Design Things To Do
Shaping Accident
September 18th - October 26th, 2024
Opening, Wednesday, September 18th, 6:00 - 8:00 PM
L.A. Louver Gallery, 45 North Venice Blvd, Venice, CA 90291
PST ART: Art & Science Collide encompasses nonprofit museums and participating art galleries. One of the latter is L.A. Louver in Venice, which has partnered up with architect Thom Mayne to show Shaping Accident, some of the artworks he has produced since taking a step back from his architecture firm Morphosis in 2020.
The exhibition opens to the public with a launch party this Wednesday.
On the walls of the gallery you will find large abstract works set in rectilinear frames. Indeterminate, mostly curving, shapes swirl and collide, in layers of rich colors –– rusty reds, saturated yellows and greens –– and swatches of sheen. While they are non-figurative, some evoke flowers and organic forms.
The title Shaping Accident sums up an iterative process in which Mayne and a computing expert colleague manipulated a series of inputs — or “primitives”— using an architectural modeling program that can generate a wide variety of images. Mayne selected a few for further development, then 3-D printed them on panels of aluminum, wood, or paper onto some of which he and his team also applied textures like rust pigment, copper and silver leaf.
Mayne began testing this process through intricate lithographic prints and digitally derived sculptural works, which he describes in his book Strange Networks. The timing of the L.A. Louver show was perfect, he says in an accompanying video, “because it is cyborg. It is science and art put together.”
Click here for more information.
XCD_240705-235744_915925-GGD; 2024; UV ink on aluminum; 96 x 78 inches. Photo by Matt Emonson.
Bruce Mau: Humans in Space
Wednesday, September 18th, 7:30 PM
Hammer Museum, 10899 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90024
Bruce Mau, the Chicago-based designer, curator and founder of Massive Change Network (he also designed the signage at the Walt Disney Concert Hall) comes to the Hammer Museum to talk about “life-centered design, interplanetary civilization, and the discovery of the beauty and diversity of our home planet.”
This is one of several talks in the free, public series Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice: Programs & Performances; Mau will share the ideas that shaped his “fictional factual future” work, A Love Letter to the XO Planets and the Mosaic Manifesto, shown in the PST ART show Blended Worlds: Experiments in Interplanetary Imagination, developed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and presented by the Glendale Public Library.
Click here for information.
Bruce Mau, Mosaic Manifesto, 2024
Engineering the House of Kappe
Saturday, September 21st, 1:00 PM
Neutra Office Building, 2379 Glendale Boulevard, Silver Lake; also available via Zoom.
Indisputably one of the greatest Modern houses in Los Angeles is the 1967 home of Ray and Shelley Kappe. But behind the great architect, the late Ray Kappe, was a little known engineer, Bud Brown.
On the next VISUAL WORLD with Victoria Lautman, the entertaining interlocutor Lautman will sit down with Brown, Shelley Kappe, and son Finn Kappe, to hear stories about the structurally and spatially stunning house, and other buildings designed by Kappe.
Click here for tickets.
Kappe Residence, Brooktree Road. Image courtesy Getty/Julius Shulman.
New Wave: Rebellion and Reinvention in the Vietnamese Diaspora
Book party, Soap Plant / Wacko
Saturday, September 21 · 5:00 - 7:00 PM
4633 Hollywood Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90027
As Vietnamese refugees forged a new life in the United States following the fall of Saigon, a generation of Vietnamese teenagers and young adults struggled to adjust.
But many found a new life and identity in New Wave music, a type of Euro Disco, blending European synth pop and American disco beats. This was so popular that a “vigorous Vietnamese entertainment industry” emerged, writes Elizabeth Ai, “creating its own stars and its own version of MTV.”
How this music and its related style –– "Mile-high hair. Synthesized music." –– became “a symbol of resistance against both mainstream American culture and traditional Vietnamese expectations for the “1.5 Generation” (those who emigrated to the US as children) is the subject of a documentary and a book, both by Ai. New Wave: Rebellion and Reinvention in the Vietnamese Diaspora, just published by Angel City Press at Los Angeles Public Library, will be launched this Saturday at a party at Soap Plant/Wacko in Los Feliz.
New Wave features essays from Vietnamese scholars, critics, and entertainment stars, and is packed with photos of this “first generation of Vietnamese punks and rebels.” It was designed by Mỹ Linh Triệu Nguyễn, founding director of STUDIO LHOOQ, and also film title designer. The book and film are especially timely because next year marks the 50th anniversary of the fall of Saigon.
Click here for details about the book party. Click here for information about the documentary.
New Wave, poster for the documentary. Image courtesy Studio LHOOQ.
Dance in the Light of the Harvest Moon – at Frank Gehry's Loyola Law School!
Saturday, September 21st, 5:00 PM - 10:00 PM
Loyola Law School, 919 Albany St, Los Angeles, CA 90015
Heidi Duckler Dance, which has long been choreographing site-specific dance performances in architecturally interesting, and sometimes scarily vertiginous, spaces, celebrates its 39th anniversary with a performance set in the Frank Gehry-designed Loyola Law School!
In addition to a reception and awards, attendees will watch dance on the staircases throughout the campus, and, during dinner, on the rooftop overlooking LA!
Click here to purchase tickets.
Still from a trailer for the dance at Loyola Law School. Courtesy Heidi Duckler Dance.
Of The Moment Takes Off
A+D Museum
Thursday, September 26, 6:00 – 8:00pm
170 South La Brea Avenue #Suite 102 Los Angeles, CA 90036
Is LA still on the cutting edge of architecture or has it lost its freedoms due to causes ranging from excessive rents for young designers to too many zoning and code restrictions? Find out in Of The Moment, a one-off publication instigated by architect Thom Mayne, produced with A+D Museum, and featuring massive infrastructure, AI imaginaries, civic buildings underway, new models of linear living and experimental ADUs, along with conversations between designers about the work. I gave an assist with the editing.
Next Thursday, A+D Museum hosts a launch party for the publication along with a fundraiser for the museum. Hope to see you there!
Click here for information and tickets.
Cover of Of The Moment
Bakersfield Built: Architecture of the 1950s
Symposium, Exhibit, Tour and Fundraiser
September 27th - September 29th; Exhibit, symposium and tour, Saturday, September 28th, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Bakersfield Museum of Art, 1930 R St, Bakersfield, CA 93301
In 1952, the City of Bakersfield experienced a big earthquake, which was destructive to the desert community founded on oil and agriculture, but brought opportunity to midcentury architects. Richard Neutra, Frank Lloyd Wright, John Lautner, and Cliff May designed homes there, as did a talented group of local modern post-and-beam architects.
Later this month, the Bakersfield Built Foundation will host a symposium, tour, and a fundraising brunch at the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Ablin Residence (1960). I’ll moderate a panel featuring the architectural history eminences Maristella Casciato, Alan Hess, and Sian Winship. Also on the symposium line-up: David Coffey, of Bakersfield Built Foundation, Noam Saragosti, Raymond Neutra and John Berley.
Click here to buy tickets for the symposium and tour.
Click here to buy tickets for the fundraiser brunch.
Note: Maristella Casciato will also speak on Wednesday, September 25 at the MAK Center, about Le Corbusier's “Album Punjab” that she has annotated. Click here for details.
Leddy Residence by Richard Neutra, 1956-7. Photo by Sian Winship
Doors Open California
Multiple cities
Sacramento, Inland Empire, and Pasadena Areas, September 21st and 22nd
Doors Open California, the statewide celebration of historic places in California, continues this weekend with open doors in the Inland Empire and Pasadena.
Diverse treats include a chance to see the Trujillo Adobe Showcase in Riverside, the Covina Bowl or take a guided tour of the Blinn House and a self-guided tour of the Ford Place Historic District, of which the Blinn House is a part.
Click here to book tickets.
Covina Bowl; photo courtesy LA Conservancy/John Eng