.

This Thursday, proponents and skeptics of the project will gather at an event hosted by LA Forum to discuss "LACMA’s transformation, its responsibility to its stakeholders, and the implications for public projects and civic architecture in Los Angeles." The conversation will be moderated by Jasmine Benyamin, with architects Frank Escher, John Southern, Linda Taalman, and Mohamed Sharif. A few remaining seats will be released Wednesday. The conversation will also be livestreamed on Instagram at @laforum_aud.

Click here for details.

LACMA buildingModel of the proposed David Geffen Galleries. Image courtesy Atelier Peter Zumthor

Cultural Capital

For more on the state of the LACMA and Lucas Museum buildings, check out Of The Moment. This one-off publication, available in PDF here, produced by Thom Mayne's Stray Dog Cafe and featuring conversations between architects about new directions in LA design, contains some striking new photos of both buildings, taken by Jasmine Park.

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Design Things To Do

 


New Ecologies of Radical Kindness
Lecture by David Godshall 
Thursday, November 14th, 7:00 PM 
Otis College of Art and Design, 9045 Lincoln Boulevard, Los Angeles, 90045 (Academic Wing, Elaine and Bram Goldsmith Campus)  
 
I first met David Godshall when we toured "test plots" of native plants that he and a team of volunteers were creating at Elysian Park, for this KCRW story about rewilding, and later witnessed gardens created by his firm Terremoto, painterly mixes of fragrant, soft colored native plants and herbs.

Godshall will address the artistic, environmental, and social dimensions of landscape architecture at a public lecture at Otis College of Art and Design this Thursday. “We believe that through investigating the nature of our relationships to the tools with which we create (land, labor, plants, and materials), we can improve and evolve our modes and methods of practice,” he says. “By asking “Why, How and For Whom is the Garden?” we drift towards ecologically and philosophically fertile new territory.”

Click here for details.

Terremoto at Elysian ParkImage courtesy Terremoto.
 
There There: UNEARTHING
Wedge Gallery, Woodbury University, 7500 North Glenoaks Boulevard, Burbank, 91504-1052
Friday, November 15th - Saturday, November 30th; Opening Friday, November 15th, 6:00 PM

Tucked away on the Woodbury University campus in Burbank is the small Wedge Gallery, and starting this Friday you can find there a gem of a show by the Madrid-born, LA-based Monica Lamela, principal of her own architecture firm There There, and one of a seeming stream of talents emanating from Spain and Mexico City.

Unearthing showcases her gifts for design and poetic representation, in three houses under construction, in Joshua Tree and Mexico, and unbuilt projects in LA and overseas.

"Our work and research unearths the layered stories and contested meanings of a place to propose new imaginaries that are in dialogue with them," says Lamela, adding, "Because we believe there is always a There, There."

z_AXO_03_interior_NO GUESTHOUSECurving, concrete block house in Joshua Tree. Image courtesy There There.

LA Forum x 3

The volunteer-run nonprofit, the LA Forum for Architecture and Urban Design, has been a machine lately, pumping out so many interesting events it's hard to keep up.

Above, I mentioned the upcoming juicy discussion about the Zumthor building at LACMA.

This Saturday, November 16th, at 4:30 PM you can get to tour a "House Stepping Down a Hill" with its architect Barbara Bestor. A few tix remain. Click here for details.

Then there is Under the Influence 009, below, that I'll speak at.

House Stepping Down a HillHillside house by Bestor Architecture. Image courtesy Bestor Architecture.

Pumped about Housing
Under the Influence 009
Wednesday, November 20th, – 6:30 PM
Neutra VDL Studio and Residences, 2300 Silverlake Blvd, Los Angeles 90039

Johanna Hurme helms the Winnipeg-based 5468796 Architecture firm, designer of very powerful buildings (see below!), and an advocate and researcher into contemporary issues in multi-family housing and urban design.

I'm thrilled to get the chance to talk to her at Under the Influence 009, hosted by LA Forum in collaboration with the Neutra VDL Studio and Residences, designed by Richard Neutra. 

Click here for tickets.

5468796_Pumphouse_06_James-Brittain-1343x2048Pumphouse, an adaptive reuse of a Winnipeg pumping station, by 5468796 Architecture. Photo by James Brittain.

Building in Place
Book signing with Greg Goldin and Lorcan O'Herlihy
Arcana: Books on the Arts, 8675 Washington Blvd, Culver City, CA 90232
Saturday, November 16th, 4:00 PM

For three decades, the architect Lorcan O'Herlihy has advanced the art and social science of housing, creating market-rate and affordable developments that push the limits on form and materials while shaping space to enhance human interaction. Along the way, he's produced monographs and treatises explaining his approach.

His latest is Building in Place: Architecture Rooted in Context and Social Equity, and O'Herlihy and author Greg Goldin will talk about the book and sign copies this Saturday at Arcana: Books on the Arts.

Click here for details about the book signing.

mlkspreadSpread from Building in Place: Architecture Rooted in Context and Social Equity

Helms Bakery is Baaack!

Get to the booksigning early and check out the new Helms Bakery!!! This is the new incarnation of the famed Helms Bakery, helmed by Father's Office owner Chef Sang Yoon and team, has "soft" opened, after many years of anticipation. Click here for information.

HELMSBAKERY_coach_artArchival image courtesy of Helms Bakery

Design for Good: LA Modern Auctions (LAMA) 
Public preview: November 12th, 6:00–8:00 PM; Public viewing: Monday, November 14th to Friday, November 21st, 11:00 AM–4:00 PM, or by appointment; Live auction: November 21st, 10:00 AM
LAMA, 6666 Lexington Avenue, Hollywood

Get a design fix and support Frank Lloyd Wright’s historic Hollyhock House at the auction of a selection of furnishings, artwork, and objects by Southern California-based designers and architects, taking place at the home of LAMA (LA Modern Auctions.)

Curated by Dung Ngo, Editor in Chief of AUGUST, items available include this nifty Half, Table Lamp by Jialun Xiong.

Click here for information.

327_1_design_november_2024_jialun_xiong_half_table_lamp__lama_auctionHalf, Table Lamp by Jialun Xiong. Image courtesy of Rago/Wright/LAMA

WestEdge Design Fair
Barker Hangar, 3021 Airport Avenue, Santa Monica
Thursday, November 14th–Saturday, November 16th; Opening Night Party: Thursday, 6:00–10:00 PM; Opening hours Friday and Saturday, 10:00 AM–6:00 PM

WestEdge Design Fair opens this Thursday at the Barker Hangar at Santa Monica Airport, bringing together interior designers, furniture makers, and more.

On Saturday morning I'll lead a conversation about ADUs — Small Space Big Style: The ADU Revolution and Popularity Behind Living Small — with contractor Joan Barton, of Dirty Girl Construction, Marcos Santa Ana, Alloi, Tyler Velten (Ike Baker Velten), and Aijie Rhyu (ARA-la Studio).

Click here for tickets to the Fair; click here for the schedule of talks.

Living it up at Westedge, 2023-11-20_WE23_Nayeli_IMG05867-687x1030 copyLiving it up at Westedge, 2023. Image courtesy westedgedesignfair.com




Binge-watch Buildings!

The Architecture & Design Film Festival Los Angeles
Tuesday, November 19th–Saturday, November 23th
Writers Guild Theatre, Beverly Hills and Culver Theater, Culver City

The Architecture and Design Film Festival kicks off Tuesday with the LA premiere of Schindler Space Architect, plus many other must-see docs including Stardust: The Story of Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown, and This House is Not a House, directed by Morgan Neville (20 Feet From Stardom), about the concrete house buried in the Montecito hillside, designed by Robin Donaldson.

Films will be followed by Q&As with directors and commentators. Following Friday's screening of E.1027 – Eileen Gray and the House by the Sea, I'll sit down with two experts on the fascinating Irish designer, the artist Kim Schoenstadt and writer Shane Reiner-Roth.

Click here for information and tickets.

Screenshot 2024-11-12 at 10.53.15 AMHill House Montecito, image courtesy Donaldson + Partners

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What I'm Digging 

Button Up!

Out with the touchscreen, back to the button! “Tactile controls” are in vogue, per IEEE Spectrum, which reports that Apple has added two new buttons to the iPhone 16, home appliances are returning to knobs, and car makers are reintroducing buttons and dials to dashboards. This “re-buttonization” is credited in part to the work of Rachel Plotnik, a professor with deep expertise on buttons and why we like to push them. 

Now, if only she could get us back to manual faucets rather than those automated ones that never seem to respond to the wave of a hand.

Apple-iPhone-16-finish-lineup-240909_big.jpg.large_2xThe new iPhone 16 features an "Action" button and one for camera control. Image courtesy Apple.com

“Green” Concrete?

Concrete carpets our world, and architects generally love it. It is malleable, it does not dry too fast, and it lends itself to monumental and sculptural forms (see, LACMA, and Montecito Hill House, above and below). Yet, it is a mega-chugger of carbon thanks to the production of the binding material, cement, that is made “by heating limestone in kilns hot enough to melt rock,” write the authors of this Washington Post article about how materials experts are seeking the Holy Grail of “green concrete.” Meanwhile, the NYT thinks the answer lies with the special self-healing concrete made by the Romans. Riveting. Really.

Screenshot 2024-11-12 at 11.24.09 AMHill House Montecito, image courtesy Donaldson + Partners

The Diplomat

Two complicated relationships — between a diplomat and her spouse; and between the US and the UK — are at the heart of the truly delicious Netflix show The Diplomat, back for a second season, starring Keri Russell and Rufus Sewell, along with a cast of great actors. It somehow blends absurdity with bracing lessons in realpolitik, not to mention the semiotics of clothing for women in politics. 

The Diplomat, main_2024-11-07_16-39-18Keri Russell stars as The Diplomat. Image courtesy Netflix.

Well, that's it for this week. Thank you so much for reading. Keep me updated with your events.

Yours as always,
Frances

P.S. Subscribe to the newsletter here, get back issues here, and reach out to me at francesanderton@gmail.com.

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