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Design Things To Do
Top Pick: Let's Dance
How better to resist the merging of human and machine than by dancing in public space! Between June 2nd and 21st, L.A. Dance Project + Paris Dance Project will animate buildings and places with City of Dance, a program of free public performances at public sites including LACMA, Tongva Park, Barnsdall Art Park, and Gloria Molina Grand Park.
Five international choreographers-Dimitri Chamblas, Madeline Hollander, Benjamin Millepied, Jamar Roberts, and Pam Tanowitz-and 14 LA-based dancers have co-created an hour‑long work set to Philip Glass’s remarkable score for the film Koyaanisqatsi (1982). Following the 4:00 PM performance at Barnsdall Art Park, I’ll moderate a conversation with artist Kim Abeles and others, tackling the question: “Can architecture and landscape still offer models for balance” in a city whose systems — ecological, infrastructural, cultural — that are increasingly off balance?
Image courtesy L.A. Dance Project
Then The Seaweed Sisters — the Los Angeles-based, color-coded choreographic trio Megan Lawson (pink), Jillian Meyers (green), and Dana Wilson (blue) — invite you into their frothy "bubble" of dance and physical comedy, on show at LA Theater Center, for nine performances starting on June 5th. The always inventive artist Mimi Haddon has created puppets for the show and tells me that WEED OH NO!, the "Sisters" first feature-length show, presented by The Center for Provocative Thought, will be a visually sumptuous blast for all ages. "Think Blue Man meets PeeWee's Playhouse, but more lighthearted with an all-female cast," says Haddon.
Image courtesy The Seaweed Sisters; photo by Taylor James
Quick Picks
Johnie’s Coffee Shop, at 6101 Wilshire Boulevard at Fairfax, has been given a new life by artist Gary Baseman. The onetime diner displays menus from various LA eateries covered in Baseman's whimsical drawings. On visiting recently, Baseman was there, outfitted in full-chef mode, and the architect Victor Newlove was present (Newlove became partner in 1963 at Armet and Davis, the “Googie architecture” firm that designed Johnie’s, formerly Romeo’s Times Square). Baseman’s art is on show and for sale, through Sunday, June 14th, Thursday through Sunday, noon–7 PM (Subject to change). Info: Gloria Westcott, info@garybaseman.com/(323) 248-1959.
Victor Newlove and Blackie The Cat at Johnie's. Photo by Frances Anderton
Richard Neutra's radical 1928 Jardinette Apartments modeled hyper-modern living before sinking into disrepair over the decades. They have been brought back to life by developer Cameron Hassid, historical consultant Dr. Barbara Lamprecht, and June Street Architecture. Now the building is up for sale, but before it goes into new hands, you can tour it this Saturday, May 30th. The L.A. Forum for Architecture and Urban Design will host a general tour (12–2:00 PM), and The Neutra Institute for Survival Through Design has some “first-look” tickets for 11 AM–12 PM. Highly recommended.
The ribbon windows at Jardinette. Photo by Frances Anderton
Design for Dignity, the annual AIA/LA conference about housing those most in need, is back for an 11th outing, this time with the theme From Crisis to Construction — Building a "City of Yes". Speakers will address how to integrate the "policy, capital, and design that have operated in isolation for too long," from the building site to the City Charter. It takes place on two Friday mornings, this coming May 29th and next Friday, June 5th. At the second session, I’ll moderate a panel about Single Stair Access.
Two related shows open this weekend at Craft Contemporary. Outside is Earthen Comforts: Airing Earth, a courtyard installation by (Office e.g./ (Im)material Matters Lab) that “stages mass and fiber as shared infrastructures for collective comfort” through passive cooling, which was the norm in hot countries before AC. Inside is tierra, the museum’s 4th Clay Biennial, in which 14 artists use clay, masa, rock, sand, and dirt to craft artworks that “ask what it means to truly know a place.” There is an opening party for Earthen Comforts on Saturday, May 30th, 7:00–9:00PM. Both shows open to the public on Sunday, May 31st.
Heat resilience and material experimentation will be modeled at Earthen Comforts. Image courtesy Craft Contempoary
The coastal city of Santa Monica was once home to a thriving Black community that was displaced by the construction of the 10 Freeway. Now the Coastal Coastal Crossroads Tour, a self-guided tour of 20 sites by the sea, brings alive this history at four of the sites, including A Resurrection in Four Stanzas, artist April Bank’s installation (below), depicting the historic traces of the former Belmar neighborhood. The tour launches Sunday, June 7th from 1:00–4:00 PM. Historian Alison Rose Jefferson, Banks, and a team of storytellers will docent at the four sites. The tour launches on the same weekend as the 14th Annual Nick Gabaldón Day — honoring the pioneering Black surfer — on Saturday, June 6th, and in time for Juneteenth.
A Resurrection in Four Stanzas," by April Banks. Photo by Frances Anderton
Still trying to figure out your feelings about the perplexing (IMHO) new David Geffen Galleries at LACMA? Come hear some architects and critics debate “the most polarizing work of architecture to appear in Los Angeles in the twenty-first century.” It’s on Sunday, June 7th, 4:00 PM–5:30 PM, Barnsdall Gallery Theatre. Hosted by Punch List, NYRA, and L.A. Material, and featuring Antonia Cereijido, Frederick Fisher, Christopher Hawthorne, Jimenez Lai, Samuel Medina, and KCRW's Art Insider, Carolina A. Miranda. Also on show: New photographs of the David Geffen Galleries by Janna Ireland.
The belly of the beast; underneath the Geffen Galleries. Photo by Frances Anderton
Every June since 2008, UCLA Architecture and Urban Design (UCLA AUD) has hosted Rumble, a showcase of student and faculty ideas. This year, the event, taking place on June 8th and 9th, also honors the institution’s six-decade history of “shaping architectural advances… bringing together hundreds of architects, designers, and civic and cultural leaders to celebrate AUD’s legacy and see what the future of architecture and urban design may hold.”
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