11 posts tagged “kcrw”
Probably LA's biggest contribution to architectural history is its residential design (think Irving Gill, Rudolf Schindler, Greene and Greene, Frank Lloyd Wright, Wallace Neff, Gerard Colcord, John Lautner, Cliff May, Frank Gehry, the list goes on and on. . .), and a new generation of architects is continuing to test ideas here. On Sunday, you can get to peek inside some of the recent creations on the Westside, on the AIA self-guided tour, The Herron Residence by Michael Lee Architects (Michael Lee, AIA), King Residence by John Friedman Alice Kimm Architects (John Friedman, FAIA; Alice Kimm, AIA), Painted Light Studio by by Jennfier Wen Architecture (Jennifer Wen, AIA), and Venice Prefab by Jennifer Siegal of OMD are the four homes that will be showcased on the May 3rd AIA/LA Spring Tour. Tickets are NO LONGER available via web, so there is no relevant address. Tickets are available only by physically going to WILL CALL between 11:00AM and 1:00PM.
Los Angeles is seeing a sudden upsurge of digital billboards and supergraphics lining freeways, boulevards, and the sides of buildings. Thousands of ad stands are popping up along sidewalks. Is this the future of advertising or another form of visual blight? Are billboards just part of a healthy urban landscape? And, as Los Angeles considers a new sign ordinance amid a blizzard of lawsuits, how do we ensure everyone plays by the rules?
Join the Westside Urban Forum on Friday, March 20, 2009 to hear from all sides of this highly charged topic facing Los Angeles. WeHo Urban Designer, John Chase, will moderate a discussion with John Kaliski, Jane Usher, Paul Prezja and Paul Rohrer.
When: Friday, March 20, 2009 , 7:00am Registration, 7:45am-9:00am Program
Where: The Regency Club, 10900 Wilshire Blvd., 17th Floor, Los Angeles, CA
Members: $30 ($10 for full-time students with ID)
Guests: $45 ($15 for full-time students with ID)
More info here. Online registration is closed.
The Department of Architecture at Woodbury University announces Valley Summit II: Designing the SFV, February 12 & 13.
The conference will bring together a group of scholars and community design experts who will present strategies on how we might begin to understand and, potentially, augment the 345 square miles that constitute the San Fernando Valley.
Click here for more information and a schedule of events.
Otis College of Art and Design invites all Futurists (and the public at-large) to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Futurist Manifesto, written by Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti. The declaration was published on the front page of Le Figaro on February 20, 1909, and launched a cultural phenomena also referred to as the avant-garde movement.
Marinetti¹s legacy continues to exercise a vital and often controversial influence on the contemporary visual and literary worlds.
To commemorate the founding of Futurism, the Graduate Writing Program at
Otis will host a real "futurist evening." Fields dear to the Futurist sensibility will be represented: poetry, music, visual arts, cinema and food. It is recommended that attendees wear Futurist attire (i.e., red, black or white) .WHEN: Friday, February 20, 2009 from 8pm - 10pm
WHERE: Otis College of Art and Design, just north of LAX, at 9045 Lincoln Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90045.
L.A. designer Michael Smith has been named the official interior
designer for the White House. Tune in Tuesday for DnA where we'll talk
about this presidential appointment.
Make sure to check out the 2008 Architecture Biennale at the Arsenale in Venice (http://www.labiennale.org/en/architecture/), the biannual showcase of global design, mixing up work and personal appearances by journalists and architects aplenty ("Bird's Nest" designers Herzog and De Meuron and Frank Gehry are among this year's luminaries). The theme this year is Architecture Beyond Building -- a topic regularly explored on DnA in view of the multi-disciplinary nature of the design process and professional practice these days. The curator is Aaron Betsky, globetrotting curator and writer now at Cincinnati and based at one time in LA, and among designers invited to exhibit their architectural imaginings, LA's own Greg Lynn http://www.glform.com and Ball-Nogues http://www.ball-nogues.com.
For ongoing coverage of the event check out the Architects Newspaper; the paper's editor, Bill Menking, curated the American Pavilian, designed by Teddy Cruz of San Diego, and well-received by critics at the show. Bill is blogging furiously and you'll find links to other commentaries as well at:Shepard Fairey, who wears another hat as DJ, later spun discs at the hot ticket Manifest Hope Gallery show and party in a residential neighborhood West of the convention area. The party attracted legions of young Obama supporters, including LA's own Eric Garcetti and scribe Joel Stein, to look at art in honor of the candidate and watch performers including comedienne Sarah Silverman. Pictures shown below are artwork made in honor of the candidate at the event.
More to come...
After Michele Obama dazzled the audience last night – yes, inside the convention hall, the atmosphere was electric – the convention has gotten going, though some are asking what exactly IS the theme beyond presenting the Obamas as an all-American family, albeit an extremely well-dressed one. Artist Robert Indiana believes in the Obama message of HOPE, and has created this reincarnation of his LOVE sculpture, now unveiled in front of the Pepsi Center. Proceeds go to the campaign.
Although this has become the first convention overrun by bloggers -- 5000 credentialed in all -- the mighty broadcast media dominate, as you’ll see on this building that CNN has adopted for the duration. Tix to its grill are highly prized, as food at the DNC is either non-existent or inedible. Even though this was touted as a "green" convention, there is not a vegetable in sight.
Even though journos like to think of themselves as not susceptible to influence, each large white media tent has an area for weary scribes to take a break and be pampered by products from a local company. Our tent has vibrating massage chairs; another has this oxygen bar that adds cynicism-reducing aromatherapy oils to ones hit of O2. I think perhaps I need one to keep going . . . as Gary and I head off to the Pepsi Center for an evening of speeches including the much-anticipated one by Hillary Clinton. Make sure to listen to To The Point to get the post-mortem from Warren and guests.
Well here I am in Denver wearing my To The Point producer hat. I’m with Warren Olney and co-producer Gary Scott, and we’re here to air To The Point shows live from Denver all week. We hit the ground running and have not yet had time to check out the new David Adjaye or Daniel Libeskind-designed art museums, or even the Denver downtown with its brick and glass new condo and apartment towers like those that have sprung up in renewed downtowns all over the country. So far my horizons extend as far as the walls of our cubicle inside a large white tent that is located between the Pepsi Center and Invesco Field (where Obama will speak on Thursday night).
We have the plum spot, as you see, underneath some extremely large air conditioning ducts (see artful picture taken by Gary), so loud it feels like we are working in the engine of a ship. We are surrounded by the big guns of print journalism: the New York Times, Reuters etc. Next to our tent is CNN which is flaunting its power by taking over an entire brick building and painting uplifting political slogans as well as its own logo on the sides. We are all in what is referred to as the Hard Security zone and to get in you have to run a gauntlet of security. So once in you stay in and hang out with the herds of journalist and delegates come to participate in what is at once a highly formulaic, marketing bonanza coupled with a genuinely exciting, culturally momentous event. You can feel the buzz of excitement in the air, even among normally jaded media types. And since we spend most of our time in LA, out of the orbit of the East Coast press and political establishment, it is rather fun to rub shoulders with politicos and talking heads at the parties and Pepsi Center. Among those seen so far: Anderson Cooper, Al Sharpton, Kweisi Mfume, Donna Brazile, Chuck Todd, the REAL Charlie Wilson and KCRW’s own Harry Shearer, who guest-presented at a Jambalaya concert-party for New Orleans last night.
For more on the convention, listen to our To The Point shows, and to see our new video vignettes by Gary and I (in our first experience as videographers, working without mikes, so excuse the lack of good sound) go to the home page, kcrw.com.
Meanwhile, don't forget to listen to DnA Tuesday. It was taped last week and looks at two theaters in LA, one new (the SMC Performing Arts Center), the other renewed, the Mark Taper Forum; as well as at the impact of digital design on the process and sensibility of design in film and more, today. kcrw.com/dna.