The Cube: Manuel Lima

WEB_B31-D4s_JV10623-Edit-Edit

Above, a look at an evening performance by Manuel Lima, photo by Jon Viscott. Note: Sunset Strip’s resident “Jesus” adds his own element to the performance space.

Watching Brazillian-born artist Manuel Lima perform his piano score “The Sunset Cube” inside a translucent cube in a West Hollywood parking lot is a transcendental experience.

Lima calls his piano composition and performance a “composition of a life for ten days,” but the music and the experience goes beyond that. The performance artist is perched inside a translucent cube, in which he has lived for ten days, performing essentially around the clock in the Sunset Strip parking lot at 8775 Sunset Boulevard, and inviting the listener/viewer to merge his experience with their own.

In a copy of his score, Lima attests “I want to reach a point where work, life and art are all the same. I want to be present. I want to be away from my phone and social media and have my heart on one thing at a time.”

Watching his shadowy form through the cube, and at night, the red lights synchronized to his music, the listener/viewer is transported to somewhere almost unworldly. It is a landscape within a landscape, sound within sound. While traffic rushes by on Sunset Boulevard, the music throbs with intensity one minute and flows with serene intent the next. The hazy vision inside the cube itself is like a glimpse into another dimension, one in which the external landscape sifts like sand through an hourglass.

Lima notes that “art is process and life is process. This piece is just to remind you we are all going crazy. If I can have my life back again I will call it art.” At first considering being locked in his cube 24 hours a day for the ten day performance period, Lima instead realized he could more healthily encompass a morning run when he wakes up in the cube, going out for a coffee, dining on a budget, and sharing tea with his viewers. Stepping outside his contained space also enriches his composition with creative interactions.

The artist describes his time in the cube as beginning with initially driving to the cube and entering it; “I will be like a worker on a 9 to 5 job by day. During the evening I will be a Bohemian.”

Lima’s schedule follows a set routine day and night, Bohemian or not. From 7 to 9 a.m. he wakes, runs, showers, and breakfasts. From 9 to noon, he performs his “Sunset Boulevard” composition moving from left to right on the FM dial for inspiration, improvising five-minute piano segments that riff on the music and sounds he hears.

Lima says that he works essentially as “transducer” of radio waves during this time period, defining a transducer as a “device that converts one form of energy to another.”  He has designed this piece to be naturally progressive, adding new piano loops and performing those done before.

He takes a lunch break from noon to one. Working with a severely limited budget for food, Lima thanks every restaurant that helps him to eat with a sign in front of the cube and a heartfelt thank you for sustenance.

He then returns to perform this composition from 1 p.m. until 5, when he offers a public tea just outside the cube space until 7 p.m. This provides a unique opportunity for the community to speak with the artist. His interactions are so genuine and warm that he becomes no longer a performer of life but a participant in life.

A dinner break lasts from 7 to 8 p.m., after which the artist performs a different composition, his “Red Light Piano.”

We enjoyed hearing and seeing this piece, which combines both light and sound in sixty different music cycles lasting between one and five minutes in length, with variations increasing in length each day. It can last around five hours, but respectful of his neighbors, Lima primarily stops around 10 p.m. so as not to disturb area residents. And then, close to midnight, Lima sleeps, or attempts to do so.

Is the experience private or public? It varies. Lima’s cube floats like a cloud above the tumult of Sunset Boulevard, removed from the world yet uniquely of it, whether Lima is living and performing inside his sparely-furnished 10-foot-square cube or interacting with viewers outside it. It is a meditation of music, performance, sound, light, and spirit, a glimpse into a private and powerful creative world, but also a public event in which watchers gather throughout the day and night to interact whether in conversation or by listening to Lima’s music.

WEB_B30-D4s_JV10035

Above, Lima by day, performing. Photo by Jon Viscott.

Lima plays his musical compositions blindfolded, creating an insular world within a world that allows him to focus entirely on the music and not on who is watching or participating in the experience. He explains the decision to blindfold himself as one to prevent nervousness and distraction, but his blindfold also creates a space between himself and his audience and the aural experience of the boulevard itself, and filters external references.

WEB_B30-D4s_JV19808

Above, a look inside Lima’s live/work space, as sunset finds Sunset Boulevard. Photo by Jon Viscott.

Lima received a full scholarship from the Brazilian government to attend grad school in the U.S., and recently earned his Doctor of Musical Arts degree from CalArts in Valencia. He performed in his cube initially in the hills outside Valencia; his transition to the current West Hollywood landscape has created a shift in his performance that encompasses the urban environment and his interactions with viewers/listeners.

WEB_B31-D4s_JV10595

Above, “Jesus” watches Lima, his cube ablaze in a light show that highlights his music. Photo by Jon Viscott. 

Cube 2

Above, following an evening performance, Lima steps from his cube for a late night break. Photo by Jack Burke.

Lima discusses the experience of his evening performance with us. “Every night that I play I have structures that develop little by little. The composition gets more developed. My work was commissioned by the City of West Hollywood and highlights a process more than a product. It’s about finding art in life, both inside and leaving the cube,” he says. “Art and life are not separate. In the score you can get a feel for the experience. It’s meditation, the Red Light Piano.”

Cube 1

Above, Lima’s red lights begin to glow. Photo by Genie Davis. 

Asked what it is like being so exposed yet so contained in his cube, Lima says “It’s noisy. People are always walking past you, even as you are getting ready for bed.”

IMG_1438

Above, Lima with author Genie Davis. Photo by Jack Burke.

“It’s been a privilege to be here. It’s amazing, like being in a very surreal artistic residency,” Lima relates. “Between public and private interactions I get a lot of time to create, but I am in the middle of regular life, which informs the art.”

Lima’s incredibly unique and stirring performance ends tomorrow, August 21st at 10 p.m. Stop by for a listen, a look, or a conversation.  Lima is performing his closing on the same night the Olympic closing ceremonies take place in Brazil.

Lima’s cube is perched in the city parking lot at 8775 Sunset Boulevard; parking is plentiful and hourly.

  • Genie Davis; Photos and video by Jon Viscott, Genie Davis, Jack Burke

How We Met – Anatomy of an Indie Comedy

F23C5537

How We Met is an hilarious dark comedy written by Brian Flaccus and Chadwick Hopson and co-written and directed by Oscar Rene Lozoya II. A blind date that takes a turn for the definite worst, involving corrupt cops, drug dealing, and a dead body, the film has been a festival circuit darling, and DiversionsLA had the pleasure of viewing this audience-favorite at Dances with Films in Hollywood earlier this summer.

Brian and Chad had been working together for several years doing short skits, giving them some chemistry; as Brian explains, “We hadn’t taken on anything this big before but we had a pretty good sense of each others’ working styles.” Christina was newer to the group but instantly clicked with the guys, saying, “It wasn’t hard at all to get that chemistry and rhythm going.”

The film had only a thousand-dollar budget and was shot in eight days. Being flexible and working under pressure: no problem for this cast and crew. As Brian describes, “Shooting and writing for those constraints forced us to be more creative in terms of telling a good story within a small box.” It also caused them to look for any inexpensive filming opportunities that presented themselves, often relying on the kindness of others, shooting in and around Flagstaff, Ariz. According to Christina, “I loved how the whole town supported our project. Everyone wanted to be involved in some capacity, whether it was offering locations for free, cooking us meals or becoming extras when we were short of people. It felt like a village was behind us and when you’re working on a very limited budget that means the world.”

F23C5558

There were also some complications – the major one being sleep deprivation. Christina relates that “while trying to shoot an intimate scene at midnight, we had dudes wakeboarding while blasting loud music and we thought that would never stop.”

“Not a typical film fest movie” is how Oscar describes the film, which is possibly funnier, more subversive, and more accessible than many an art house film type selection. “We didn’t know what would happen with it, but we wanted something that would put a smile on people’s faces at the end of the day,” he says.

Safe to say, the movie accomplished just that.

Sacred Landscape II – Hung Viet Nguyen at Launch Gallery

F23C8100Through August 27th, Launch Gallery takes viewers on a tour of Sacred Landscapes II, courtesy of Hung Viet Nguyen.

The lush, jeweled pastels of Nguyen’s mosaic-like worlds are inspired “in part by Joan Miro and Pablo Picasso,” according to the artist, and completely by his deep love of nature.

F23C8105

“I’ve always loved nature,  whether I’m hiking or walking. All my life, it’s been about nature for me. Everybody can paint landscapes, but I wanted to come up with serial landscapes that represented significant meaning, ” Nguyen says.

His landscapes are indeed sacred – to him, and to the viewer. They are created with beautiful detail and a great deal of insight into a magical world, a perfect fairy-tale realm.

“You accumulate a lot in the art field,” he attests. “From Van Gogh to Hockney,  I’ve gathered inspiration.” Other inspirations: “the patterns of a Zen garden, and water.” His images of water are particularly compelling.

F23C8077

Nguyen’s magical paintings are highly detailed. “I sketch the whole area, geometrically. I divide the canvas into sections. In some, I put the oil thick enough to use on a palette knife. Other areas are flat.  I’m not an abstract artist, I plan each area of the canvas.”

F23C8089 F23C8097

In terms of technique, Nguyen combines traditional elements such as Japanese woodblock and mosaic into a painterly style with varying textures and a rich panoply of style.  Complex and labor intensive to create, the artist’s work has a quality of wonder that’s fluid and graceful.

You could dive into the waters of this dreamscape, you could absorb the colors of sky, water, and earth.

F23C8091

Enter Nguyen’s world to experience a love-letter, a poem, to a prismatic landscape that glows from the light of a thousand suns.

  • Genie Davis; Photos’ Jack Burke

 

 

 

Let Them Roar: The Los Anegles Zoo’s Roaring Nights

F23C8046

Lions, tigers, bears, oh my – and music too. That’s the Los Angeles Zoo’s Roaring Nights summer music series.

F23C8042

At the second of four evening events for ages 18 and up, it was country music that had a friendly, lively crowd dancing. Performers covered the best in country hits, and line dancing lessons were also on tap. Bands included Highway Starr, Grant Langston and the Supermodels, Rocky Neck Bluegrass Band, and South Bay Country.

F23C8010

Even the elephants were having a good time. The Rocky Neck Bluegrass Band (above) was within range of those elephant ears, and we saw one elephant swaying pleasureably.

F23C7979

The reptile exhibits at the zoo were open and fascinating, from frogs to snakes to lizards, it was great to see some of these jewel-colored creatures up close and personal without the daytime crowds.

F23C7975

F23C7988 F23C7984

Fish and sea turtles were on display too.

F23C7860

 

Some of these creatures are descended from dinosaurs…which leads us to the wonderfully realistic, life-size, Dinosaurs: Unextinct at the L.A. Zoo. With evening lighting adding to the dramatic appeal, these animatronic wonders made an exciting evening stroll.

F23C7922

And it wasn’t all just fun and games, we learned some dinosaur facts, too – for example, some were feathered (above).

F23C7918 F23C7915

Hatchlings above, what could be Survivor Dinosaur Island, below.

F23C7896

F23C7891

Above, the gentle Edmontonia.

F23C7885

Above, guests were treated to a surprising water spray greeting by the Dilophosaurus.

F23C7880 F23C7875

Citipati above, looks a bit like an ostrich.

F23C7867 F23C7865 F23C7862

Not your ordinary T-Rex standing stationary, here, the carnivores were slashing at the plant-eaters, viewers were treated to a startling spray of water from the mouths of some of these amazing creatures, baby dinos were hatching, and a fossil “dig” allowed participants to comb the sand and discover fossils just like the scientists do (below).

F23C7903

What a pleasure to tour that exhibit and wander the entire zoo at dusk and once the sun was fully down – with our LA heatwave, the zoo’s cool temps were just as inviting as the cool program itself.

F23C7851

F23C7926

But wait, there was more, a painting station that provided the materials needed to create images of participants’ favorite animals…

F23C7931 F23C7928

a game area with board games, pop-up zookeeper talks, and plenty of well-placed food trucks and full service bars.  Grilled Cheese Truck? Rice Balls of Fire?

F23C7933 F23C7935 F23C7952 F23C7961 F23C7972 F23C8055 F23C8044 F23C8058

The exotic pleasure of hearing animals stirring, calling, and yes, roaring; the magical dinosaur exhibition, the live music located throughout the zoo, the drinks and dining, the beautifully lit landscaping – Roaring Nights is hands down (and paws down, too) more fun than any dance club in town.

A live indie sound replaces Texas twang on Friday August 26th, when the zoo serves up another Roaring Night of fun with music from Black Crystal Wolf Kids, Well Hung Heart, FifthLaw and DJ Steve Prior. Go wild!

  • Genie Davis, photos: Jack Burke