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Halo Lighting designed by Mandalaki

Dear DNA friends,

I hope you’re doing well and had a very restful holiday.

For my part, I got Covid and spent much of the break sleeping and hoping that the scary brain fog would pass. I am very grateful that it seems to have done so and am happy to be back sharing Design Things To Do with you.

During this time we also lost a force: on December 22, the station's former general manager, Ruth Seymour, left us at age 88.

You’ve probably already read many obituaries, so I’ll just add a short tribute. Among numerous broadcasts, Ruth created Which Way LA? and To The Point, the two shows I had the good fortune to work on as a producer for Warren Olney. Then, in 2002, she launched DnA: Design and Architecture.

Up to that point, she had felt design and architecture did not lend themselves to a radio show. Then came the choice of the provocative Dutch architect, Rem Koolhaas, to redesign LACMA, and his plan to tear down most of the museum.

Ruth loved nothing more than a good conflict and decided we needed to debate it on Politics of Culture. Knowing I was interested in design, she ordered me to be the host. Having had zero experience on air, I was utterly terrified. To this day, all I can remember is being a kind of verbal goalie trying to catch and make sense of comments as they flew past me by guests including LACMA’s then-president, Andrea Rich, and art critic, Edward Goldman, who made mincemeat of the Koolhaas demolition plan by asking how bird poop would be cleaned off the architect's proposed replacement building with a transparent roof. Koolhaas, incidentally, wound up losing the commission, which later went to Peter Zumthor who had the same idea about getting rid of much of LACMA.

OMA proposal for LACMARem Koolhaas and then-design partner Ole Scheeren proposed putting all of LACMA under one roof.

Putting a newbie live on air was typical of Ruth. She would take bets on people and broadcast concepts on pure instinct. And it didn’t always go well. She let me sink until I swam. This meant that periodically Ruth would beckon me into her office, sit me down — on an unnervingly sweet, soft yellow sofa, that was lower than her chair so she loomed over — and give me an eviscerating dressing down about the mistakes I was making. It was tough love and I always learned from it.

Ruth was amazing in many ways including some of her presumptions. When DnA started, I recollect her telling me to avoid words and themes like “urbanism”, “community”, and “planning”, because these were boring. As it turns out, in the intervening years, these very topics came to dominate design thinking, and I see a growing generation of architects who are as interested in these issues as formal experimentation. Of course, Ruth would stay abreast of trends so she would be right on top of this, and would demand programming that told stories in the most interesting way.

To have spent time in her orbit was an amazing gift. RIP Ruth Seymour (February 17, 1935 – December 22, 2023).

Speaking of stories told interestingly, for the last five years I’ve had the good fortune to periodically join KCRW host Steve Chiotakis on air on his show Greater LA. Steve “connects you to the people and places of Southern California” with a cheer and enthusiasm that is infectious. Our last expedition together was this daredevil tour of perilous stilt houses. Sadly, that broadcast comes to an end this week. You will doubtless hear Steve back on air soon though. In the meantime, thank you Steve and everyone on the production team for illuminating our region with such spirit.

12.21-RUTH-SEYMOUR-WSJ-01-1, photo by GoldsteinRuth Seymour; photo by Marc Goldstein

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Design Things To Do

Best Laid Plans
Los Angeles Planning History Group (LAPHG)

Thursday, January 11, 6:00 PM, on Zoom

As mentioned above, planners have not always gotten the best rap. They can be seen as terrifying – citymakers like New York’s Robert Moses who mowed down neighborhoods in the name of urban renewal. Or, as my former boss saw them, as boring: the interpreters of eye-rolling codes and zoning. But it is through planning that cities mysteriously take their form. It is through planning that Los Angeles will – or won’t – solve its housing challenges, or shift people from cars to alternative mobility systems, or combat climate change, or get itself ready to welcome the world at the 2028 Olympics.

So I am highly honored to get the chance to talk with planners and planning historians this coming Thursday. The topic is my book, Common Ground: Multifamily Housing in Los Angeles, and how to maintain and advance the best of LA's multifamily housing legacy. This free public talk with the Los Angeles Planning History Group (LAPHG) takes place on Zoom. Hope you’ll join us!

Click here to register. 

View from overlook, IMG_4795Who planned this? View towards DTLA from Mulholland Drive overlook. Photo by Frances Anderton

Counter:image: Acres of Books
Downtown Long Beach (DTLB) Art Walk
240 Long Beach Blvd. Long Beach, CA 90802
January 13, 4-9 PM

There’s a lot of talk about urbanizing LA, and one city that truly has a walkable, dense, urban-scaled downtown is Long Beach. There you can find a nexus of design-centric small businesses, makers, and art galleries that host several art walks a year. 

There’s one coming up this Saturday and it features an activation of Acres of Books, the late lamented bookstore that once held nearly a million used books before it closed in 2008. Even though its owner consigned science fiction to the “screwball section,” per the Long Beach Post, famed sci-fi writer Ray Bradbury loved the store, giving it a shoutout in his essay, I Sing the Bookstore Eclectic.

What remains of Acres of Books is its Streamline Moderne facade attached to a new building, now owned by Urbana Development. It may get a new use as part of a large development emerging on the block. In the interim, the architecture firm Studio One Eleven, located in DTLB, is filling its space with an exhibition, Counter:image

Curated by Sinead Finnerty-Pyne and Mario Ybarra Jr., this show features several artists including photographer Monica Nouwens, artists Phung Huynh and Adam Leeman, dancer Chakravartin Sokhomsan, and Dasha Podoltseva and Elena Orap, a graphic designer and architect duo who have been exploring the brutalist mass housing in Ukraine. 

In addition, Mario Ybarra Jr. will offer something fun for everyone. She and her Slanguage Studio will stage “We Activate our Cities,” a silkscreen workshop and giveaway with the added goal of urging individuals “to participate in revitalizing urban cores by bringing art, culture, and design back into these spaces" (see her poster, below). As Finnerty-Pyne says, "We as citizens can have some agency in bringing our cities back to life.”

Click here for details.


mario ybarra jr.Silkscreen print by Mario Ybarra Jr. 


We Are Here: Imagining Space in the 21st Century
A+D Architecture + Design Museum
170 South La Brea Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90036
January 19 - April 7; Weds - Sun, 12 - 6 PM (Opening on January 19, 6 PM)

A+D Museum reopens with its first show of 2024. We Are Here: Imagining Space in the 21st Century takes on the topic of today's unprecedented inter-connectivity, in which "familiar structures of regions, territories, cities, and neighborhoods are continually redefined, and representations of space are themselves undergoing a significant evolution," explains curator Laure Michelon.

The show features representations of this evolution by contemporary artists, designers, architects, and data analysts. Michelon, a self-described "architectural technologist," says, "Their works question how we find our place within the intricate tapestry of contemporary life today as lived through a blend of data, geography, and sociocultural dynamics.⁠"

Free and open to the public. Click here for details.

We Are Here, A+D MuseumJenny Rodenhouse created this image for "We Are Here."

Electric Moons: Talk with author India Mandelkorn
A+R, ROW DTLA 777 S Alameda St, Building 1318, #100
Los Angeles, CA 90021
January 25, 6:30 PM

We may not give streetlights much thought these days. After all, they’re virtually everywhere and they have become pretty uniform and mundane, not to mention the LED bulbs cool their warm glow. Back in the day, however, writes India Mandelkorn, “Los Angeles was known for its breadth of innovative streetlight designs: products of an active civic imagination and a well-timed real estate scramble.”

Mandelkorn examines the art and politics of street lighting in Los Angeles from the 1880s to the present day in her new book Electric Moons: A Social History of Street Lighting (Hat & Beard Press), with lovely photography by Tom Wayne Bertolotti. I’ll talk with India about the book at A+R design store at ROW DTLA on Thursday, January 25.

Expect us to touch on themes including the connection of streetlighting to public art and space, surveillance, infrastructure, and traffic. Mandelkorn is well suited for this task, by the way. As an intern a few years back at LACMA, she created Chris Burden's Urban Light: A Field Guide (2018).

Incidentally, A+R has a marvelous range of indoor lighting, designed by luminaries (excuse pun) such as Tom Dixon and Milan-based Mandalaki (see image, top of newsletter), so it’s worth the trip to see these too. Enter a raffle for giveaways including a Limited-Edition version of the original 1939 lighting icon, Luna Table Lamp, courtesy of Louis Poulson. A+R owner Rose Apodaca says you can expect "an evening of light, energy and spirits ushering in a New Year of electrifying design."

Screenshot 2024-01-08 at 5.17.43 PM Streetlights in Los Angeles photographed by Tom Wayne Bertolotti

Learning from Vienna
Neutra Institute for Survival Through Design
2379 Glendale Boulevard
Saturday, January 27, 10 AM to 1 PM

If you’ve been tracking the conversations around affordable housing today, you will know that the social housing program in Vienna, Austria is seen by many experts as a model of best practices. But how relevant is Vienna to LA? What about LA's historic public housing program and what can we learn from it? 

That’s the topic of Housing Vienna: Lessons For LA, a symposium coming up at the Neutra Institute for Survival Through Design, presented with Friends of Residential Treasures: Los Angeles (FORT: LA.). It’s free and open to all, but seating is limited so you need to register ASAP!

I’ll lead conversations with Beatriz Stambuk-Torres, Manager, Global Policy Leadership Academy (GPLA) Vienna Housing Field Study; architects John Ellis and Michael Lehrer; the Gregory Ain historian Anthony Fontenot; Cristian Ahumada, Executive Director and CEO of Holos Communities; and Dr. Raymond Neutra, son of the architect Richard Neutra, who left Vienna in the early 1920s as that city's massive housing program was getting underway.

The symposium takes place at the historic Neutra Office Building (1950), the site of the combined practices of Neutra and Robert Alexander, partners on the ill-fated public housing project at Chavez Ravine. It will be accompanied by a short film, Expansive, Still and Connected: Life at the Strathmore Apartments, made by Russell Brown, founder of FORT: LA. 

I should add that this event is part of Awesome and Affordable: Great Housing Now. This is a new media project also supported by FORT aimed at educating Angelenos about how affordable housing is defined, funded, produced, and designed. Watch for a kickoff later this month.

Click here to register for Housing Vienna.

Vienna social housingAlt-Erlaa, income-restricted housing in Vienna designed by Harry Glück; Image courtesy GPLA

Luna Luna: Forgotten Fantasy
1601 East 6th Street, Los Angeles
Through Spring 2024

When the art scene was less bloated and more punk, and Germany was still split in half, an Austrian pop star turned impresario named André Heller produced Luna Luna, a "total artwork" in Hamburg, Germany. This 1987 pop-up amusement park featured rides designed by 30 artists including Basquiat, Keith Haring, Kenny Scharf, David Hockney, and Dalí. It was attended by some 250,000 people, and then it was disassembled and languished in storage for 35 years!

Enter Drake's entertainment company and a team of investors and the fun palace has been recreated in downtown Los Angeles! It has lost the freewheeling accessibility of the original, with tickets approaching Disneyland levels, as reported in this NY Times article. The rides themselves have been transmuted into “high art” objects for viewing, not riding. Still, Luna Luna: Forgotten Fantasy is worth the visit if only for a trip down memory lane to the Cold War era, with all its pre-gentrification, edgy hipness, and extremely bad hair.

Click here for tickets and information.

Carousel7David Hockney, Enchanted Tree, and Keith Haring, Painted Carousel. Luna Luna: Forgotten Fantasy, 2023

 
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What I'm Digging


Out of this World

Over the holidays I watched A Murder at the End of the World, created for FX by Zal Batmanglij and Brit Marling, who also stars, along with Emma Corrin, who I last saw playing a coquettish Lady Di in The Crown. I loved this eerie and gripping story about a hacker on the hunt for a serial killer who finds herself on a new hunt in a shiver-inducing, atmospheric outpost in Iceland. Some people I know predicted the twist, but I didn’t, and I highly recommend this series that is part love story, part meditation on climate disaster, AI, and the hubris of Tech billionaires, set within marvelous production design by Alex DiGerlando.

Interior of Icelandic set, photo by Chris FXInterior of Icelandic hotel in A Murder at the End of the World; photo by Chris Saunders/FX

Ancient Elements of Cool

The counter to the dystopian future portrayed in A Murder at the End of the World comes from a story about pre-tech solutions for livability. It has to do with a topic about which - forgive me -- I’ve held forth before: air conditioning, which is essential in some situations, but is also an over-used source of over-processed, sometimes-toxic, and often too-cold air that is a huge energy suck. Luckily, we have WaPo architecture critic, Philip Kennicott, on a mission to enlighten us. First, he released this brilliant article explaining how the invention of AC upended vernacular building traditions, literally reshaping our world. Over the holiday, he published this report on his travels to find out how buildings in the hottest places in the world stay cool. He writes eloquently and minutely about the ancient design features that not only bring about dramatic drops in temperature but do so in a profoundly sensory way. 

Cats and More Cats

If you read this newsletter, you’ll know I am a sucker for felines. And there’s been a stream of stories reinforcing this passion, from this Vox take on cats' mixed view of us (“Maybe your cat loves you. Maybe it would kill you if it could”) to this New York Times report on the genuinely therapeutic effect cats have in an overcrowded prison in Chile. Meanwhile, book publishers are feeding the cat frenzy. I was gifted this gorgeous TASCHEN book of cat photographs by the late Walter Chandoha; and Thames & Hudson has just released HOUSE CAT: Inspirational Interiors & The Elegant Felines Who Call Them Home. Photographer and author Paul Barbera writes: "This is not a book about cats. Nor is it a book on interiors. It is somewhere in-between: a look at how cats and interiors interact, and how cats become a fundamental part of one’s home." Purr-fect.

HC p 120 (1A103448_2022-08-02 15.38.46_PB)GG and Siouxsie; Interior Designer: Augusta Hoffman; Location, Soho, New York

Thank you so much for reading and I look forward to sharing more with you over 2024.

Yours,

Frances

PS. Subscribe to the newsletter here, get back issues here, and reach out to me on francesanderton@gmail.com.

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