Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Offbeat Art: The Koos Art Center
The center started out in early 90s Santa Ana as a beatnick's paradise; a small cafe that featured spoken-word poets and local independent bands.
The Koos also ran several art education programs, notably the Awareness Through Arts and Community Program, and served as a base for the "Food Not Bombs" activism movement.
The center was also awarded a $10,000 grant in 1998 by MTV's Do Something Foundation to fund its programs.
The year 2003 saw the relocation of the Koos to Long Beach's downtown arts district, where it has resided ever since. This change in locale was brought about by the need for a bigger space for art, bands, and its various programs.
video courtesy of YouTube.com
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Arts Week At Long Beach State
Displays are available for viewing from November 13th through the 20th, with a different artist or exhibit shown each day.
Most of the shows are free to CSULB students, such as the "Warhol; 15 min/24 fps" and "Maya Schindler: Present Progressive" shows, held last Thursday, November 13th.
Of course, the activities for students to partake in aren't strictly limited to displayed works of art; the World Percussion Concert (Nov. 14, $7), featuring a Latin-jazz fusion type musical performance is also on the bill for arts week.
Artist Tomory Dodge will be at the University Theater onn Wednesday, November 19th, at five o clock to discuss his craft and what it means to him with the students who care to join in. Dodge's work with landscapes and imagery have made him a well known artist in the Los Angeles area. There is no charge for this event.
Thursday November 20th an art showcase called "The King and The Condemned" will be available for viewing in the showcase and theater arts rooms 24 and 26 at CSULB. This week student artist Gowen's art will be prominently displayed. A later show, this one is at 11p.m. and also free.
As an added bonus to this tapestry of artistic events, there will also be, as mentioned earlier, art tours of the university every day during arts week, starting promptly at noon at the University Student Union information desk, located on the second floor in the center of the foyer.
Monday, November 10, 2008
V.I.P. Fundraiser Nets Big Money for Kid's Programs
The event took place at the palatial home of Linda and Howard Knohl. Mrs. Knohl is the board president of Music Theater West, an organization that brings theater to roughly 15 thousand children a year through its various outreach groups and programs.
Hosted by a support group of MTW, called Footlighters, the fundraiser featured an auction, through which the majority of the money was raised. Up for bidding were, among other things, a theater trip to New York city.
Also rounding out the evening were musical performances from the various plays that MTW had put on at the Carpenter Center, including "The Producers," "Forbidden Broadway" and "Dreamgirls."
Friday, November 7, 2008
Rock Opera "Spring Awakening" Now At The Ahmanson
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
"The Art of War" at the Norton Simon Museum


In a small room next to the entrance of the Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena, California, there are a group of items on display that some might not expect to find in a museum.
These pieces of art are not sculptures by Degas or paintings by Picasso, though both are on dsplay in other parts of the museum. No, displayed on the walls of this room are propaganda posters collected during the time of the first and second World Wars.
One of these posters depicts three children, two boys and a girl, cowering in fear as a shadow in the shape of the nazi swastika looms over them from above. They are in the light spaces created by the crooks of the swastikas arms, but the shadow is close. The caption reads, "Don't let that shadow touch them."
Another shows a stoic-looking soldier, head wrapped in a bandage like the Civil War soldiers of even earlier times. This one states, "Doing all you can, brother? Buy war bonds."
One cannot help but notice the parralels to our present condition of hard economic times and long periods of war, though the messages are not as obvious today as they were then.
"I think it's so interesting to see this history, and how close it is to what's happening now. That poster about saving your waste fats for explosives could be how recycling started," said Andria Rothenberg, a 20-year-old CSUN student.
"Its very topical," said Mary Lynn, another museum patron and mother of two.
The exhibit will be on display through January 2009.
Link to current exhibitions page: http://www.nortonsimon.org/exhibitions.aspx?id=6#1060
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Exhibit At the UAM Showcases Old Artistc Footage
The exhibit is basically a gallery of video clips, made from 1973 to 1976. The pieces vary greatly in what they display. Some are silent, but a great number of them have headphones provided to listen to the audio on the tapes. The majority were filmed in black and white, though a few of the works are in color.
Among those works being displayed are "In Version", made in 1974, featuring nothing more than a man pressing his face up against a pane of transparent glass multiple times being played over and over on a loop, as are all the pieces.
Also displayed is "Theme Song", a tape of a man laying on the floor and looking into the camera, casually talking to it with music playing in the background, as if the camera were a lover. He attempts to seduce the viewer by looking directly at them and saying things like, "Whatever you wanna do baby, whatever is fine..." in a singsong voice.
Over 150 artists contributed to this exhibit, which began its life in Florence, Italy and has traveled all around the world. The medium of display ranges from old television sets, to projectors, to cameras that make the viewer part of the exhibit.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Saturday Art Walk Provides Venue For Local Artists
Local artists, musicians, painters, and more are given a chance to showcase their talents to the general public, in the East Village Arts District of downtown Long Beach, on the second saturday of every month.
Its called the Second Saturday Art Walk, and since 1997 its been giving Long Beach residents a chance to let loose onstage, or just take their better half to a cheap night out on the town. Admission is free as well as parking on public streets, if you can find it. If not, parking is available in nearby structures for four dollars.
Ocean Avenue, Broadway, Elm, and Linden Avenue are cordoned off for this event, and people can grab a bite to eat at the restaurants along these streets. Wine tasting is also an option. The art on display ranges from sculpture to photography in addition to live music, dance, and performance artists who's acts include fire-hoop dancing and vaudvillian melodrama. Car shows featuring vintage modified cars have also rounded out the event in the past.
The Second Saturday Art Walk benefits the community by providing extra revenue for downtown's small businesses through proximity to the event and press gained from it, and the strong presence of an artistic commnuity there has attracted more attention and more residents, according to an article in "Harbor Living" by Noel Barr.
*note: the video below was not taken by me, I found it on 2nd Saturday Artwalk's myspace page.