Tag Archives: Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA

YMA SUMAC — HAMMER TRIBUTE

Peruvian singer-cult figure Yma Sumac was the only direct descendant of Incan emperor Atahualpa to play Carnegie Hall, perform in Broadway musicals, and score a Number One debut album—Voice of the Xtabay (1950)—on the Billboard charts.

This weekend, Empress of (Lorely Rodriguez), Nite Jewel, Maria Elena Altany, Ceci Bastida, Dorian Wood, Carmina Escobar, and Francisca Valenzuela—backed by a band led by Alberto López of Jungle Fire—gather at the Hammer Museum to pay tribute to the legendary singer from Peru with the four-octave-and-then-some range.

VOICES OF THE XTABAY—A TRIBUTE TO YMA SUMAC, Saturday, October 7, at 7:30 pm.

RADICAL WOMEN—LATIN AMERICAN ART, 1960–1985, through December 31.

HAMMER MUSEUM, 10899 Wilshire Boulevard, Westwood, Los Angeles.

hammer.ucla.edu/programs-events/2017/10/voices-of-the-xtabay-a-tribute-to-yma-sumac/

yma-sumac.com

pacificstandardtime.org

Yma Sumac. Image credit: Yma-sumac.com

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LA/LA/LA AT ROBERT BERMAN

LA/LA/LA—a PST: LA/LA show at Robert Berman Gallery—showcases artwork from two historical exhibitions/catalogues of contemporary art—Hispanic Art in the United States—Thirty Contemporary Painters and Sculptures (1987, Brooklyn) and Le Demon des Anges—16 artistes chicanos al voltant de Los Angeles (1989, Nantes)—as well as pieces Berman has shown in his gallery since 1979.

LA/LA/LA features work, documentation, and ephemera by Carlos Alfonzo, Carlos Almaraz, Sol Aquino, Sergio Bustamante, Oscar Castillo, Fulgencio F. Corral, Richard Duardo, Rudy Fernandez, Elsa Flores, Diane Gamboa, Harry Gamboa Jr.Margaret Garcia, Roberto Gil de Montes, Yolanda Gonzalez, Robert Graham, Gronk, Wayne Healy, Luis Jimenez, Roberto Juarez, Leo Limon, Los Four, Gilbert “Magu” Lujan, Daniel Joseph Martinez, Jesus Moroles, Manuel Ocampo, Retna, Frank Romero, Rafael SerranoPaul Sierra, Eloy Torrez, and John Valadez.

A special featured exhibition of works by Martín Ramírez is also on view, courtesy of the Martín Ramírez Estate and Ricco/Maresca Gallery, “[which] has championed the art of self-taught masters working outside the art-historical mainstream since it was founded in 1979.”*

Ramírez is also featured in the exhibition MARTÍN RAMÍREZ—HIS LIFE IN PICTURES, ANOTHER INTERPRETATION at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (ICA LA).

LA/LA/LA, through October 14.

ROBERT BERMAN GALLERY, Bergamot Station, 2525 Michigan Avenue, Santa Monica.

robertbermangallery.com/

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MARTÍN RAMÍREZ—HIS LIFE IN PICTURES, ANOTHER INTERPRETATION, through December 31.

ICA LA, 1717 East 7th Street, downtown Los Angeles.

pacificstandardtime.org/en/exhibitions/exhibit/view/Martin-Ramirez-His-Life-in-Pictures

*  riccomaresca.com/

From top:

Martín Ramírez, Untitled (Horse and Rider with Frieze), no date, gouache, colored pencil, and graphite on pieced paper.

Le Demon des Anges catalogue. Image credit: Ezra the Bookfinder.

Gilbert “Magu” Lujan, Untitled, 1984, pastel on paper.

Daniel Joseph MartinezI can’t imagine ever wanting to be white, 1993, published for the Whitney Museum Biennial, metal tags encased in resin.

John ValadezCarlos (Almaraz), Sunshine, Ramon, Glenn and Elizabeth, 1983, pastel on paper.

Frank RomeroMuscle Car, 1991, oil and gold leaf on wood with neon lights.

GronkLa Tormenta, 1985, acrylic on canvas.

Harry Gamboa Jr.First Supper (After A Major Riot), 1974/Printed 2008, ASCO, chromogenic print mounted to aluminum.

Harry Gamboa Jr.Asshole Mural, 1974/Printed 2008, ASCO, Chromogenic print.

All artwork images courtesy of the artists and the Robert Berman Gallery.

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GAVALDÓN — DOUBLE NOIR

“If Garbo was a woman who became a goddess, Dolores del Río was a goddess who became a woman.” — Carlos Fuentes

In LA OTRA/THE OTHER ONE (1946)—directed by Roberto Gavaldóndel Río  plays twin sisters: one bad, the other worse. Dead husbands, playboy lovers, mirrors, betrayals, and closets full of couture all play their part in this Mexican noir—the first big hit by its director.

The films of Gavaldón (1909–1986)—a peer of Douglas Sirk, Vincente Minnelli, and Max Ophüls—are largely unknown in the States. This rare double bill—part of the PST: LA/LA program Recuerdos de un cine en español: Latin American Cinema in Los Angeles, 1930-1960—includes another Gavaldón masterpiece, EN LA PALMA DE TU MANO (1951), starring Arturo de Córdoba.

LA OTRA and EN LA PALMA DE TU MANO

Monday, September 25, at 7:30 pm.

Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum

10899 Wilshire Boulevard, Westwood, Los Angeles.

From top: La Otra poster; Victor Junco and Dolores del Río in La Otra; Del Río.

RADICAL WOMEN — CURATOR WALK-THROUGH

“The very need to organize a historical exhibition based on gender is evidence of a vacuum in the art system. Women have been systematically excluded or presented in stereotypical and biased ways for centuries.

“This has created a situation that is difficult to address, partly because the opportunities to do so are still few, and also because many of the same prejudiced and exclusionary frameworks still prevail today. The reality is that many more women artists participated in the shaping of twentieth-century art than have been accounted for.” — Cecilia Fajardo-Hill, “The Invisibility of Latin American Women Artists”*

“Starting in the 1960s and through the 1980s, Latin American and Latina artists classified by society as women… produced experimental artworks that introduced radical changes in how the body was represented…. I would even argue that feminist artists and artistic feminism… enacted the twentieth-century’s greatest iconographic transformation.” — Andrea Giunta, “The Iconographic Turn”*

This weekend, Cecilia Fajardo-Hill and Andrea Giunta, the curators of RADICAL WOMEN—LATIN AMERICAN ART, 1960–1985, will lead a tour through the exhibition.

 

RADICAL WOMEN CURATOR WALK-THROUGH, Sunday, September 24, from 2 pm to 3 pm.

RADICAL WOMEN—LATIN AMERICAN ART, 1960–1985, through December 31.

HAMMER MUSEUM, 10899 Wilshire Boulevard, Westwood, Los Angeles.

hammer.ucla.edu/programs-events/2017/09/radical-women-curator-walk-through/

hammer.ucla.edu/exhibitions/2017/radical-women-latin-american-art-1960-1985/

*Quoted texts from chapters in Cecilia Fajardo-Hill and Andrea Giunta, Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960–1985 (Los Angeles: Hammer Museum/Munich: DelMonico Books-Prestel, 2017).

See:  loop-barcelona.com/profile/analivia-cordeiro/

From top: Ximena Cuevas, Las tres muertes de Lupe, video, 1984; Antonia Eiriz, Figuras, circa 1965; Analívia Cordeiro, M 3×3, video, 1973.

All images courtesy of the artists and the Hammer Museum.

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RAÚL RUIZ AND ÁLVARO CEPEDA SAMUDIO

Join Colombian curator Marta Lucia Velez for a special evening of short films by Raúl Ruiz, Álvaro Cepeda Samudio (with Enrique Grau Araújo, Luis Vicens, and Gabriel García Márquez), and Horacio Coppola (with Walter Auerbach)—all influenced by Surrealism—at REDCAT this weekend.

LA LANGOSTA AZUL/THE BLUE LOBSTER, 1954, directed by Cepeda Samudio, Grau Araújo, Vicens, and García Márquez.

LA MALETA/THE SUITCASE, 1963, directed by Ruiz.

TRAUM/SUEÑO/DREAM, 1933, directed by Coppola and Auerbach.

Friday, September 22, at 7 pm.

REDCAT, Disney Hall, Music Center, downtown Los Angeles.

redcat.org/event/dreams-suitcases-and-blue-lobster

This is a PST: LA/LA program:

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Top: Enrique Grau Araújo (in sombrero on left), filming La Langosta azul. Photograph by Nereo López.

Bottom: still from Raúl RuizLa Maleta.

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