The great Greil Marcus was at Pomona College on Thursday night for a talk about failure, and I was there. (Thus probably accentuating the failure.) Needing a topper to some items for Sunday, I was hoping for the best, and was rewarded. Read that — plus a few items — in Sunday’s column.
Category Archives: Arts and Lettuce
Column: Kids’ theater storage must exit, stage left — and fast
A Claremont-based theatrical group for children, Alliance for the Performing Arts, must vacate its 6,000-square-foot storage space in Pomona by May 1 — but has nowhere to take its vast numbers of costumes, props and set pieces. I don’t know if a column will help, but it can’t hurt. I write about it for Wednesday’s column.
Column: Home Savings financier banked on beauty
Painter Millard Sheets was also the designer of the classic Home Savings thrift branches, a career that is explored in a new book, “Banking on Beauty.” I write about that book and that work in Friday’s column. Above, the former Home Savings at Second and Garey in downtown Pomona, now owned by Western University of Health Sciences with Chase Bank on the lower level.
Column: Theater company Ophelia’s Jump lands in Upland
Ophelia’s Jump has gambled on presenting the sorts of modern, edgy plays common in LA and uncommon out here, and found success. Now they have a permanent space after bouncing among venues the past six years. I profile the couple behind the group and catch a dress rehearsal of “In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play)” for Wednesday’s column.
One day, two art exhibits
Saturday afternoon I attended not one but two art openings. The first was at the Ontario Museum of History and Art, which is focusing on the latter for “Diversity and Inclusion.” Over four rooms, it’s got paintings, collages, drawings, sculpture, embroidery and probably something I forgot, all offering a look at the African-American experience.
It was well-attended, and at times the galleries were actually crowded. Probably half the attendees were black, a nice sight in Ontario and at a local art event. That and the strong turnout should be encouragement to do more such shows. Besides, most of the art was really strong.
After that, I headed for Cal Poly Pomona for “Positively 4th Street,” an ode in paintings, drawings, assemblages and text to LA’s 4th Street viaduct. It’s a small show, but likewise evocative. Below is Richard Willson’s “The Approach.” He and Roderick Smith did the art and D.J. Waldie provided text and an essay on the bridge’s history. I introduced myself to Waldie and got his autograph in my copy of “Holy Land.”
Find the exhibit on the 4th floor of the University Library through April 12.
All in all, a pleasant, visually stimulating afternoon across two counties.
Column: New biography offers portrait of painter Milford Zornes
Milford Zornes, who died at 100 in 2008 in Claremont, is the subject of an art exhibit and a biography by his son-in-law. A day ahead of what would have been his 110th birthday, I write about him in Wednesday’s column.
Favorite films of 2017
Consider this the How Did We Stand the Suspense Edition, coming as it does 10 days into the new year. I had planned to wait on this list a few days into 2018 to buy myself time to see an extra movie or two. But then I came down with a cold, which meant I couldn’t get out to any movies OR produce the list, the pen-and-ink draft of which was on my desk at the office. Sheesh.
At least I got to two movies in the final days of the year, and they filled my No. 1 and 2 slots.
- The Shape of Water
- Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
- Lady Bird
- Get Out
- The Big Sick
- Wonder Woman
- The Trip to Spain
- War for the Planet of the Apes
- My Cousin Rachel
- Blade Runner 2049
It was hard to know where or if to place Arrival, which was a 2016 release when I saw it last January. Fences was another holdover, but I liked it less. Arrival would have come in around No. 8. From No. 11 down, the rest of my 2017 movies would run like this: Thor: Ragnarok, The Beguiled, Dunkirk, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Kong: Skull Island, Beatriz at Dinner, Rat Film.
Obviously I missed or haven’t yet had a chance to see lots of good movies, among them The Post, Phantom Thread, Darkest Hour, Molly’s Game, Call Me By Your Name, Novitiate, All the Money in the World, The Florida Project, Mudbound and I, Tonya. Oh well.
What did you see in 2017 that you liked — or hated?
Favorite music of 2017
We’re in an age when music seems to mean less to the average person than ever before, but many of us still care, and some of them are my friends and colleagues. Below you’ll find a list of my favorite releases of 2017, pictured above. Wes Woods’ list is below mine.
- Rolling Blackouts CF: “Talk Tight” (Sub Pop)
- Arcade Fire: “Everything Now” (Columbia)
- Waxahatchee: “Out in the Storm” (Merge Records)
- Jens Lekman: “Life Will See You Now” (Secretly Canadian)
- Saint Etienne: “Home Counties” (Heavenly)
- Kamasi Washington: “Harmony of Difference” (Young Turks)
- Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit: “The Nashville Sound” (Southeastern Records)
- Randy Newman: “Dark Matter” (Nonesuch)
- Yumi Zouma: “Willowbank” (Cascine)
- The Magnetic Fields: “50 Song Memoir” (Nonesuch)
- Brad Paisley: “Love and War” (Arista Nashville)
- Various Artists: “The Rough Guide to the Music of West Africa” (World Music Network)
- The Pollyseeds: “Sounds of Crenshaw, Volume One” (Ropeadope Records)
Wes Woods:
- Kendrick Lamar: “Damn” (Top Dawg Entertainment, Aftermath Entertainment, Interscope Records)
- Rapsody: “Laila’s Wisdom” (Jamla Records, Roc Nation)
- Valerie June: “The Order Of Time” (Concord Records)
- SZA: “Ctrl” (Top Dawg Entertainment, RCA Records)
- Thundercat: “Drunk” (Brainfeeder)
- Sampha: “Process” (Young Turks)
- Jlin: “Black Origami” (Planet Mu)
- The War on Drugs: “A Deeper Understanding” (Atlantic Records)
- St. Vincent: “Masseduction” (Loma Vista Recordings)
- (tie)Â The xx: “I See You” (Young Turks); Migos: “Culture” (Quality Control Music, 300 Entertainment, Atlantic Records);Â Joey Bada$$: “All-Amerikkkan Badass” (Pro Era Records, Cinematic Music Group)
Column: Psst! Here’s the lowdown on PST: LA/LA shows in the IE
You may be at least marginally aware of the Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA art exhibits scattered around Southern California. I visited the eight shows in our area, in Pomona, Claremont and Riverside, and wrote capsule summaries for Wednesday’s column. This weekend brings free admission (although many venues are free anyway) and special events to the IE-area spots, so it’s timely.
(To be candid, I’m guessing this column will get fewer clicks than normal while requiring more time and mileage out of me than normal. But it seemed worth doing, so I did it anyway.)
Column: Dining hall masterpiece provides food for thought
In writing last month about the Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA show at Pomona College, I said I’d come back to the topic of the college’s celebrated “Prometheus” mural. At last, I do so in Sunday’s column, where you’ll learn how the first Mexican mural in the United States came to be painted in Claremont, what it’s about and what (tee-hee!) seems to be missing.
It’s a relief to have written this, by the way: My research started in March 2016 when I attended a talk on the mural and continued through the reading of two college-published art books, attendance at two events this fall around the PST show and interviews with several of those involved, all culminating in lunch in the dining hall earlier this month where I could see the mural. Whew!
Now I can finally get these books and notes off my desk. My only regret is that I forgot to make the dining hall my Restaurant of the Week — but maybe I’ll do that this week.