Sunday, December 16, 2012

Disney Hall Weekend

On Saturday, Colleen and I met her local sisters and family at the Disney Hall for a Festival of Carols by the L.A. Master Chorale.  The venue was decorated with Poinsettia flowers and the 67 member Chorale were formally dressed.  They were led by conductor Grant Gershon and accompanied on some songs by Lisa Edwards and Shawn Kirchner on the piano and John West on the giant pipe organ.  Shawn arranged many of the songs.

My favorites were "One Sweet Little Baby" by Glenn McClure and arranged by Kirchner, "Glory, Glory, Glory to the Newborn King" by Moses Hogan with a solo by Caroline McKenzie, and "Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming" arranged by Kirchner with Doug Masek on the saxophone.  The last one reminded me of my high school chorus days under the direction of our teacher, Ruth Rickards, who had to corral us wild teens.




We returned on Sunday to celebrate Zubin Mehta's 50th anniversary as the conductor of the L.A. Phil.  In 1962.  In November of that year, Mehta conducted his first program as Music Director of the L.A. Phil and that concert was repeated this weekend.  He remained in that position until 1978.

The program was Mozart's Overture to Don Giovanni, Hindemith's Symphony Mathis der Maler, and Dvorak's Symphony No. 7 in D minor.  The orchestra started small with the Mozart and grew.  The full orchestra performed the 40 minute Dvorak Symphony which included important parts by Ariana Ghetz, the oboe player, the horns, and of course all the strings.  In the middle there was a lively waltz to sway back and forth.

Thank you Zubin Mehta.  We last enjoyed his leadership in a 2004 Beethoven's 9th (Ode to Joy) will all the trimmings.  Twas a great weekend of music.  How great it is to be in L.A.!

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Returning to LACMA on a Tuesday

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art has a seemingly infinite collection of delights that I find a new each time I roam in the doors.  Today, I stumbled into the modern paintings from the 20th Century.  I went to visit my favorite George Braque's " Boats on the Beach," 1906.  It is from the Fauvism era meaning in the style of les Fauves (French for 'the wild beasts').  The movement was led by Henri Matisse and Andre Derain.  The paintings of the Fauves were characterized by wild brush work and strident colors.  I love the explosion of color of the Fauves and especially this painting by Braque.  He went on to work closely with Pablo Picasso in the development of Cubism.

Georges Braque, France, 1882-1963 "Boats on the Beach," 1906



I found this great Richard Diebenkorn painting "Freeway and Aqueduct," 1957.  He painted this while living in the Bay Area in the 1960's and a part of the Bay Area Figuration which was conceived as a reaction against abstract expressionism.  The painters used a representative style in order to experiment with shape, color and texture.  Diebenkorn later moved to the Ocean Park neighborhood of  Santa Monica where he painted shapes based on aerial landscapes as seen near his studio for 20 years.


John Baldessari, born in 1931, painted this "Double Bill (Part2):...and Grosz," 2012.


"Portrait of Sebastian Juner Vidal," 1903 by Pablo Picasso, Spain, 1881-1973
This painting was done during Picasso's Blue Period (1901-04) and shows his loneliness and sadness.


"

Henri Matisse, France 1869-1954, "Tea" 1919
The garden scene depicts Matisse's model and his daughter and dog outside his home near Paris shows his interaction of  pattern and color.


I wanted to call this my portrait, but it was painted in 1631 by Jan Lievens from the Netherlands, 1607-1674 entitled
"A Philosopher"
Lievens uses a strong shaft of light to focus on the elder scholar seated at his desk behind a stack of books.  The style of painting suggests the influence of the Dutch followers of Caravaggio who had recently returned to Utrecht from Rome.


George Segal, 1924-2000 U.S. "Old Woman at the Window," 1965
In the background is John Mason's "Red X," 1966.  John was born in 1927 in the U.S.  It is made of clay with a bright red glaze.


 A wonderful docent talked about this painting and all the activity on the beach in the Netherlands in 1646.  The painting is entitled "View of the Beach" by Simon de Vlieger, Netherlands, 1600-1653



Claes Oldenbury, Sweden, born 1929, active in the U.S. "Giant Pool Balls," 1967
Robert Gober's "Single Basin Sink,"1985.  Robert was born in the U.S. in 1954.
John McLauglin's "#26," painting 1961 .  John lived in the U.S from 1898 to 1976

Friend Family at the Sacramento Marathon

Colleen and I traveled to Sacramento to cheer her family members who ran in the Sacramento Marathon last weekend.  Of course it rained cats and dogs...but they all finished...and raised money for the Noreen Fraser Foundation for cancer research. 

The night before in their Noreen Fraser Foundation Shirts


After:  The Wet and Happy Runners with their medals.
Bill and Billy Friend, Michael LaRocca, Noreen Friend Fraser, Patrick Friend, Cooper Friend Tighe, Danny Hutchison

Thursday, November 29, 2012

"Citizen Who" by Eric Liu at Zocolo

I attending an amazing performance of a one man + presentation entitled "Citizen Who" by Eric Liu.  It was sponsored by Zocolo at The Actors Gang theater in Culver City.  This was the launch of Zocoo Public Square/Cal Humanities "Searching for Democracy" series.  He has been a fellow at the Center for Social Cohesion a former speech writer for Bill Clinton.  He has been traveling around the country and interviewing individuals on what it means to be an American. 

Liu is a second generation Chinese American whose mother came to the U.S. when she was 21.  She was college educated in Taiwan.  Liu's grandfather was a Chinese General who fought the Japanese and the Communist Chinese.

He talked with Gerda Weissmann Klein, a Polish- born American author and a Holocaust survivor.  She has written about hope, inspiration, love humanity and received an Academy Award and Emmy for a documentary based on her life and her fight to promote tolerance, encourage community service and combat hunger.  She was presented  the 2010 Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Obama in 2011.  Her first book was "All But My Life" 1957.

Between his stories another actor conducts the room as if it was a U.S. Citizenship class/exam.  We all stood to recite the Naturalization Oath and answered questions to an oral quiz.  Then Eric played patriotic songs on the violin.

He told his stories of going through the process to become an officer in the Marine Corp, working for a Senator from Oklahoma.

He talked about the internment of Japanese during WWI, the Chinese Exclusion act of 1882, Angel Island in San Francisco Bay where Chinese were interned and the U.S. history of exclusion, color coded, In/Out systems.

One hero he talked about was Mark Massey, a Pentecostal lay minister from Sand Springs, Oklahoma who has helped more than 500 Indian guest workers escape virtual servitude.  One Sunday, he noticed to workers from Indian in the back of his church and learned that they escaped from the steel factory across the street.  They were brought to this country as indentured servants to work long hours and live under restricted conditions.  He talked about Mr. Massey's "call of conscious."

He also talked about Antonella Packard from Saratoga Springs, Utah.  She came to the U.S. from Honduras as a university student then moved to Utah where she married into a family of entrepreneurs and became a Mormon.  She is a Republican and chair of the Utah Hispanic Latino Legislative Task Force.  She has supported immigrants' rights and talks about how it goes hand in hand with "conservative, Constitution-loving, free-market-type" thinking. 

Eric asked the audience what if we had to earn American citizenship.  We were asked to stand, raise our right hand and recite the "Sworn-Again American Oath"
"I pledge to be an active American to show up for others to govern my self to help govern my community.  I recommit myself to my country's creed:  to cherish liberty as a responsibility; to serve and to push my country--when right, to be kept right; when wrong to be set right.  Wherever my ancestors and I were born, I claim American and I pledge to live like a citizen."

It was a a moving and educational evening.



Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Lunch and a stroll at Huntington

'twas a beautiful day to give thanks for our many gifts at the Huntington gardens and museums.



"The Last Gleanings" 1895 by Breton (French 1827-1906)
Breton, Courbet, and Millet lived in the town of Barbizon and created a special school of painters that focused on social realism in art.  They painted peasant life in the country using tonal qualities, color, loose brushwork and softness of form.


"Vesuvius from Portici" 1774-76 by Joseph Wright of Derby, (British, 1734-1797)
The world was very interested the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius that occurred in 79 AD as the Italians had begun to excavate the buried towns of Pompeii and Herculaneum.


"The Blue Boy" 1770 by Thomas Gainsborough (British, 1727-1788)
Gainsborough painted this just to prove that he could paint like Anthony van Dyck, the 17th century Flemish painter.  The painting became famous when Huntington purchased it for $700,000 in 1921, the largest amount of money ever for a painting up to that time.  The likeness has been copied and even placed on chocolates.



"Pinkie" Sarah Goodin Barrett Moultoni, 1794 by Thomas Lawrence (British, 1760-`1830)
The painting was commissioned by Judith Barrett of her 11 year old granddaughter who she missed seeing.  The girl was called "Pinkie" was raised in the British colony of Jamaica before being sent to England for schooling.  The grandmother asked that "Pinkie" be shown "in an easy, careless attitude."
"Pinkie" died a few months after the painting was completed perhaps of T.B.


On the second floor of the mansion museum, the works of sculptor Ricky Swallow and his wife Lesley Vances' paintings are displayed.  The paintings are oil on linnen.


By Leslie Vance




"Retired Instruments" by Ricky Swallow


"Ann and Mary Constable:  The Artist's Sisters" 1818 by John Constable (British, 1776-1837
Mary on the right with the pensive expression and red riding hood is a contrast to her older sister Ann who is more serious and dressed starkly in a masculine riding habit.




By Lesley Vance


"Girls Surprised Bathing by Moonlight" 1840 by Joseph Mallord William Turner (British, 1774-1851)
The painting is divided by a sudden burst of moonlight in the night sky in the Bay of Naples.  Turner paints an eruption of Vesuvius in the background while a fire started by hot ashes burns in the right foreground.


"The Grand Canal Scene - A Street in Venice"1837 by Turner.
A city of light and water, Venice enabled Turner to indulge his fascination with brilliant effects of color and light.

Norton Simon on Monday

I enjoyed lunch with a colleague in the garden and visited some of my favorites.

Wow, this is an amazing art museum.




A Bronze by Auguste Rodin greets everyone on the front walkway


Manet's "The Ragpicker" 1865-70


Pissaro's "View of Berneval" 1900


Matthias Stom's "Christ Crowned with Thorns" 1633-39 Dutch
A single candle, a device favored by Caravaggio for the strong contrast of light and dark that result.

Monday, November 19, 2012

UCLA 38 / USC 28

'twas a wet and wonderful day for UCLA at the Rose Bowl on Saturday.


Friday, November 16, 2012

The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA

I roamed through the new exhibits at the Geffen and enjoyed them very much.  The first is called "Blues for Smoke."  This is described as a major interdisciplinary exhibition exploring a wiide range of contemporary art, music, literature, and film throught the lense of the blues and "blues aesthetics."  There are works by more that 50 artists fromt the 1950's to the present.


Bob Thompson "Garden of Music" 1960
Complete with lollipop trees and figures in expressive color and rough-hewn shape, this painting plays homage to the jazz musicians the artist knew, admired and regularly enjoyed listening to while painting.  The musicians in the middle of the painting are, from left to right:  Ornette Colemann (saxophone), Don Cherry (trumpet), John Coltrane (sax), Sonny Rollins (sax), Ed Blackwell (seated with drum) and Charlie Haden (bass).  The artist included his self-portrait, the figure in the broad-brimmed hat in the lower right area. 


The other exhibt is Taryn Simon:  A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters I-XVIII.  The artists photographs are mounted in themes and displayed on the walls in a huge room.  This was produced between 2008 and 2011.  The artist traveled around the world researching and recording "bloodlines" and their related stores.  "In each of the 'chapters' that make up the work, the external forces of territory, power, circumstance, or religion collide with the internal forces of psychological and physical inheritance."  The sujects include victims of genocide in Bosnia, test rabbits infected with a lethal disease in Australia to reduce their unmanageable population, the first woman to hijack an aircraft, and the living dead in India.

"Blues for Smoke" exhibit painting of James Baldwin, 1955 by Beauford Delaney

"Last Days of Pompeii" at the Getty Villa Malibu

I went with members of the V.A. class to the Getty Villa to roam through their regular exhibits plus through the special "Last Days of Pompeii."  I enjoyed seeing some of my favorites plus the traveling exhibit.  "The Last Days..." focused on art that has been created in the last 170 years through painting and sculpture.  With the excavation advancing in the 19 century, more artists began writing about what life must have been like in Pompeii before the eruption and painters and sculptors have added their interpretation.  Some have over dramatized and contributed to the notion that it was an evil place back then and some have suggested that God punished them.  This argument has been advanced in recent years also such as some comments post Katrina about evil New Orleans.  I haven't heard this yet about Sandy's destruction in the East...but I am sure some will pick up on it....Atlantic City and all.


Kobke (Danish) "Forum at Pompeii" 1841

W. Baziotes "Pompeii" 1955

Mark Bittman at Center Scene at Calif. Endow.

Mark Bittman spoke at the California Endowment community program on Wednesday night.  They sponsor programs that promote healthy life styles.  Mark is an author on the topic of food and cooking including the book "How to Cook Everything" and "Food Matters."   He is also a columnist for the New York Times. 

He stated that the food system in our country is a mess..it is run by the mega-corporations and needs to be reformed with transparency and control.  He said that Industrial Agriculture contributes.  Our goal should be a sustainable diet based on local agriculture as much as possible and that government needs to act to protect the 99%.

He made a strong emphasis on the effect of sodas on our national health with its contribution to obesity, heart and diabetes problems.  Feedlots destroy resources and create junk food.  He was disappointed that Proposition 37 did not pass as transparency and knowledge for the consumers is what is needed.  W need to know about the genetics, pesticides, antibiotics and conditions of the animals.  When the information is on the label, people stop buying.   He was appalled about the advertising focused on children who get addicted to junk food.  He said that we need government control over bad foods that kill.

He talked about his move to becoming a vegan....some of the time and how he lost so much weight.  He said that veganism is a journey not a destination and encouraged all to move toward being vegans more plants, less meats and junk food.  He said that he is a "Vegie 6".....eats some meat after 6 pm.  He said buy organic when ever possible.  He called for a tax on sodas and getting vending machines out of schools.  He also wants pricing of food with the focus on the healthier being the cheaper ie. salads and hot dogs more expensive. 

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Roaming through Culver City Galleries

Did you know that there are 38 Art Galleries around La Cienega and Washington Blvd. in Culver City?  I enjoyed just a few be fore the 4 PM to 7 PM parking ban.  I began at LA X ART on La Cienego and roamed East (Yes, La Cienega goes East and West in that block just South of Venice).  I visited Walter Maciel, Taylor de Cordoba, Maloney Fine Art, Cherry and Martin and George Billis...only 32 more to go.


Jen Pack's "UnQuiet Chroma" at the Taylor De Cordoba Gallery at 2660 S La Cienega Blvd
Jen Pack lives and works in Durango, Colorado and sews then stretches these textile collages.
She starts by machine stitching together strips of vividly-hued chiffon, moshi fabric and cotton.  She then begins to stretch the fabric onto a wooden frame described as intensely physical yielding sweat, sore thumbs and shoulders.
The finished work is described as having the appearance of digital pixelation.

Robert Overby's Landscape Painting, 1970, acrylic and resin on canvas at the Cherry and Martin Gallery at
2712 La Cienega Blvd.

Bonita Helmer's"Here Be Dragons I," 2012 Acrylic and spray paint on canvas at the George Billis Gallery at
2716 S La Cienega, Blvd
Freddy Chandra's "Drift Expanse" at the Walter Maciel Gallery at
2642 S. La Cienega Blvd.
Freddy works and lives in the San Francisco Bay area.  He applys acrylic and urethane paints on transparent cast acrylic panels.  He describes his work as rhythmic compositions of discrete frames in which the relationship between parts inherently informs the logic of a continuous whole.
Greta Waller's "In the Closet" exhibit with the above painting entitled "Buca di Beppo"
Michael Maloney Gallery at 2680 S La Cienega Blvd

Deborah Martin's "Back of Beyond"show at the George Billis Gallery.  The artist lives in 29 Palms and has painted what she sees left in the desert.  The following is written on the wall:
Beyond Home
Back of beyond,
 beyond this bend
 of light:
 between an oasis and a desert
 they once called a heart-shaped valley,
spaces sprawl like destiny,
whorls of dust
 spread by hands.
Home, deprivation, hope
spreading apart the spaces in-between
like clapboard cabins
pitched against wind, unsteady
weather they once called homesteads.....

Monday, November 12, 2012

Left Right and Center in Santa Monica

We attended a special taping of the "Left, Right and Center" radio show on KCRW public radio station at Santa Monica Community College.  Colleen and I enjoy this weekly show on Fridays.  Mat Miller, the host covers the middle ground of politics while Robert Sheer covers and left.  The right has recently been covered by Mat Continetti, editor-in-chief of the Washington Free Beacon.  This 31 year old newcomer to the show is making quite a positive impression....even with the left.  He is also married to Bill Krystal's daughter.

The evening discussion focused on the election with many views shared and argued.  It was a thought provoking and at times humorous exchange.  Thanks KCRW for continuing to challenge us.

Caravaggio at LACMA

"Bodies and Shadows:  Caravaggio and his Legacy" exhibit has opened at LACMA.  Michelangelo Merisi was born in Milan, Italy in 1561.  His parents were from the town of Caravaggio.  He painted in a style that brought him commissions from the aristocracy and the Catholic Church.  He is noted for his striking use of light and dark backgrounds enhancing the figures in the foreground.  He included realistic details such as a peasant Virgin Mary with dirty feet.

He is known also for his ill temper.  In 1606, a ball game turned into a fight and he killed someone.  He fled from Rome to Naples and then Malta where he was involved in another brawl thus escaping back to Naples.  He died from the fever in 1610.

His style of painting was so powerful that he was copied by artists from all over Europe.  The exhibit has about a half a dozen paintings by Caravaggio and dozens more by other painters of the era who used his style. 
"Smoker" by Dirck van Baburen, Utrecht, Netherlands, 1623
"Herodias Carrying the Head of Saint John the Baptist," by a French Artist 1625-30
"The Magdalen with the Smoking Flame," 1636, by Georges de La Tour, France
Self  Portrait as Bacchus by Caravaggio
"The Denial of Saint Peter," by Gerard Seghers, Antwerp, Belgium, 1620-25
"Herodias with the head of St. John the Baptist," Caravaggio, 1610
Diego Velazquez "Apostle Saint Thomas," 1619, Seville, Spain