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Art Talk

Art reviews from art critics Edward Goldman and Hunter Drohojowska-Philp.

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Episodes

Story of Two Exhibitions: One Friendly, The Other Not

One of the best kept secrets of LA's downtown art scene is REDCAT, a cutting-edge performance and exhibition space run by CalArts. Don't feel guilty if you haven't been there yet; it's not easy to find, as it's tucked away on the ground floor of Disney Hall, far from the main entrance of this famous building. Since its opening a few years ago, REDCAT has hosted a number of ambitious exhibitions, often presenting challenging conceptual and performance art not necessarily intended for a general au...

Aug 01, 20075 min

Controversy over Monument to Reverend King

When it comes to the official monuments decorating city squares in China, Libya, Iraq, and the former Soviet Union, one thing that all these oversized statues of local dictators have in common is the laughably low quality of the art. The infamous bronze statue of Saddam Hussein, toppled in Baghdad after US troops seized the Iraqi capital, is a perfect example of this brand of official art: the inevitable stiffness of pose, obligatory right arm thrust upward toward a bright future, and total disr...

Jul 25, 20075 min

The Sensual Art of Drawing

On any given day, Los Angeles teems with well-toned, fresh-faced hopefuls waiting for their big break. You can find them on the beach or if you get lucky, bump into one of them at Schwab's Drugstore on Sunset Blvd. At least that's where, according to legend, a Hollywood agent discovered the divine Lana Turner in the 1930's. If that same agent lived in Paris in the 1880s, I wonder what he would think about the beautiful barmaid at the Folies-Bergère, the one that Édouard Manet immortalized in his...

Jul 18, 20075 min

An Exhibition Overdosed on Love

Until I found in my mailbox the eye-catching catalog of Mary Heilmann's exhibition at the Orange County Museum of Art, I had never heard of her. The handsomely printed hardcover book, with its elegant layout and numerous color reproductions, is clearly a labor of love. For this California born and raised artist, who now resides in New York, this is the first retrospective covering four decades of her career...

Jul 11, 20075 min

LA Art through a European Prism

Last month, I traveled through about a dozen European cities in just three weeks; it was all art, all the time, but don't feel sorry for me, it was not exactly heavy lifting. The invitation to visit Holland came from two Dutch organizations: the Mondriaan Foundation and the Service Centre for International Cultural Activities (SICA). My hosts gave me carte blanche : staying in Amsterdam I could travel to other cities and see as many museums and meet as many curators and directors as my heart des...

Jul 04, 20075 min

The Art of El Anatsui and the Critic's Comeuppance

Intrigued by an artwork that is new to me, I like to get very close and examine its texture. It's not unlike having a handshake with a new acquaintance that hopefully confirms a first, favorable impression. A couple of months ago, at the Seattle Art Museum, when I saw for the first time a large, colorful wall hanging by Nigerian artist El Anatsui, I mistook it for a traditional African textile...

Jun 27, 20075 min

Venice the Magnificent

It's midnight, and I just said goodbye to the newlyweds with whom I shared a water taxi from the airport to the Piazza San Marco. The square is still crowded with hundreds of people sitting in outdoor cafés, enjoying a balmy night, listening to live bands playing hilariously sugary renditions of the most sentimental tunes from the 50's and 60's. The apartment I'm renting is only two blocks away, which is great, but it sits above a noisy trattoria that keeps the neighborhood awake well past 1am. ...

Jun 20, 20075 min

The Amazing Art of Nothing

Right now, there are two exhibitions in Los Angeles which have at first glance very little in common: one of the celebrated American sculptor Dan Flavin at LACMA and the other of the much lesser-known artist Richard Tuttle at MOCA.

May 23, 20075 min

Portrait of L.A. as a Young Thing

Let's be honest; we all like to check ourselves out in the mirror. Whether or not we are pleased with what we see there is another matter. In the last ten years, we Angelinos have had several chances to look in the mirror that friendly outsiders propped up in front of us to generate debate. ..

May 16, 20075 min

Museums Take a Cue from the Zoo

She is, to put it mildly, quite obese. Actually, she is so huge that it's nearly impossible not to stare at her. She has been a celebrity for so long that at this point, she doesn't mind the gawking crowds. As befitting a superstar, she is known by her first name only. Everyone calls her Clara. Paris Hilton would kill for the secret to the unprecedented longevity of Clara's fame -- two hundred fifty years and counting, to be precise...

May 09, 20075 min

Seduced in Seattle

Have you ever traveled to Seattle in the month of April, when all the trees sport the freshest shades of green and each blade of grass salutes the spring? I went there twice, and -- as luck would have it -- both times in April. It's easy to fall for this city given the picturesque quality of its waterfront and unhurried pace of its sophisticated urban center. What I find especially attractive about the city is its deep commitment to the visual arts, fully evident last week during the gala openin...

May 02, 20075 min

Happy Days Are Here Again

In a very peculiar coincidence, for two days in a row I found, on the front page of American papers, articles dealing with Russian history and culture. It is no surprise that today's newspapers paid tribute to former Russian president Boris Yeltsin, who died yesterday in Moscow at the age of 76. A larger-than-life colorful personality, he broke with the Communist Party when it was still in power and a move like that had a heavy price attached. Later, he became the first freely elected president ...

Apr 25, 20075 min

LA Cultural Scene Basking in the Sun

Following closely the developments of the Los Angeles cultural scene for a almost twenty years, I'm glad to report that artwise, favorable weather conditions prevail in the City of Angels. The Mayor's office announced yesterday the appointment of a new cultural affairs chief, Olga Garay, whose rather impressive resume bodes well for her new job here in LA...

Apr 18, 20075 min

Andrea Zittel Kisses the Frog

Have you ever tried to imagine the persona of the artist behind the work? Their look, their age. What kind of personality do they have: outgoing or shy, maybe? I have to admit that most of the time when I tried to do that, I failed. For example, LA sculptor extraordinaire Tim Hawkinson, whose current exhibition at the Getty Museum is getting rave reviews, almost shocked me when I met him for the first time. He was so quiet and unassuming, almost ordinary. With his amazingly inventive sculptures ...

Apr 11, 20075 min

Can Mediocre Art Serve a Good Cause?

Going to a museum to see a permanent collection or temporary exhibition I expect to see good as well as great artworks inevitably mixed with decidedly lesser ones which are needed to complete the story and illustrate a point of view. After all, great and good artworks are by definition in limited supply, while mediocre and merely competent works are always plentiful...

Apr 04, 20075 min

The New York Times' Love Affair with LA?

It took me no time at all to fall in love with Los Angeles -- just a few intakes of the balmy air upon emerging from the plane shortly after midnight. Until then, I didn't believe in love at first sight. Now, almost thirty years later, I know better. Never mind the wonderful climate and suspiciously gorgeous Hollywood wannabes. This huge and sprawling metropolis stubbornly refuses to follow the rules of success established by its older rivals, and instead of the storied beauty of Paris or Rome, ...

Mar 28, 20075 min

Our Right to Demand Clean Air and Good Quality Art

The enthusiastic response to last week's program about the daring art installation "Stations of the Cross" at San Gabriel's Church of Our Saviour made me think about how much of contemporary art is experienced by us outside of museum and gallery walls. The problem is that most of the art we may encounter in restaurants, in hotels, in theatre lobbies or in doctors' offices is rather mediocre, to put it mildly. I wonder how all these places would be perceived if the quality of art there was improv...

Mar 21, 20075 min

Ground Zero and Stations of the Cross

A couple of weeks ago a friend of mine called to let me know about a rather unusual exhibition I shouldn't miss. It is a little bit off the beaten path, she warned, but you're an adventurous man, aren't you Edward? It was a challenge I simply had to take. Driving to the San Gabriel Valley turned out to be not such a big deal -– actually it's not far from Pasadena and San Marino. The unusual thing about this conceptual art exhibition was that it was mounted neither in a museum nor a commercial ga...

Mar 14, 20075 min

The Getty Shows Off Its Monsters

Like a monster out of a low-budget Japanese horror movie, it's huge and more than a bit scary. Its translucent tentacles are a hundred feet long, and it feels as if they're still growing, ready to ensnare anyone within reach. The creature doesn't even have an easily identifiable main body. Instead, there are a few gigantic kidney-shaped blobs: translucent, flimsy, icky - like the tentacles that grow out of them. I saw it last night with my very own eyes, and I swear I was stone cold sober......

Mar 07, 20075 min

Oscar Dish of Celebrities and Butterflies

It takes chutzpah to roll into LA just a few days before the Oscars and still hope to get some attention for a project not connected to Hollywood -- at least not directly. To win this game, ambition is not enough; one needs to be a superstar, propelled by a superagent. Damien Hirst, the most famous of the so-called Young British Artists, and Robert Wilson, the much celebrated American avant-garde theater director, stage designer and sculptor, flew in last week to supervise the final preparations...

Feb 28, 20075 min

Close-Up on Chuck Close

If you've ever been invited to an elegant dinner where every bite is a delight and each new course makes you hungry all over again, then you want to treat yourself to what amounts to a sumptuous feast for your eyes -- an exhibition of Chuck Close prints at the Orange County Museum of Art...

Feb 21, 20075 min

John Constable, Precursor of Modern Art?

One cannot blame British artists for their cutthroat politics in fighting for a place in the sun. To be noticed by the public and written about by art critics, these chaps would go to remarkable lengths. At the end of the day, the Royal Academy and admission into its famous annual Salon was all they dreamed about. Even the lucky ones, whose paintings were accepted, were prone to anxiety attacks, wondering: Will their painting be shown in the prestigious Main Gallery or be banished into the adjac...

Feb 07, 20075 min

Four Times Fair Makes Magic?

The end of the year has its own inevitable rhythm; the busy holiday season is punctuated with shopping, partying, and obligations to have a good time. And still, many of us can't wait for the quiet weeks of January. Not this year, that's for sure. For a stretch of ten days starting last week and continuing through the upcoming weekend, Los Angeles became the arena for four virtually concurrent Art Fairs competing for our attention....

Jan 24, 20075 min

Picasso and His Monsters

One of the most intriguing art events of this season took place last Sunday at the LACMA auditorium. A single famous artwork was discussed in depth and interpreted in provocative ways during a day-long symposium devoted to what is arguably Picasso's greatest print. Seven art scholars argued their points of view regarding one particular etching, Minotauromachy, that the artist printed in 1935 -- the worst year of his life -- according to his own statement. Picasso's marriage to Russian ballerina ...

Jan 17, 20075 min

LA Art Exhibitions: Familiar and New Names

Last week was good for gallery hopping, with a number of interesting new shows popping up all over town. Given the art world propensity for the discovery and promotion of fresh young talent, it was especially satisfying to find an exhibition celebrating the sophisticated art of one of LA's most renowned sculptors, John Mason, who turns eighty years old next year...

Jan 10, 20074 min

Will the Art Bubble Burst?

At the turn of the 20th century, collecting contemporary art used to be serious business for a relatively small group of people. It was an exclusive gentlemen's club with only a few ladies, such as Gertrude Stein in Paris and the Cone sisters in Baltimore, allowed to join in. An annual trip to Paris, a visit with the preeminent dealer Ambroise Vollard and, maybe, knocking on the door of Matisse or Picasso's studio would be enough for an adventurous collector with an eye on contemporary art......

Jan 03, 20075 min

The Best of 2006

With 2006 coming to a close, it's tempting to look back at the year's most memorable encounters with art. In April, a large crowd of journalists gathered inside a plastic tent in the courtyard of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. It was raining cats and dogs but Michael Govan, the recently appointed museum director, was resolutely upbeat. Five famous paintings by Gustav Klimt, that were considered to be Austrian national treasures, were returned to Maria Altmann, a Los Angeles resident and n...

Dec 20, 20065 min

L.A. Comes of Age

One of the best kept secrets of American cultural life, the ascendance of Los Angeles to the enviable position of one of the most important art cities in the world, is not a secret any longer. The recent exhibition devoted to LA art at the Pompidou Center in Paris underscored the prominence of Los Angeles as one of the four major international centers, along with London, Berlin and New York, where cutting edge contemporary art is produced. A decade ago, The New York Times would rarely mention th...

Dec 13, 20065 min

Answered Prayers...? Let's Hope...

In a surprise, but nevertheless highly anticipated announcement, the Getty Trust revealed its choice for the new president to replace Barry Munitz who hastily resigned or--to put it more precisely--was shown the door last February. After a nine month hunt and--one would hope--a lot of soul searching, the Getty trustees did something rather revolutionary: they summoned up the courage to overcome the corporate mentality that currently prevails in American museum board rooms across the country......

Dec 06, 20065 min

Mexico City: Eyes Wide Open

My first trip to Mexico City was an eye opener. I knew that it was huge but still I was overwhelmed by its scale, its crowds, and its traffic. However, it was impossible not to be seduced by the operatic grandeur of the Palace of Fine Arts with its Art Deco interiors and frescoes by Diego Rivera and Rufino Tamayo...

Nov 22, 20065 min
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