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Image from dataland.art, courtesy Refik Anadol

Dear DnA Readers,

I hope you’re doing well, especially in these final days of the nail-biting election and World Series!

I was extremely lucky this weekend to have a chance to retreat from all the political noise and spend three days hearing from inspiring designers at the Monterey Design Conference.

MDC takes place at the Asilomar Conference Grounds on the sand dunes of the Monterey Peninsular. Since expanded and now a California State Park, the original buildings were designed early last century by Julia Morgan in the Arts & Crafts style for the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA). She built halls and lodgings of fragrant redwood and granite stones, carefully wrapping them around existing trees.

This is one of the few conventions I’ve attended that takes place not in the climate-controlled, fluorescent-lit, characterless halls of a vast convention center but rather in a location that plays right into the themes under discussion at MDC: sensitivity to place, love of craft and materials, consideration for the climate, biodiversity, and human wellbeing.

Merrill HallInside Merrill Hall, at Asilomar Conference; image courtesy Monterey Design Conference

Sharing their concepts was a line-up of talents, including the electrifying Tatiana Bilbao. The Mexico City-based architect introduced her work with provocations, whether questioning the meaning of “living” and why to challenge the conventional programming of rooms in a house, to arguing that housing as a human right is impossible to achieve within the free market.

She took on aquariums, arguing that they symbolize "our human belief that we can dominate and control the world through technology," and recounted how she reconciled herself with the commission to build one, by basing the design on a “narrative” — about the discovery in 2289 of a building from 2023 that had fallen into ruin and been flooded with seawater and aquatic life. "When we arrived at this ruin from the future, we carved paths, created staircases, and opened possibilities to encounter a world that had taken over the space." Her bold Sea of Cortez Research Center, in monumental raw concrete, appearing to emerge from the sea, is the result.

Bilbao has a project in the pipeline for Los Angeles: a complex that combines a Chicano art museum and affordable housing in Boyle Heights. The ten-story residential building, approved under ED1, the directive aimed at fast-tracking affordable housing, is her first for a cluster of sites owned by the land-use lawyer Alfred Fraijo, Jr.. (At a Monday night talk hosted by L.A. Forum, the two explained their goals of developing the Boyle Heights neighborhood in a manner that benefits and keeps in place the current residents.)

2141 e cesar chavez ave 2A proposed art museum for Boyle Heights. Image courtesy Tatiana Bilbao ESTUDIO

The Monterey conference also took on the onslaught of technology, in the form of speaker Refik Anadol, possibly the world's sunniest proponent of AI.

The media artist, UCLA professor, and pioneer in the aesthetics of machine intelligence walked the audience through artworks made of data, which he gathers in vast quantities and somehow repurposes as swirling, tumbling, shape and color-shifting images, projected onto the outside of buildings or seemingly set within gigantic frames as seen, below, in Moment of Reflection, shown at UCLA in 2022 to contemplate the impact of COVID-19. It was made "by feeding machine-learning algorithms a dataset of more than 300 million images of nature."

Refik Anadol, UCLA, 2022, pink, IMG_7443-1Moment of Reflection, by Refik Anadol, UCLA, 2022. Photo by Frances Anderton.

Anadol brims with enthusiasm about AI’s health-giving benefits, both through medical advances and through the power of art, and he spent no time at the conference on its negative implications: the nuclear power stations now being revived to power data centers, the jobs at risk, the questions of copyright, and more.

He showed his next big project DATALAND, the “world’s first Museum of AI Arts and digital ecosystem dedicated to data visualization and AI-based creativity,” which is to open next year at The Grand LA, the hotel, apartments, and mall designed by Frank Gehry, opposite WDCH. See it transformed by Anadol into hallucinatory "living architecture" in photo top of page.

Even though it is unclear what the connection is between the crunched data and the abstract patterns that emerge, Anadol's "machines dreaming" imagery is dazzling, and draining! It was a relief to take refuge from the kinetic screen and step into the woods for a peaceful walk alongside the deer and birds with evocative names like the Chestnut-backed Chickadee, the White-crowned Sparrow, and Dark-eyed Junco.

Hello deer!, Photo by Robin Bennett Stein copyDeers are unphased by human presence at Asilomar. Photo by Robin Bennett Stein

Then it was all over, and I got back to LA, woke up early Monday to get back to work at the computer and found… nothing. The Modem had died while I was away. Unfortunately, this was no longer the time for silence and contemplation. I need to do some fast research. Thankfully the machine was soon back in action, and Google AI was there to help.

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Design Things To Do

For the Love of Trees x 2

Treehugger
Opening: Saturday, November 2nd, 5:00–8:00 PM; On View through December 14th,
Wednesday–Saturday, Noon–5:00 PM
Marta, 3021 Rowena Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90039

Put your arms around Treehugger, a solo exhibition by Base 10, the husband-wife sculptural furniture practice of Joshua Friedman and Lindsey Muscato. 
 
The duo, partners in life and practice, create functional sculpture from solid timber  "arboreal forms," salvaged close to their Mount Washington studio, such as this chaise, below, whose curving backrest is formed from the interior of a sycamore tree. Treehugger follows a prior show also honoring our arboreal treasures, Spirits of the Trees.
 
Click here for details.
 
Marta, photo by Brian GuidoPhoto by Brian Guido

GIANTS
Opening Reception: November 2nd, 2024, from 5:00 PM–8:00 PM; Gallery Hours: Friday–Sunday, 10:30 AM–4:30 PM
ARCANE Space, 324 Sunset Ave, Unit G, Venice Beach, CA 90291

Last year, ARCANE Space, a delightful little gallery tucked away next door to Gjusta Bakery in Venice, held a show of paintings by Lucas Reiner of the characterful, under-appreciated Inglewood trees. Now it's celebrating California’s mighty sequoias, with a show of paintings by J Maskrey. A portion of the proceeds will support sequoia conservation efforts.

Maskrey, who has spent much of her career as a make-up artist specializing in “skin jewelry,” finds in the sequoias a connection to the architecture of her home. "Growing up in Hong Kong, I was surrounded by vertical buildings. The Sequoias take me back to cities where I’ve lived. The trees speak to me. They are where I feel accepted.”

Click here for details.

J Maskey Sequoias5th Avenue (2023) - Diptych, Acrylic on Canvas 60” x 72”

Alcohol and Architecture in Tasteful Pairing!
Saturday, November 9th, 5:00–6:30 PM
Barnsdall Art Park, 4800 Hollywood Boulevard, LA 90027

Friends of Residential Treasures: Los Angeles (FORT: LA) bounces into our lives again with yet another happening produced by founder Russell Brown, this time at Barnsdall Gallery Theatre at Barnsdall Art Park (below).

Architecture! Trivia, Trails, Topics and Wine Tasting: Edition 1 is a new quarterly gathering that pairs architecture chit-chat with a tipple. In addition to hearing about the latest FORT Trail, by Laura Massino Smith, I'll sit down for a talk with a current architecture newsmaker and then — the highpoint! — India Mandelkorn (author of the excellent book Electric Moons) will tap into her other expertise — wine connoisseurship — and offer up a wine tasting inspired by Massino Smith's Trail (of early Gehry buildings.)

Click here for tickets. DnA newsletter readers get a 25% discount, with promo code: KCRWDNA


Barsdall Gallery TheatrePhoto by Gerard Sandoval, courtesy of the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs

Eclectic Collection from LA Modern Auctions (LAMA) 
Public preview and reception: 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

LA Modern Auctions (LAMA) has long been a magnet for collectors of modern furniture and art, with the added buzz of live auctions. 

In late November they will auction off a selection of furnishings, artwork, and objects by Southern California, to benefit Frank Lloyd Wright’s historic Hollyhock House. The preview and reception take place on November 12th.

Curated by Dung Ngo, design expert and Editor in Chief of AUGUST, you can pick from designs by talents including Christopher Norman, Edwin Chan, Kulapat Yantrasast, Design, Bitches, West of West, Hiroshi Clark, and Ali Tayar, whose Lazy Shoesan (witty!) stool, below, is made up of two rotating tiers each with two open storage compartments.

Lazy ShoesanLazy Shoesan; upholstery, pine; 15 dia x 22.5 h inches

WestEdge Design Fair
Barker Hangar, 3021 Airport Avenue, Santa Monica
November 14th–16th; Opening Night Party: Thursday, November 14th, 6:00–10:00 PM; Friday, November 15th, 10:00 AM–6:00 PM; Saturday, November 16th, 10:00 AM–6:00 PM

As mentioned above, design events are so much more enjoyable when they are in appealing spaces rather than bland convention centers. This is in part why WestEdge Design Fair, the showcase for interior designers, furniture makers, and more, is always fun.

It takes place at the breezy, open, Barker Hangar, steeped in history, enlivened with single-engine planes flying overhead.

There you will find 150+ design brands, along with design seminars and panel talks, culinary demonstrations, book signings, and special events, including an opening night party. I'll lead a conversation — Small Space Big Style: The ADU Revolution and Popularity Behind Living Small — about today's most popular residential add-on, 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.

ADU by Joan BartonADU designed by SheSpoke Studio and built by Dirty Girl Construction.

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, founded by Kyle Bergman, comes to LA in November with films including E.1027 – Eileen Gray and the House by the Sea (about the amazing Irish Modernist architect Eileen Gray), Stardust: The Story of Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown, and the LA premiere of Schindler Space Architect.

Films will be followed by Q and As, including a talk I'll conduct with Valentina B. Ganeva, director of Schindler Space Architect. Jim Venturi will talk about the film he made about his parents.

With over a dozen must-see films and surprise guests joining throughout the festival, ADFF:LA tickets go fast.

Click here for information and tickets.

Eileen Gray stillStill from E.1027 – Eileen Gray and the House by the Sea; courtesy ADFF:LA.

More on Schindler and Women architects

If you want to find out more about both Schindler and women in architecture, check out the online series "Schindler Talks," presented by Friends of the Schindler House (FoSH), an occasional series of informal, online conversations aimed at keeping the legacy of the Kings Road House and its creators, Rudolph and Pauline Schindler, alive. On Wednesday, November 13th, Doris Cole, FAIA, and Chloe Cuffel will talk about "From Tipis to Skyscrapers: A History of Women in Architecture," about the women who studied at the Cambridge School in the early 1900s.

Click here to sign up. If you missed previous Schindler Talks, you can watch them all on the FoSH YouTube Channel here.

Education of Women ArchitectsPhoto from the book, From Tipis to Skyscrapers: A History of Women in Architecture. Photo credit: William and Henry Frost Collection      

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What I'm Digging 

Pretty Kitty

I just learned that the day I'm writing this newsletter happens to be National Cat Day! Of course, this gives me an excuse to give props to the purr-fect pet. Or turn to Hyperallergic and A Charming Cat-alog of John Craxton’s Kittens, an article about the late painter and the new book, Craxton's Cats, of his clever cat paintings. Hyperallergic writer David Carrier notes that Craxton would "see the animal mid-action and think, that’s another picture." How right he was.

John Craxtons KittensJohn Craxton, "Cat and ball" (2007) (all images © 2024 John Craxton; courtesy Thames & Hudson)

The Money Pit

Having not yet done the grown-up thing and bought a house, I am one of the millions who periodically fantasizes about chasing down a Cheap Old House and turning it into a lovely home. Turns out you may get more than you bargained for when you purchase a 10,000 Euro villa in Southern Italy or a tatty craftsman bungalow with "good bones" in the Midwest. Find out from those who've tried, in this illuminating article in the Guardian, Rot, romance and renovations: the reality of buying a cheap old house on Instagram.

Cheap old house509 7th Ave, Sterling, IL — $60,000. From Cheap Old Houses IG.

The Boys in Blue

One of the architects who dazzled the audience at the Monterey Design Conference, described top of the page, was Go Hasegawa, a Japanese architect of intriguing homes that play with scale and heighten connection to the outside to increase our sensory awareness. But he could barely stay for questions afterwards because he had to dash to catch a plane to get to LA — to watch the second game of the World Series, starring his phenomenal countryman Shohei Ohtani. As I write, the contest is up for grabs. Go, Dodgers!

Screenshot 2024-10-29 at 4.36.51 PMDodger Stadium. Image courtesy MLB.com

Well, that's it for this week. And, in case you are celebrating, Happy Halloween as well. Thank you so much for reading. 
Yours,
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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