Saturday, July 17, 2010

Caravan Palace at Grand Performances



One of the things to do before leaving Los Angeles?

Catching a (free) Grand Performances show at California Plaza on a warm summer evening. Hot bill on Friday evening was the Parisian sensation “Caravan Palace” … and I had no idea to what extend it was going to ignite the massive audience!

Its unique sounds combine flapper swing, gypsy/jazz arrangements and generous scoops of electro pop wrapped with weird, energetic lyrics all held together with virtuosic performances on guitar, violin, double bass, trombone, clarinet and electronics. Name it “electro-swing a la francaise”!

An amazing show this “troupe” gave. One couldn’t sit/stay still by its enticing, wacky vibes, they called for a dance party! Even I shaked my booty (see video below)!

In the midst of the second set the crowd was going completely wild.

Some overheated shakers and groovers were running barefoot through the ponds at the plaza … to dismay of the organizers who stopped the concert for a few minutes until these peeps had left the fountains. It couldn’t stop the amused “bande” to play and sing to mesmerizing tunes and make for a superb and memorable evening. Merci, Caravan Palace, you have me hooked!


Friday, July 16, 2010

ArtInsight


Last Sunday afternoon I joined artists Michael Baroff and Norma, curator Jacki Paddock and friends at ArtInsight for an informal conversation about their work. The venue on the Westside is currently showing a photography group show, featuring nature inspired photographs by Norma, video art by Michael Baroff, among others.

In the inspiring discussion similarities as well as differences surfaced.

Norma is persuaded that training and technical expertise makes for a great picture, and that there should be standards. Others think that “a good eye” is all it takes. Who will tell?

Michael, who presented his aesthetically unique “Movement Series” – eight short videos capturing unscripted in the moment physical movement and ambient sound in local public environments – pointed out some interesting and personal thoughts. “Creating art is a process. It reflects one’s view of the world, combined with attitude, and mastering one’s technique of choice. I find satisfaction in the process. The fun part is to share my work with other people and friends, and feel validated.”

Jacki added: “Being creative, in whatever medium you choose, allows you freedom to do something else, and can be very therapeutic.”

Writing it is for me.

Photo credit: video still from “Moving Sunset” by Michael Baroff

For more info on this creative community:

http://www.meetup.com/Art-InSight

Video: “Boardwalk Beat” (Michael Baroff 2010)


Friday, May 14, 2010

How Do We Experience Art?


That was supposed to be the subject of this lecture.

As Geoff Dyer, author of The Ongoing Moment and, most recently, Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi, took the stage at the auditorium at the Getty Center, he insisted: “It’s important that you don’t know what this talk is going to be about.”

I was all ears and didn’t know what to expect. One hour later I was even more confused and amused.

Dyers’ talk was mainly about landmarks. He recalled landscapes from his youth. Next, unable to find Gauguin’s “Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going?” in Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts. Instead he came across “The Questioner of the Sphinx”, by Elihu Vedder. It seemed to Dyer an emblematic way of experiencing a landscape.

His wanderings brought him further to a square with poles and land art. He described Walter De Maria’s The Lightning Field, one of the great Land Art projects of the 1960s and 1970s … a sensational bit of marketing, an experience “almost unphotographable.” But unlike most art, it permits “freedom of behavior and response.” “And do not expect to see God appear at the field, there is no room for God”, Dyer ended his lecture.

Mesmerized by his words, now I have to read his books.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Red Book Dialogues








Related to the current exhibition The Red Book of C.G. Jung at the Hammer, artists and cultural icons are paired on stage with Jungian analysts or scholars and invited to interpret a folio from Jung’s Red Book as a starting point for a wide-ranging conversation.

This week’s duo featured filmmaker, artist and writer Miranda July, best know of her unique and very personal feature film Me and You and Everyone We Know, and Jungian analyst John Beebe, who concentrates particularly on American cinema in his work.

A little side note – a year or two ago, I got the pleasure of meeting Miranda when she took the same modern dance class as me!

Didn’t know what to expect of this dialogue but my curiosity was uttermost triggered when the two got off to a strange start… “Is this some kind of staged therapy session…?” went through my mind.

Beebe interpreted some of Miranda’ dreams – she acknowledged that most of her writing is based on her dreams -, and linked them to the Jungian theory of “active imagination”: how this translates in film, and to the “jouissance” of making a film?

Both further conversed about the intensity of the process of creating. For Miranda July it means going through a crisis. Beebe: “One has to go through this torture, it is hunting for one’s soul”. The conversation swerved on in this unusual vibe of in-depth “Jungian” observations by Beebe, and spontaneous, sometimes funny mutterings by July. Near the end Miranda even initiated some “performance art”: both are standing on the Red Book, “it supports us”, answering questions by the audience. Per the Jungian theory, Beebe broke down the nurturing of the creative process as follows: “Non Sense = not knowing what to do – vulnerable – see what happens.” Hammering words…

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Art in the Afternoon


This sunny day calls for some outdoors activities, like a bike stroll in the neighborhood, direction beach.

On 7th and Vernon, colorful balloons, a children’s bounce house, and a petting zoo catch my attention. I enter the courtyard. Tables with adults and children drawing and coloring, inside the studio all kinds of hands-on workshops (from drying flower petals, crafting small wooden jewelry boxes, to making simple jewelry…). They are part of this event Art in the Afternoon, benefiting the non-profit organization A Window Between Worlds, that helps children and women survivors of domestic violence recover from abuse using arts as a healing tool.

Founder Cathy Saiser tells: “These survivors are dealing with unsettled emotions, which they can release through creative expression. This relief opens up the healing.”

12-year old Destiny, a children’s workshop participant, shares her experience, how she finds empowerment though her voice and dancing. She sings with such an emotional voice, it’s very touching!

On my way out, I can’t help myself but color a few flower drawings. It feels good.

Isn’t that Diana’s voice, the one half of the duo Ketchup Soup, playing the button accordion and singing that unique mélange of folk, blues and jazz tunes, on the patio of Venice Beach Wines?

And then there is the salty smell of the ocean waves… my meditative moment.

Here’s the link for more info on A Window Between Worlds: http://www.awbw.org