Essential Arts & Culture: The Getty's new trove, an Italian artist's due, âAngels in Americaâ returns
New works from Old Masters at the Getty. Reconsidering the career of Marisa Merz. And our man in London has a look at the revived âAngels in America.â Iâm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer for the Los Angeles Times, with your weekly report on all things awesome in the world of culture:
The Gettyâs âSurpriseâ
The J. Paul Getty Museum is adding a group of 16 Old Master drawings to its collection â" among them, drawings by Rubens, Goya, Degas and a âsuperlativeâ Michelangelo, according to Times art critic Christopher Knight. On top of this incredible haul, the museum has also added a new canvas by Jean-Antoine Watteau that had long been thought destroyed. It is fittingly titled âThe Surprise.â Los Angeles Times
An artist gets her due
She was a pioneer of the 20th century Italian artistic movement that was known as Arte Povera. But she remains largely forgotten. Christopher Knight looks at how the reputation and the âintensely personal artâ of painter, sculptor and installation artist Marisa Merz is being revived in an important retrospective at the Hammer Museum. Los Angeles Times
âAngelsâ remains fresh
Times theater critic Charles McNulty is in London, and he reports that the townâs best new production is Tony Kushnerâs âAngels in America,â starring Nathan Lane, Andrew Garfield and Russell Tovey â" and, yes, heâs well aware that âAngelsâ first debuted in the â90s. âBut itâs hard not to be astonished by the way the playâs richly expansive sociopolitical vision, which was born out of a particular historical moment,â he writes, âis able to shed light on contemporary crisis-ridden America.â Los Angeles Times
Canât make it to London? Thankfully âAngels in Americaâ will be broadcast live to U.S. theaters in late July. Los Angeles Times
The eternal Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett recently teamed up with the Los Angeles Philharmonic for a concert at the Hollywood Bowl. For the duration of the performance, reports Times classical music critic Mark Swed, Gustavo Dudamel and the L.A. Phil remained somewhat sidelined. The show, he writes, was all on the 90-year-old Bennett, âwho held the stage for well over an hour, never faltered on a lyric, hit a lot of pitches on the nail, retained high notes and showed himself to remain as agile a dancer as a singer.â Los Angeles Times
The show came on the heels of another L.A. Phil performance that featured none other than recently retired Dodgers announcer Vin Scully, who read the famous line â" âFellow Citizens, we cannot escape historyâ â" for Aaron Coplandâs âLincoln Portrait.â Los Angeles Times
Plus, Times contributor Margaret Gray profiles composer Stephen Sondheim in advance of a concert celebrating his 75th birthday at the Hollywood Bowl: âSondheim on Sondheim,â a revue of his Broadway career. Los Angeles Times
Satire that remains contemporary
The play is about a condition that turns the citizens of a French town into rhinoceroses, but itâs really about âthe seductively corrosive lure of herd mentality,â writes Times contributing reviewer Philip Brandes. And this production of Eugene Ionescoâs absurdist satire âRhinocerosâ couldnât be more timely. Staged by director Guillermo Cienfuegos (working under the acting name Alex Hernandez), at the Pacific Resident Theatre in Venice, this faithful staging, says Brandes, also manages to tame âthe playâs unrulier idiosyncrasies.â Los Angeles Times
Shakespeare and xenophobia
I was really moved by Stephen Greenblattâs essay exploring the anti-Semitism he contended with as a student at Yale along with the anti-Semitism he encountered in literature â" including Shakespeareâs âMerchant of Venice.â It was something that led him to dive into Shakespeare even deeper: âI wouldnât turn away from works that caused me pain as well as pleasure. Instead, insofar as I could, I would pore over the whole vast, messy enterprise of culture as if it were my birthright. I was determined to understand this birthright, including what was toxic in it.â Itâs a stirring look at Shakespeareâs social and political context â" and his surprising humanity, even in his most stereotyped characters. New Yorker
Ian Flanders
Alan Blumenfeld, center, plays Shylock in the ongoing presentation of "The Merchant of Venice" at the Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum.
Alan Blumenfeld, center, plays Shylock in the ongoing presentation of "The Merchant of Venice" at the Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum. (Ian Flanders)
Speaking of must-read essays: Michelle Garciaâs deconstruction of filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowskyâs reading of the tarot for an elite audience at the Museum of Modern Art is pretty magical. Of course, given writer and subject, it would be. The Baffler
An Eve Babitz moment
Eve Babitz â" writer, dater of the famous, poser of the infamous nude chess-playing photo with Marcel Duchamp â" is having a moment. Her 1979 novel âSex and Rageâ was just re-released by Counterpoint Press, following re-issues of her essay collections: âEveâs Hollywoodâ and âSlow Days, Fast Company.â These have invited some intriguing reconsiderations of her work. âSex and Rageâ is plotless, reports cr itic Michelle Dean, but it is a âportrait of an It Girl on the verge of a nervous breakdown that softens and opens the type.â Los Angeles Times
And ââSex and Rageâ isnât as sharp as the books Babitz made her name on,â writes Jia Tolentino. âSheâs really a memoirist â" but itâs nonetheless a mesmerizing account of a young woman trying to decide what to do about her own premonition.â New Yorker
A generous donation
The Valley Performing Arts Center at Cal State Northridge just announced the single largest arts gift to the state university system: a $17-million donation from business mogul Younes Nazarian and his wife, Soraya Nazarian. VPAC will be renamed the Younes and Soraya Nazarian Center for the Performing Arts â" âthe Sorayaâ for short. Los Angeles Times
In other news...
â" Gentle people, start your browsers: The Broad museum will be releasing tickets â" at $25 a pop â" for the much-hyped Yayoi Kusama exhibition on Sept. 1. Los Angeles Times
â" Critic Andrew Russetth asks if the Broadâs Kusama tickets are simply too much â" especially at a time when some critics are arguing museums, like libraries, should be free. ARTnews
â" A floating concert hall designed by architect Louis Kahn could end up in Kingston, N.Y., after a push from cellist Yo-Yo Ma. Chicago Tribune
â" Speaking of which, critic Paul Goldberger considers Kahnâs legacy and his new biography, âYou Say to Brick.â The Nation
â" A âgap between good intentions and real life.â Architecture critic John King revisits Thom Mayneâs San Francisco Federal Building 10 years out. San Francisco Chronicle
â" The iPalpiti festival, known for fostering the careers of young classical musicians, is staging concerts around L.A. through July 30. Los Angeles Times
â" Amid scandal and tumult, French choreographer Jean-Christopher Maillot teams up with the Bolshoi for a successful âTaming of the Shrew.â New York Times
â" Salvador DalÃâs remains, mustache intact, are exhumed for a paternity suit. New York Times
â" Storms invade the Louvre, damaging works by Nicolas Poussin and others. Artnet
â" An Israeli artist, the granddaughter of Holocaust survivors, stole Auschwitz artifacts for an exhibition. The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum says it will press charges. The Independent
â" Artists on art: light and space artist Helen Pashgian on a painting by 17th century painter Georges de La Tour. Unframed
â" Capturing lost worlds: Im ages of mid-century Vancouver by Fred Herzog. The Guardian
â" Pairs well with this photo essay on Broadway in downtown Los Angeles by Leopoldo Peña. Más Ultra
â" How Sanrio makes anti-capitalism adorable with characters such as Aggretsuko. New York Times
And last but not leastâ¦
Yamada Unsodoâs drawings of clouds. Smithsonian Libraries
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