Magic and Love in Rhythms of the City at the Rendon

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There are art experiences, there are music experiences, there are performances, installations, and walk- throughs. Sometimes, in a city as diverse and exciting artistically as Los Angeles, you get a mix of the visual and aural in one cool package, tied up with a metaphorical bow.

But it is a rare event to have something as haunting – the score is still in my head from Sunday’s performance – as lush, loving, and soul-stirring as Rhythms of the City at the Rendon Hotel in DTLA. On top of the beauty of the program, which included music, dance, and installation art, the event itself had a beautiful purpose – 100% of the proceeds from Rhythms of the City benefitted Play with Music, an LA-based nonprofit bringing music and tech education to underserved youth, connecting them to eight- week mentorship programs.

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The magic and love inherent in the experience shold draw you – fast, fast – to any future Art at the Rendon production.  Produced by Cindy Schwarzstein, participants hummed, danced, swayed, and stood in awe of the multi-room production.

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Composed by the extremely gifted Heitor Pereira, and directed by Ralph Ziman, with creative direction from Maria Greenshields-Ziman, and music direction from John Leftwich, attendees were invited onto both the second and third levels to watch the central starting point – repeating every 15 minutes – of the program.  This took place in an inner courtyard visible from both floors. Opera singers Anna Gregory and Rachel Staples Guettler, accompanied by rapper Jordan NliteN Tolbert performed the piece, from which harmonies, melodies, and reinterpretations spun out in all the rooms of the hotel. Guettler and Gregory’s dulcet vocals were like spun silk; Tolbert’s work was a rich, deeper counterpoint – the two styles merging into a seamless tapestry.

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Leaving the courtyard area and pausing fairly briefly in each room, we were able to take in each of the riffs and expansions of the central piece; my only disappointment was that there was no time left at the end of the captivating performance to go back and revisit some of our favorite rooms.

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That said, it’s also hard to play favorites. There were flaminco dancers, a gifted belly dancer, ballet, and jazz dance.

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Music was wide ranging in style and approach.

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There was African rhythm and rap; the alternative singing and guitar of Michelle Shocked (whose radio hits a few years back were favorites of mine); ipad techno, synthesizer, Native American sounds, Indian Raga, Hip Hop, the sounds of Peru, and even the use of Industrial and Found objects. 

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Shocked, above; Klezmer performers Ted Falcon Gypsy, below

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From a digiridoo to steel drum, to Klezmer, jazz, and electromagnetic field recordings of the sounds of the city, the audience would be hard put to not find “their” type of music, whether that meant music from their personal heritage, or just their favorite sounds and styles.

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Tom Freund, above; Marcus Lundqvist Trio, below

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Personal highlights included the sublime blues performed by Tom Freund; the vibrant rock of the Marcus Lundqvist Trio; the Rio Trio with Kleber Jorge Pimenta, Marco Dos Santos, and Rodrigo Galvao; and the riveting rhythm of Mexico performed by Elizabeth Sanchez Martinez, Claudia Lugue, and Geovanni Suarez. Elle Lewis played an ethereal solo flute; John Leftwich thundered his bass. Mike Dupree’s hip hop was passionate and compelling.

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Above, Elizabeth Sanchez Martinez, Claudia Lugue, and Geovanni Suarez

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Lewis on flute, above; Mike Dupree plays below

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The production was beautifully mixed, with speakers providing the central melody in each hallway.

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Several rooms had video monitors, others were hung with fabric, one was thatched with branches.

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The result was inspirational, exciting, and filled the admiring audience with longing to repeat the experience. Described as an immersive, collaborative performance, that is just the beginning. It’s kind of literally the stuff of dreams.

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If you haven’t supported Art at the Rendon before, be sure to do so whenever their next production comes around – this was my third “stay” at the old hotel; and each one gets better — more exciting, more profound.

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The evening ended with the chance to get two free glasses of beer, wine, or soda at the dark and cool speakeasy in the hotel’s basement, and mull over the musical magic.

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Visit www.artattherendon.com to find out more about past and upcoming events.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis

Dias de Los Muertes at Hollywood Forever: Art and Altars that Transcend This World

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Hollywood Forever’s Dias de Los Muertes event has become a true staple of LA life. The gorgeous, large-scale celebration features musical and dance performances on stage and on the grounds; sculptural installations; art installations, elaborate and witty costumes on visitors and participants, and moving, poignant, and sometimes amusing altars.

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Gotta catch ’em all.

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There were drummers, dancers, and multiple stages offering soft ballads and strong beats. And quiet, contemplative spaces honoring the departed.

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As a link between this life and the next, as a celebration, as an opening of the heart, mind, and soul to global cultures, the event is both lively and exciting. 

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Hollywood Forever was packed this year, as performers wove lush musical interludes and wild, mythical dances; attendees wrote messages to the departned on paper butterflies and tied them to a tree; and at another altar, attendees were encouraged to write the names of loved ones on colorful wooden sticks and plant them in sand.

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Thematically, this year, the festival’s 20th, was about the mariposa, or butterfly, specifically the orange and black monarch. It was a graceful, hopeful theme, one that resonated on a variety of different levels.

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The monarch butterfly winters in the Mexican state of Michoacán. Michoacán is also one of the two cultural heartlands in Mexico where the ancient traditions of Dia de los Muertos have been celebrated the longest and most vibrantly. The butterfly also represents the immigrants whose personal journeys echo the migrations of the butterflies between the U.S. and Mexico.

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Several of the altars offered moving commentary on the difficulty immigrants face entering this country.

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Inside the mausoleum, a bevy of terrific artists offered everything from carved wood to evocatively lit sculptures, paintings, and even stained glass. Arists included Eva Malhorta, Juan Solis, and Lore among many others.

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On the grounds, large scale artworks dotted the landscape.

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Taking place on Saturday the 2nd this year, this vibrant, transcendent cultural and spiritual event is as much an epitome of Los Angeles life as the pink and orange sunset pooling across the sky at twilight.

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As lights sparkled on altars, the sunset, the towering palms, skeleton sculptures floated in Hollywood Forever’s small lake…

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…sugar skulls and fairy lights glowed…

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and the cemetery’s resident peacocks settled into cages for the night.

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And one vibrant peacock-themed participant showed her plumage on the grounds.

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Missed it this year? Pay homage to your ancestors, your city’s culture, and the magic of Dias de Los Muertos at Hollywood Forever in 2020.

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  • Genie Davis; photos: Jack Burke; supplemental shots, Genie Davis

Stepping into New Frontiers

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In a time with the word “border” fraught with intended socio-political context, to have a show that exceeds conventional borders is inspiring both artistically and thematically. Opening October 26th at Jason Vass, Frontiers, from artists Tadashi Moriyama and Rachel Pease is a dramaticly lovely series of works created in ink.

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Both artists create highly detailed drawings, Moriyami’s, above, edging on the more surreal. Pease and Moriyama describe their work as a version of meditative mandala making, requiring both close observation and an appreciation of mysterious, contemplative visual narrative.  

The rainbow colors of Moriyami’s works are aglow, and seem to shift and shimmer. They have the look of a tapestry, one woven of ink.

The artists are married, and moved to Los Angeles from New York,  the quintessential journey to a Western frontier. But while the images could be taken as a look at their new physical landscape, it also revolves around their own brave new world in parenting, and a destination as yet not fully realized — the ongoing discovery process – of their art.

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According to Moriyama “We look for the unknown and unexplored, and attempt to make images that are new to us, and give us unexpected and serendipitous surprises.”

 Moriyama’s ink works are stretched on wood, and created with acrylic as well as ink. Their are buildings and ubran grids as well as seemingly interstellar environments. He references, subverts, and transcends images of Tokyo and New York, traveling into dreamscapes and a realm of other planets and space. A background in Japanese calligraphy is evident, as is the transcendent spirituality in his practice of Zen Buddhism. His otherworldly images are in part an outgrowth of meditation.

They swirl and spin, taking the viewer on a journey infused with movement, into which some figurative elements appear as if seeking a place within this brilliantly colored, seething world.

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Pease focuses her India ink on frosted mylar works on elaborate, magical riffs on the land and forests that surrouned her as she grew up in rural Indiana. Many of her works begin with an image of a tree that she uses as a kind of portal into a landscape that is mystical and fantastical.  There is both grace and elegy in her work, a tribute to a landscape that perhaps never was, or is in danger of disappearing from imagination and reality.

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The grace and stillness of Pease’s work is captivating; it compels viewers to enter into a forest of great beauty and strangeness.

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Canyon of the Distant Land, from Pease, above. The moonrise and mountains evoke images of Yosemite and Zion, while taking viewers into nature previously uncharted, a special, secret place. Both artists’ works surge beyond the prosaic and past common boundaries of location and imagination. They are futuristic and fantastical, yet grounded in a reality of landscape and cityscape; of dreams and desires, of the metaphorical and metaphysical.

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Viewers will find each work an immersive experience, and find a sense of the alchemic in each of these intricately realized and vibrantly alive images.

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The exhibition opens October 26th, reception from 5 to 8 p.m. Jason Vass is located at 1452 E. 6th Street in DTLA.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by gallery

Night Windows Offer an Illuminated Look Inside at CMay Gallery

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South Korean artist Hwang Seon Tae’s remarkable Night Windows is his first exhibition in Los Angeles, and it is a stunner. At CMay Gallery in mid-city through November 30th, the luminous new works from his Lightbox series are truly astonishing.

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Using literal illumination through images of windows, we are invited into perfectly designed, innately architectural rooms and spaces, through which we can see outdoor views or portals of light. In some cases, we see shadows from trees cast in light spilling onto walls. The result in each work is something incandescent.

Hwang Seon Tae, The Sunshine Room, 2019, Plastic Plate, LED, 29.9 x 22.4 x 3.5 inches , 76 x 57 x 9 cm

Asked if the works were representative of a Zen-like or meditative state, the artist demurred. Tse related that the works are to be taken “however you wish to take them, as long as you enjoy them and feel pleasure from them.”

Blissfully free of humans, while several pieces feature a peacefully sleeping cat or dog, the spaces are primarily pristine, well-designed living spaces. The emphasis on the domestic creates the sense of a place of being at rest, a true home.

Demur as he will, there is a highly spiritual component to the work, an emotional peace that vibrates through the observer.

Tse also explained that he views each of his precise lines as a kind of representative, visual language, and that each line has meaning and resonance for him as an artist.

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The use of light is enormously appealing, drawing the eye of course, but also engaging the mind and heart. It feels both transcendent and sweet, balming and beneficient.  His work is also concerned with simply the use of light, dimension, and space.

His line drawings illuminated by LED create an aura of stillness and restfulness, but also the provide a way for the viewer to step into that illumination and feel awash in its brightness. The dimensionality welcomes the viewer to step within each work.

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Some images include bright spots of color, as in the work above.

Tse’s manipulation of the physicality of the acrylic plate is a testament to his art, and in its perfection, also pulls viewers into the contemplation of simplicity, beauty, and minimalism.

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There are a number of other pieces from earlier series also on exhibit at CMay: a glass sculpture representing a rumpled newspaper; soft, out of focus photographic images of objects.

In an art talk Saturday night, the artist said “I am most interested in the objects themselves. In giving them meaning, attaching importance to them.”

Hwang Seon Tae, The Sunshine Room, 2019, Tempered Glass, Sandblast, LED Backlit, 86.6 x 34.4 x 1.6 inches , 220 x 62 x 4 cm

In a sense, he makes the objects – sofa, lamp, chair, window – into a character in his visual narrative.

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Above, a view of one of Tse’s works taken through a gallery window, a perfect introduction to the exhibition.

Born in Korea, trained in sculpture and Glass Art at Burg Giebichenstein University of Art and Design Halle in Germany, the exhibit is mesmerizing and involving. And it would be difficult to overstate the sense of calmness, the sense of joy which the viewer feels when “coming into the light.”

Hwang Seon Tae, The Sunshine Room, 2019, Tempered Glass, Sandblast, LED Backlit, 40.2 x 31.5 x 1.6 inches, 102 x 80 x 4 cm

CMay Gallery is located at 5828 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, CA, 90036.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis, and provided by gallery