Friday, January 28, 2011

Eight Claude Chabrol Films Screening at LACMA

Each element that makes a film directed by Claude Chabrol all the more compelling is also the one that renders it unseemly.


Thank you for not smoking. Jean-Pierre Cassel, Jacqueline Bisset, and Valentin Merlet in La cérémonie, 1995.

The astonishingly prolific French director Chabrol died last September at the age of 80, leaving behind more than 70 films marked by a predilection for passion, poison, and perversity. His filmmaking descended from the generation of Cahiers du cinema and the Nouvelle Vague, and it observed greed, adultery and murder with a narrow psychological intensity that made notions of sin or crime seem to be beside the point. 
He melded a lyric, semi-formal sensibility reminiscent of Alfred Hitchcock and Fritz Lang with tense, cynicism-infused narratives, some derived from satirical suspense queens Patricia Highsmith and Ruth Rendell. In his cinematic world, it’s an act of pitiable optimism to suppose there are only seven deadly sins. An insurance broker, bourgeosie chateau dwellers, or a country cousin are no match for the machinations of a debauched student, an illiterate maid, or a scheming Swiss chocolate heiress. 
The effect: equally pure and corrupt. 
From January 28 through February 5, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art will be screening eight Chabrol films, starting with his first feature, Le beau Serge, and rounding out the set with recent work, including one of my favorites, Merci pour le chocolat.
Can’t miss: a guest appearance on Saturday night by Jacqueline Bisset, who appeared in La cérémonie as an industrialist’s wife undone by the machinations of the local postmistress.
January 28 7:30 pm, La femme infidèle, 1969
January 28 9:20 pm, The Bridesmaid, 2004
January 29 5:00 pm, Le beau Serge, 1958
January 29 7:30 pm, La cérémonie, 1995 (with a guest appearance by Jacqueline Bisset)
February 4 7:30 pm, Les cousins, 1959
February 4 9:35 pm, Les bonnes femmes, 1960
February 5 5:00 pm, Merci pour le chocolat, 2000
February 5 7:30 pm, This Man Must Die, 1969

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

LACMA’s 18th Century DIY Costumes



If you’ve ever wanted to spend a quiet evening at home watching NetFlix and licking the frosting off cupcakes in unparalled elegance, then the Los Angeles County Museum of Art is providing a grand opportunity to flounce around in stunning 18th century menswear rather than an ex-boyfriend’s faded, pizza-stained tee shirt. 
The curators and conservators of the LACMA’s Costume and Textiles Department have created patterns based on the designs of garments in their collection, including a man’s at-home robe (banyan), from China, 1700-50. And should you care to leave the manse, they’ve also provided annotated pdf patterns of styles that would suit even Mr. Darcy's legendary pride, including two waistcoats — with sleeves or without  from China for the Western market, c. 1740, and a man’s coat, France, 1790–95. It’s time to buy some silk jacquard or voided velvet and start sewing.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Pretty Is As Pretty Does

“My face has been my misfortune.” 
— Hedy Lamarr, from her 1966 autobiography, Ecstasy and Me




Ebony hair. Alabaster skin. Vermillion lips. 
Born Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler. Transformed into Hollywood screen goddess Hedy Lamarr. 
From the beginning, she was acknowledged for her beauty. Not so much for her acting. And finally, decades later, for her brains.
Her first foray into cinema was a 1933 Czech film, Ekstase (Ecstasy), in which she appeared nude and simulated fufillment of the movie’s title; other well-known roles include Algiers with Charles Boyer, 1938; White Cargo with Walter Pidgeon, 1942; and the technicolor Biblical potboiler, Samson and Delilah with Victor Mature, 1949.
In 1942, she and composer George Antheil shared a patent for inventing a technological system they called “frequency hopping”, an idea that she and the avant-garde American composer hatched at a dinner party. Their invention opened the doors to the spread-spectrum technology and cell phone usage. Talk about networking!
Unfortunately their idea languished until 1957, when it was adopted by engineers at Sylvania Electronis Systems. In 1962, it was installed in United States military ships, three years after the Lamarr-Antheil patent had expired. So Lamarr is credited with a portion of the credit but enjoyed none of the proceeds.  
In 1997, she and co-inventor Antheil won the Electronic Frontier Foundation Pioneer Award. “It’s about time,” she reportedly said.
To learn more about Hedy Lamarr, tune into the Stuff You Missed in History Class podcast about the Hollywood starlet who invested cellular technology.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Chris Burden’s Metropolis II En Route to LACMA

Chris Burden’s Metropolis II, is a kinetic frenzy
of 1200 Hot Wheels toy cars, gigantic roller coaster roadways, toy tracks, wood block, tiles, Legos, Lincoln Logs and a whole lot of noise. Metropolis II is expected to be unveiled at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 2011. A clip documenting the work-in-progress was filmed in Burden’s studio in Topanga Canyon, California. 





Bigger, better, faster, stronger —Metropolis II is an evolution of a Burden’s earlier work, Metropolis I. A visual and auditory construction of 80 toy cars, two single lane highways and monorails on tracks, Metropolis I is at the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art in Kanazawa, Japan





LACMA also features another of Burden's monumental compositions, Urban Light, a dramatic sculptural arrangement of salvaged 1920s- and 1930s-era cast iron lampposts from the Los Angeles area.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

The Formosa Pocket Park: Good Thing, Small Package




Peaceful, sustainable and verdant. 
The Formosa Park, located north of Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood, a green space designed for neighborhood use.
Enter through frosted glass.
It’s 4600 square feet, with drought-tolerant plants, water-conserving irrigation, rocks, sand and a water feature. Compared to most parks, it’s a postage stamp.
The forest floor is translated into a metal shade above, with cutouts that filter light and flirt with sky.
A sculpture reminiscent of a desiccated tree occupies an unexpected corner.
Seats mimic the scattered shapes of fallen leaves, punctuating the winding walkways.














The park was designed by Katherine Spitz Associates.
It adjoins the Formosa 1140, an 11-unit condominium building of blood-orange corrugated metal, wood and glass, developed by Richard Loring of the Habitat Group and designed by Lorcan O'Herlihy Architects. The condo building’s vibrant palette and towering geometry make it hard to miss in a neighborhood of vintage brick and stucco, giving the adjacent residences the effect of unwilling matrons clustered at an impromptu block party or a wake; the pocket park, somehow, softens the effect.
Formosa Park opened in August, 2009. It closes at night.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Project Angel Food’s DO GOODING good Cookies

It’s not often that the opportunity to do help others comes in delicious flavors, but such are the perks of Project Angel Food’s Ginger Snap, Iced Lemon and Chocolate Chip DO GOODING good COOKIES. 
The cookies are the first product line from Project Angel Food Bakeries, an enterprise developed in Project Angel Food’s Vine Street kitchen, which cooks and delivers more than 13,000 meals a week to men, women and children affected by HIV/AIDS, cancer and other life-threatening illnesses. The DO GOODING good COOKIES have been launched in a special partnership with Hollywood and West Hollywood Pavilions Stores; they retail for $3.99, and 100% of the price will go to directly to support the work of Project Angel Food. 
The packaging makes the cookies pretty enough to give as gifts—the delightful pink, yellow and orange cylinders were designed by Richard Manville and directed by board member and volunteer Jacqui Farina. And the cookies were created to be equally beautiful within, using real butter and cane or beet sugar, and eschewing corn syrup, preservatives and hydrogenated or partly hydrogenated fats. Which, in my book, practically qualifies the DO GOODING good COOKIES as health food.
Final note—Project Angel Food has been operating for 21 years, and to date, they’ve prepared and delivered more than seven million meals free of charge. 
You can find the DO GOODING good COOKIES at these Pavilions locations:
727 N. Vine St. Los Angeles, CA 90038
8969 Santa Monica Blvd, West Hollywood, CA 90069
Yum.