Heidi Duckler’s Site Specific Dance Classic: Parts & Labor

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“At the car wash…talking about the car wash…” that’s what audiences will be doing on Saturday, May 7th, when the Heidi Duckler Dance Theatre stages a classic dance performance at the Santa Palm car wash in West Hollywood.

Presented in part with a grant from  City of West Hollywood and its Arts and Cultural Affairs Commission through WeHo Arts (www.weho.org/arts), and support from Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, this exciting piece features four dancers staged on a vintage 1970s Cadillac Coupe de Ville. The Cadillac is more than a stage and a prop – the percussion trio Antenna Repairman will be miking it and using the car as an instrument, too.

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Heidi Duckler Dance Theatre creates deeply innovative dance experiences in non-traditional, site-specific locations, inviting its audience and artists to connect with their community in a fresh way. Duckler founded the troop in 1985, and the choreographer has earned the moniker “reigning queen of site specific performance.” Each staging is a contemporary art experience that integrates audience and performers.

Duckler has created more than 200 dance pieces around the world, receiving awards from the City of L.A. Department of Cultural Affairs, the California Arts Council, and the National Endowment of the Arts. With original percussionists Bob Fernandez and MB Gordy of Antenna Repairman still performing, Duckler felt the time was right to re-stage “Parts & Labor.”

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Originally performed in 1993, “Parts & Labor” explores our love/hate relationship with cars, and our dependency on them. The theme is more timely than ever, as LA highways grow increasingly congested and alternative transportation becomes more and more relevant. The piece was originally performed in a Studio City car lot, where dancers performed on an amplified Cadillac, a used car salesman tried to sell Caddys to the audience, and vintage film clips of Detroit’s view of the future screened in the background.

Percussionist Fernandez came up with the original idea to mic the car as a resonant instrument after visiting Cuba and noting the metal in pre-60s era vehicles driven there.

The 1992 performance featured four women in long black veils cradling gas pump nozzles, then changing into doctors’ scrubs, with the Cadillac going into labor and giving birth to a hood ornament. The current iteration will focus on the car as a symbol of freedom, as well as having the potential for entrapment.

“We live in our cars,” Duckler notes. “The car is our home.”

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This Saturday’s car wash location should also add a new look to the piece. “It’s more about relationships,” Duckler relates.

Combining exciting rhythm with progressive dance in a wide range of local settings is hardly a first for Duckler, who has been creating pieces and setting them in locales from the Los Angeles River basin to laundromats for decades.

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Check out her new vision for “Parts & Labor” this weekend, and be prepared for one “driving” evening of stellar dance and riveting rhythm.

“Parts & Labor” will be performed May 7, 2016, at 8 p.m. in the Santa Palm Car Wash, located at 8787 Santa Monica Blvd. in West Hollywood.

See http://bit.ly/hddtpartsandlabor for more information and to purchase tickets. Tickets will be available at the door as well, until sold out.

Visit http://www.heididuckler.org/ for more information about the full range of programming planned by this innovative dance group.

Calling All Poets in West Hollywood

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Want to be a poet laureate? The City of West Hollywood is accepting nominations for City Poet. The two year term runs October 2016 to October 2018,  following a two-year term served by inaugural City of West Hollywood City Poet Steven Reigns.

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So what does the job entail? The City Poet is the official ambassador of West Hollywood’s vibrant literary culture, leading the promotion of poetry in the city, including the annual celebration of National Poetry Month, which has just ended. The goal: to create excitement about the written word,  and to create a new body of work commemorating West Hollywood, present writing workshops and lectures. The position includes a yearly honorarium.

Interested poets are asked to self-nominate by Thursday, July 14, 2016 no later than 12 p.m.; applications may be submitted here: https://form.jotform.com/60328187326962.

For more information on the City Poet Program, please visit:http://www.weho.org/residents/arts-and-culture/literary-arts/city-poet or contact Mike Che, Economic Development and Cultural Affairs Coordinator at mche@weho.org.

Dulcepalloza: Art Extravaganza in El Segundo

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Curated by Dulce Stein and Tricia Banh, Dulcepalloza features the work of over thirty artists, and includes some incredible installations along with sculpture, found object art, pottery, paintings, and more. At the opening April 30th, live music and painting were also a part of the mix, in a truly engaging exhibition that transforms an El Segundo warehouse space into an exciting temporary museum.

Participating artists include:

Debi Cable
Amy Kaps
Mark Tovar
Skye Amber Sweet
Nikolai Molecules
Billy Pacak
The Night Owl Players
Vicky Barkley
Gabriela Zapata
Reidar Schopp
Arlene Mead
Mondo Bobadilla
Kellie Cracker
Sheri Neva
Sybil McMiller
Scott A. Trimble
Sheila Cameron
Jim Caron
Dulcinea Circelli
Shalla Javid
Achille Morie
Cie Gumucio
Bethann Shannon
Marianne Magne
Julian Hernandez
Robyn Hardy-Alatorre
Helena Gullstrom
JonMarc Edwards
Kristine Augustyn
Moe Betta

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The curators included a wide mix of artists from throughout Los Angeles, including a number who call the South Bay home.

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Artist Dulcinea Circelli’s mixed media – above and below – includes objects she found in the streets. “I try to up-cycle materials. I hand grow the crystals using a crystal growing kit. My artwork is an expression of Zen Buddhism.” Titled Indra’s Net Number 3 of 10, this piece represents the “totality of the universe and everything within it.” It’s a fascinating piece.

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Below, artist Amy Kaps in her incredible black and white striped installation. “I’m primarily a performance artist. I was doing living sculpture with striped cloth, and I was approached by photographer Eric Schwabel. We made the first striped room, and the photos hung within this room came from that time. Curators started asking for this installation. My works have a lot to do with perception. I’m interested in you asking what you’re looking at, and what you see.”

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Below, Hermosa Beach artist Scott Trimble with one of three pieces he exhibited in the show. “Is this Propaganda,” the title of this piece, refers to social issues regarding women. “I have a strong feminist background. The title really refers to the idea that while I find women attractive, I do not want to be exploitative.” Trimble paints up to sixteen works a week.  “I never approach with a thought clear in my head. I let my hand and my eye paint. It’s a process that’s so freeing, to turn my mind off and engage in emptying myself into the canvas as I work.”

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Below, co-curator Tricia Banh. This is her first curated show, and she hit it out of the ballpark.

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Below, artist Vicki Barkley with a piece that she originally created at Coagula Curatorial. “It came from my heart. People respond to the emotional content here. It came out of a transitional phase as I was going through a divorce.” The panels are plastic but flow as if they were cloth. “There are eight panels hung in sequence, and they correspond to a little bit of numerology and metaphysical tradition. Water represents the heartbreak goddess, so I made them blue for that reason.”

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Above, Robin Hardy-Alatorre provides an interpretation of the history of art itself that she says parodies perception.

 

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Below, curator Dulce Stein. She designed the event to be “a celebration of art through the eyes of the artist.” She adds that taking over the warehouse space gave her “the opportunity to explore the many ways one can display art and still be fun and innovative.”

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Below, inside the true “3-D Wonderland” of Debi Cable’s installation.

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Below, JonMarc Edwards with his installation, Debriti. His “shop” sells text by the ounce: letters, sentences, words, poems. “Choose your words carefully,” he suggests. The installation texts are made of natural, bio-degradable tag board. “You can take it and throw it in the air, and the letters will decompose over time,” he says. “The excess and meaningfulness of words are both everywhere.”

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Achille Morio, below, created another portion of the “Wonderland” installation, working in vibrant 3D. “I try to make visible a continuity between the visible and invisible, fluorescent and phosphorescent, to create a surprise,” he says.

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Below, artist Cie Gumucio with one of several very diverse pieces in the exhibition. The striking red and white mixed media piece below is called “A Million Tiny No’s and I Said Yes, Yes, Yes.” Gumucio notes “The stitching was important, I think what’s so beautiful is that one object, the zipper, can be imbued with so much meaning, whether open or closed, it can be communicated across languages.”

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Below, Shelly Heffler with a variety of ceramic works. “They’re very organic. Like my paintings, they come out of movement. They start with a lump of clay that I just start forming, it’s a sensuous movement of positive and negative space.”

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Outside the exhibition, The Night Owl Players performed exciting live music, created and performed to inspire live painting.

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Missed the opening? Head to 140 Center Street in El Segundo all the same – the exhibit runs through May 20th, hours are 7 to 9 weekdays and 2-5 Sunday, by appointment only. Call or text Dulce Stein at (424) 789-1788; the closing reception and an artist panel will be open to the public from 6-11 pm on Thursday, May 19th. Artist’s panel will run from 7 to 8 p.m.

  • Genie Davis;  photos: Jack Burke

 

 

BLAM! and Smack, Pow, Wow – Opening Exhibition “Concrete” is Amazing

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At last, Brooklyn and LA are united again, and it has nothing to do with the Dodgers. It’s all about the art.

Running through May 1 in DTLA,  “Concrete,” the freshman endeavor by BLAM (Brooklyn Los Angeles Meet) is a terrific showcase for artists from LA and Brooklyn.

Founder and “Concrete” curatorial coordinator David Spanbock says “With this opening show, we celebrate and reflect …16 individual artists from both East and West coasts. It is the belief that these two diverse centers of American creativity can co-exist…elements when mixed together can become something bigger, something stronger, like concrete.”

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Participating artists include Nadege Monchera Baer, Corey Bond, Paul Catalanotto, Dani Dodge, Kio Griffith, Pete Hickok, Richard Lebenson, Alise Mona Loebelsohn, Aline Mare, Alanna Marcelletti, Jesus Max, Vincent Romaniello, David Spanbock, Joe Wolek, Lena Kazakova Wolek and Alison Woods.

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Here’s a look at some of the art and some of the artists, eleven from the LA area, and 5 from NY. But don’t just read about this show, go see it.

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Alanna Marcelletti: “‘The Assumption’ is the first in a series working with ideas of home. I felt that in a shadow box you could contain the idea. The organza over the top, other fabric in the collage, I was looking for any fabric I could find, my grandmother’s nightgown, my old wedding dress. It’s a blend of architecture and psychological space, how I feel in a home. The layering in some more recent pieces aren’t as tightly strung as in this one, where it’s more like a skin. I had a baby about a year ago, and I felt as if I was channeling the changes to my body.”  The love and chaos around new motherhood is clearly a part of this beautiful work.

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David Spanbock: “All of my work is about the politics of transformation, the politics of human physics. I had the insight that a city is a collection of events and figures, creating a larger structure, and that’s what I’m working with here. I grew up outside of Manhattan but started painting in Santa Barbara.” Spanbock’s work can easily be seen in form and color as merging the east and west coasts, the prismatic like shapes capturing light and shadow.

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Dani Dodge: “My piece was originally a painting of New York. I covered it with silver paint, leaving some of the edges showing. Over the silver paint, I’m projecting a video I created out of the window of my car, driving from where I live downtown to Hollywood Boulevard. I also hand painted on the frames of 35 mm film, and converted those images to video. The hand drawn animation plays off images of the street looking at New York and LA. Los Angeles is moving and happening. I’ve tried to capture that in my piece and my joy of being a part of the LA art world.” The flow of the roadway, the bits and pieces of the original NYC scene on the edges of the current work take the viewer along for a bi-coastal ride.

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Aline Mare: “This is a transitional piece, I’m interested in the boundary between painting and photography. Growing crystals and painting them in relation to natural objects is the basis for this piece. The root, the bat wing with the crystal growing out of it…” The effect looks jeweled, translucent.

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Joe Wolek’s photography could almost be a painting, or a pastel drawing, whether he is photographing the back end of a Costco or tweakers searching for treasure in urban discard. “All this work from this series deals with found places. I don’t manipulate the image in any way. I shoot them in a long lens telephoto for compression of space, and then I stitch shots together for a wide angle view. My ‘Tweaked’ series, I have 15 pieces so far. The series is on-going, I come across these scenes and I’m not going to not include them.”

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Kio Griffith: “I’m doing a series of sculptures from poems. This is the second in the series, based on Alan Ginsberg’s ‘America.’ I call these haiku assemblages. Being half Japanese, I translate into haiku naturally. I deconstructed the Ginsberg poem to find the materials to create the piece. All the poems I work with have to do with my dad. He was a literature professor. I’m revisiting his favorites in the same way that a musical artist pays tribute to a musician.” Evocative of so many American past-times, using materials such as portions of a flag and a yoga mat, Griffith’s piece here is sinuous and exciting.

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Alison Woods: “I consider myself a cyborg artist,” she laughs. “Half computer work, half human. I do a digital version first, and then I paint, I hand-cut stencils. The layers and colors, some are spray paint, some poured.” Her works look as if they’ve flown out of a kaleidoscope. “As a graphic designer, I think of shapes and behind them, their emotive energy.”

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Lena Kazakova Wolek: “I’m working here in ink on yubo paper. The images are like my dreams, my insomnia. It’s hard to sleep here. I’m from a small town in Siberia, where night is like a vacuum, very quiet. But here, there is always something going on, I can hear my brain working and the sounds of the city, the freeway, the static energy. You cannot relax anywhere.” Her piece is about urban life and wakefulness, and what it means for her; the images dynamic and abstract, almost molecular.

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Nadege Monchera Baer: “I take a lot of photos of trash downtown. This represents that kind of image, or the image of what it would look like after an earthquake. I draw first, then just enjoy myself painting in acrylic color. I use light and bright color to depict the detritus. This is just one of a series.” Like a series of puzzle pieces, the images are meshed together, linked.

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Jesus Max: “These are very symbolic paintings. ‘The Curator’ is playing around with the word, which has the same root as a doctor, a healer, hence the medical items in the piece. ‘Bewitched’ is set in the same kitchen, it is about witchcraft, and there’s occult paraphernalia in it, including the little devil figure.” Beautifully hyper realistic, Max’s work offers pastel colors and rigorous attention to detail in a fantastic world.

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Whether it’s a kitchen, a house, a street, a root, a suburban store, an insomniac’s dreams – each of the pieces in this stellar exhibit are strongly grounded in a sense of place; this place, this city. While the New York-based artists were not present for interview, their pieces were every bit as strong, focused, and, well, ‘concrete.’

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BLAM is an on-going series of installations, with exhibitions both in LA and New York. When the inaugural exhibition ends, new shows are already planned for June and August here in the City of Angels, with a schedule of every other month expected locally.  According to Dani Dodge, an award winning installation artist active in this inaugural exhibit,  the initial show is designed to introduce the BLAM collective to the community. Visiting New York? BLAM’s East Coast edition will take place in June at the Bushwick Beaux Arts Center, and will be titled “Abstract.”

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BLAM Los Angeles is located at 1950 S. Santa Fe Ave #207, Los Angeles, CA 90021

“Concrete” will be open 1 to 6 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays to May 1, and by appointment on weekdays.