A Musical Portrait of LA

“Elvis Whispers Softly,” 1956, from “Who Shot Rock & Roll?” Photograph © Alfred Wertheimer, The Wertheimer Collection The recent regional extravaganza known as Pacific Standard Time (PST), a six-month, far-ranging agglomeration of Southern California exhibitions, installations and performances, began with a series of shows that made a very convincing argument for the importance of art […]

Read More… from A Musical Portrait of LA

Jonathan Foer’s ‘New American Haggadah’: Extremely Similar and Incredibly the Same

The haggadah, the user’s manual to the Passover seder, might be the world’s oldest annually practiced ritual, and the story of the Jews’ freedom from slavery in Egypt is, Jonathan Safran Foer said recently, “the best-known greatest continuously read story” in book form. And yet, just like there isn’t a singer who doesn’t think he […]

Read More… from Jonathan Foer’s ‘New American Haggadah’: Extremely Similar and Incredibly the Same

Art + Fashion = Life by Design for L.A. Couple

Artist Moshé Elimelech and his wife, fashion designer Shelli Segal, at their Burbank home and studio. Photos by John Hough Cubes of color intersected by bands, which the viewer can manipulate into arrangements within a grid framing the work; watercolors of narrow striations, punctuated by colors and shapes, transform abstraction from cool cerebral to emotional […]

Read More… from Art + Fashion = Life by Design for L.A. Couple

Have a Fantastic Klezmatic Hanukkah!

Share5 From left: Frank London, Matt Darriau, Lisa Gutkin, Lorin Sklamberg, Paul Morrissett. Photo by Joshua Kessler On Dec. 19, as part of their 25th anniversary tour, the Klezmatics will perform at Walt Disney Concert Hall for a Chanukah concert featuring both their well-known and new repertoire. On the program are songs by the legendary […]

Read More… from Have a Fantastic Klezmatic Hanukkah!

Lost & Found: What Wasserstein Hid, New Bio Reveals

When the Pulitzer- and Tony Award-winning playwright Wendy Wasserstein – beloved for her plays “The Heidi Chronicles,” “The Sisters Rosensweig” and “Isn’t it Romantic?” – died in 2006 at age 55, Broadway dimmed its lights in her honor. Five years later, Julie Salamon’s page-turning biography “Wendy and the Lost Boys” (The Penguin Press: $29.95) sheds […]

Read More… from Lost & Found: What Wasserstein Hid, New Bio Reveals

How LA Grew its Art

From left: Edward Kienholz, “Walter Hopps Hopps Hopps,” 1959; photo by Susan Einstein. Wallace Berman, “Untitled (Faceless Faces with Kabala),” 1963-70; photo by Ellen Labenski. Larry Bell, “Untitled,” 1969. For those of us who are not native to Los Angeles yet live here (some for more of our lives than anywhere else), there is a […]

Read More… from How LA Grew its Art