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Tickets start at $25 | 626-356-PLAY |pasadenaplayhouse.org
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EMOTIONALLY IMPACTFUL”
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by Lauren Yee
Directed by
Tony Award winner BD Wong
CRITICS CHOICE!
—Los Angeles Times
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DIRECTED BY
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KATHLEENBAILEY&
MACKENZIERICKABY
NOWTHRUDEC22
WEST COAST PREMIERE
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Large-format landscape
and seascape photos by
Thomas Joshua Cooper are
luxuriously printed in velvety
black and white. The artist,
72, uses a complex tonal
printing process that lends
richness and depth to the
photographic grays and
blacks.
Visually, however, the im-
agery is dull. If not exactly
interchangeable — a frothy
swirl of churning foam
around a rocky outcropping
in the Strait of Magellan
here, a frosty rim of the Niag-
ara Falls Basin there — the
photos exhibit a repetitive
sameness. In 140 examples
(75 small studies and 65 as
large as 40 by 54 inches) at
the Los Angeles County Mu-
seum of Art, a viewer’s eyes
glaze over pretty fast.
Cooper has been an
American expat working in
Scotland since 1982. The
LACMA show, organized by
Director Michael Govan and
curator Rebecca Morse, is his
first significant museum sur-
vey. Its centerpiece is a selec-
tion from his “Atlas,” some
700 photographs that, ac-
cording to the museum, to-
gether “charts the Atlantic
basin from its most extreme
northern, southern, eastern
and western land points.”
Over three decades, in
other words, Cooper traveled
the Western Hemisphere
and photographed the At-
lantic Ocean’s edges. The
idea might be compelling,
but the art isn’t. This is one of
those Conceptual projects in
which the concept far out-
strips the visual result, the
often-rollicking tales of their
perilous making supplanting
any interest generated by
largely humdrum images.
The work is something
of a cross between the criti-
cally admired, nearly ab-
stract black-and-white pho-
tos of the world’s oceans that
Hiroshi Sugimoto began
around 1980 and Ansel Ad-
ams’ hugely popular, some-
times grandiose pictures of
the American West from the
1940s and after. Cooper is a
true eccentric, as a recent
New Yorker profile attests,
but his pictures couldn’t be
more conventional.
In an eyebrow-raising
addendum, LACMA’s direc-
tor also commissioned19
photographs of the Califor-
nia coast (Cooper was born
in San Francisco) and organ-
ized a concurrent exhibition
of them at Hauser & Wirth
gallery, where the work is for
sale.
The expedition to pro-
duce the suite of coastal pic-
tures was funded by the Lan-
nan Foundation and Ann
Tenenbaum & Thomas H.
Lee. They are also major
donors to artist James Tur-
rell’s “Roden Crater” project
in an extinct volcano in the
Arizona desert, where Go-
van is president of the Sky-
stone Foundation that over-
sees the project and raises
funds for it.
Artistically, the photo-
graphs in “The Capes of
California” are just more of
the same shallow tedium.
A commercial exhibition
conceived and assembled
by a nonprofit museum di-
rector who is the head of a
county department subsi-
dized by taxpayers, on the
other hand, creates an ethi-
cal swamp of considerable
depth. Neither LACMA’s
board of trustees nor the
L.A. County Board of Super-
visors should stand for it.
LACMA’SThomas Joshua Cooper photographic exhibition includes “Fleeing From a Force Eight Gale ...”
Photographs from LACMA
ART REVIEW
Deep dive into the abyss
The tones are rich,
the images bland in
troubling Thomas
Joshua Cooper shows.
CHRISTOPHER KNIGHT
ART CRITIC
Alexis Smith has been a
major artist since her first
mixed-media text-and-im-
age collages of the 1970s. No
one does assemblage better
than she.
A beautifully installed
survey at Parrasch Heijnen
Gallery tracks the arc of
Smith’s career in just 11
smartly selected works.
From 1977, “Labyrinth”
lays out many salient as-
pects of her approach. The
work is simplicity itself — a
printed book-illustration
pasted onto paper and cap-
tioned with a snippet of text,
all set within in a shaped
frame. Frames are impor-
tant to all of Smith’s work,
which itself is dedicated
to reframing established
points of view.
This one is shaped like a
Monopoly house, similar to
Joel Shapiro’s little cast-iron
house sculptures from the
same period. Those set aside
Minimalist art’s obsession
with nonfigurative abstrac-
tion.
Rather different houses
collide within Smith’s hom-
ey frame. Sebastien le
Clerc’s intricate 1677 plan for
an elaborate garden laby-
rinth at the royal Palace of
Versailles outside Paris
meets an 1872 fragment of
Walt Whitman’s democratic
poetry: “The paths to the
house I seek to make / But
leave to those to come to the
house itself.”
In Smith’s image-and-
text pieces, art is proposed
as a playful and meander-
ing refuge, an exclusively
aristocratic European
legacy evolved to a self-di-
rected, inclusive American
model.
Given the domestic focus
on the home, the work also
resonates with a shrewdly
feminist undercurrent. It
turns up repeatedly in the
show, not least in “Medium
Message,” a large wall mural
from 2013.
“Medium Message” in-
serts a lavishly decorated,
heart-shaped candy box,
notably upside-down, and a
child’s battered drum set
into a gray text painted on
the wall. The objects take
the place of words: “The
[candy box] is the [drum
set].”
Our topsy-turvy adult
interactions are given
form that is interchangeable
with long-ago childhood
disturbance. Smith’s po-
etics of unanticipated con-
sequences — a Marshall Mc-
Luhan-like observation
about mediums and mes-
sages — are the fundamen-
tal stuff of art.
ART REVIEW
Concise arc of a long career
“LABYRINTH”is one of 11 Alexis Smith works on display at Parrasch Heijnen.
Parrasch Heijnen Gallery
A small yet expansive
show in Boyle Heights
of Alexis Smith’s work
takes the full measure
of her approach.
CHRISTOPHER KNIGHT
ART CRITIC
‘The World’s
Edge’
Where:LACMA, 5905
Wilshire Blvd.
When: Through Jan. 26;
closed Wednesdays
Cost:$10-$25 (see website
for free periods)
Info:(323) 857-6000,
http://www.lacma.org
‘The Capes
of California’
Where:Hauser & Wirth,
901 E. 3rd St.
When:Through Jan. 19;
closed Mondays
Cost:Free
Info:(213) 943-1620,
http://www.hauserwirth.com
THE REGIONaround Niagara Falls is the subject
of “Along the Frozen Rimtop of Horseshoe Falls...”
‘Alexis Smith:
A Survey,
1973-2016’
Where: Parrasch Heijnen
Gallery, 1326 S. Boyle Ave.,
L.A.
When:Tuesdays to
Saturdays, through Dec. 7
Info:(323) 943-9373,
parraschheijnen.com