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Design Things To Do
Lovely Long Beach Long Beach Architecture Week May 29th–June 9th Various Locations and Venues
Long Beach is home to a lively urban downtown, Art Deco delights, and gems of midcentury Modernism. And that's just for starters. Get better acquainted with the cityscape at Long Beach Architecture Week, co-presented by KCRW.
Right now, say the organizers, "the city is experiencing one of the greatest building booms in its history. Long Beach Architecture offers the opportunity for residents and visitors to experience the city as a living organism through its cherished, historic buildings that anchor the community. Rehabilitated, restored, and newly built structures that will change how Long Beach looks and feels."
Click here for details.
Check out the delights of Long Beach at their Architecture Week
A Housing Three-fer: Building on History, in the City of Los Angeles, May 29th Move LA Expo, on Transport and Housing in LA, May 31st Housing Solutions and the Future, in Santa Monica, June 6th
As mentioned above, not a week goes by when LA's housing challenges are not under consideration. If you want to join the conversation, pick from these three panels:
On Wednesday, May 29th, the California Preservation Foundation hosts Building on History: A Summit for Housing Solutions, a conference at the Herald Examiner building as well as online. There's a great line-up of speakers, including a keynote by the lawyer-developer to watch Alfred Fraijo Jr., Principal, Somos Group. I’ll moderate a panel about saving NOAH (Naturally Occurring Affordable Housing.)
On Friday, May 31st, Move LA Expo, at the Biltmore Hotel, largely focuses on creating a workable transportation system but includes a panel on Real Strategies that Address the Affordable Housing and Crisis of Homelessness in LA.
Next week, June 6th, at Santa Monica Museum, currently showing the exhibition UnHoused: A History of Housing in Santa Monica, I'll moderate a discussion about Housing Solutions and the Future. This promises to be lively, with guests representing the city (Jing Yeo, City of Santa Monica Planning Commission), affordable housing (Jesús Hernández, Community Corporation of Santa Monica), renters rights (Denny Zane, Santa Monicans for Renters Rights) and home-building. The latter is represented by Bruce Fairty, Cypress Equity, developer of the "Lincoln Center," below, a plan to replace a Gelsons with a dense housing and retail development that has been as controversial locally as the Venice Dell Community, above.
The Lincoln Center project, planned to replace a Gelsons and a parking lot at Lincoln Boulevard, designed by Koning Eizenberg Architects
Wrapture, works by Jim Isermann, presented by Miles McEnery Gallery Pacific Design Center Design Gallery, 8687 Melrose Ave, West Hollywood, CA On view through June 29th, Tuesdays–Saturdays, 10:00 AM–6:00 PM; Reception for the artist, Thursday, May 30th, 3:00 PM–7:00 PM
Since childhood, the artist Jim Isermann has been “super interested in how pattern works,” he told Palm Springs Art Museum on the occasion of a show of his work in 2020. He added that he is “very interested in working with materials that make me construct patterns in a different way.”
His super-sunny geometric designs, evoking Op and Pop Art, and Supergraphics, fit naturally into crisp interiors with both modern furniture like his own Donald Wexler-designed steel and glass house in Palms Springs, and the walls of the Pacific Design Center Design Gallery, where you can see a survey of Isermann’s vinyl decal and painting work from 1986 to the present.
A reception will be held this Thursday, May 30th, coinciding with Pride Week. Expect tacos and Tecate from El Comal Rosa, and a burst of glorious color.
Click here for details.
Wrapture, at PDC Design Gallery. Image by Joshua White, courtesy of Miles McEnery Gallery
What Makes a Great California Idea? CalMatters Ideas Fest Wednesday, June 5th, 2024, 5:00 PM PDT Live Streamed or In-person, Sheraton Grand Sacramento Hotel, Sacramento, CA
California has long been seen as the future forward state and certainly in some ways it still is. AI, anyone? But when you watch its high-speed rail project lurch along or witness the resistance to an overhaul of yesterday’s land use policies, you start to wonder. Next Wednesday, a panel of experts will take up that question, with "What Makes a Great California Idea?," a conversation hosted by Zócalo Public Square, as part of the CalMatters Ideas Fest, taking place in Sacramento but available to us Angelenos via livestream.
Joe Matthews, California and Democracy columnist for Zócalo (and our tour guide on this DnA report into California's struggle to build the bullet train), will lead a conversation with XPRIZE Foundation CEO Anousheh Ansari, Public Policy Institute of California president and CEO and retired Chief Justice of California Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye, and founding director of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace California Center Ian Klaus.
The program is free. Get information here, and register here.
When will California catch up? The 700 Series Tōkaidō Shinkansen zips across Japan, 2008. Image by Sui-setz/Wikimedia.org.
Beyond Supersonic Art Center College of Design, South Campus Celebration Saturday, June 8th, 9:00 AM–3:00 PM 870–950 S. Raymond Ave. and 1111 S. Arroyo Pkwy
Peter Mullin was well-known for his collection of classic French cars, housed in the Mullin Automotive Museum in Oxnard. Following his passing last September, that collection of Bugattis, Delahayes, Delages, and other gorgeous “swoopy, hand-beaten metal” automobiles closed earlier this year.
But Mullin’s name and passion for cars live on in the Mullin Transportation Design Center, the new South Campus home of ArtCenter’s undergraduate and graduate transportation systems and design programs. It will be unveiled with a soft opening to the public this coming Saturday.
Designed by Darin Johnstone Architects (DJA), the center comprises 31,000 square feet of labs, classrooms, studios, and offices built into the vast barrel-vaulted supersonic wind tunnel once used by Caltech as a testing facility for aerospace manufacturers. The centerpiece is the viewing deck on the mezzanine level and a curved ramping gallery overlooking an exhibition space, where students and teachers can view cars at a 1:1 scale, as in professional auto design studios.
When Mullin pledged his $15 million gift more than a decade ago, he told Autoweek that ArtCenter’s transportation design was the best in the world. "Eighty-five percent or so of all the new cars being designed that are thought to be the best of the best in automotive design come from Art Center graduates.”
See the work of recent and past car design grads as well as work by students from across ArtCenter disciplines, and check out the new space on June 8th. Expect more public events in the coming months.
Click here for details.
The new viewing space in the Mullin Design Center at ArtCenter's South Campus. Courtesy DJA.
Unfurling: The Old Zoo Heidi Duckler Dance Saturday, June 8th, 7:00 PM Old Los Angeles Zoo, Griffith Park
What do you get when you combine dance, the ruins of the Old Los Angeles Zoo, and the seductive, paint-drippy artistry of Kim West? Probably something worth watching. On Saturday, June 8th, Heidi Duckler, choreographer of site-specific works since 1985, will unleash her troupe on the faux-rock outcrops of the historic ruins of the old zoo in Griffith Park, built in 1912 and abandoned in 1966. The centerpiece, says Duckler, is Kim West's “tiled mural, sculptural fabric flows, and an arrangeable flora tableau.” She adds, “UNFURLiNG animates the ruins, fostering empathy for past inhabitants.”
Click here for information and tickets.
Be dazzled by Kim West's design for dancers like Colleen, shown, at Unfurling. Image courtesy Heidi Duckler Dance.
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