Advertisement

Newsletter: Essential Arts & Culture: Deciphering Civil War telegrams, summer of Shakespeare, a conductor’s fiery performance

Transcription of a telegram from Abraham Lincoln to Union Maj. Gen. Godfrey Weitzel.
Transcription of a telegram from Abraham Lincoln to Union Maj. Gen. Godfrey Weitzel.
(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
Share

From Civil War telegrams to a historic Los Angeles house to the shaky place of art in Brazil, there has been terrific culture writing going on. I’m Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer for the Los Angeles Times, and here are the week’s top stories:

Decoding Civil War telegrams

The Huntington Library has launched a crowdsourcing project in which volunteers will transcribe or decipher nearly 16,000 Civil War telegrams from Abraham Lincoln, his Cabinet and Army officers.

Advertisement

For more than a century, nearly 16,000 Civil War telegrams have sat locked in a trunk that once belonged to a confidant of President Abraham Lincoln. “They ticked out news of typhoid, scurvy and fear,” writes The Times’ Jeffrey Fleishman. “They spoke of long marches and vast battles. They hummed with frailty and humor, fretting over drunken soldiers and praising the unwavering president of a fraying republic.” Now the Huntington, which holds the trove, is looking for “citizen archivists” to help transcribe and decode them. Los Angeles Times

How the U.S. underestimated an important conductor

Times classical music critic Mark Swed is in Switzerland, where he took in a performance of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony directed by Italian conductor Riccardo Chailly — and it was smoking. The conductor, who had been perennially overlooked for leadership posts when he worked in the U.S., recently took over La Scala in Milan. The show he just gave in Lucerne, writes Swed, represented an “extraordinary arrival for a conductor who has struggled through much of his career to be taken seriously as a substantial musician.” Los Angeles Times

Plus: On the centenary of Yehudi Menuhin, Swed pens an appreciation of the famed violinist: “Listen to Menuhin’s recordings, the heavenly early ones, the sour but unmistakably soulful later ones, and you can hear … what a better world might sound like.” Los Angeles Times

And because we’re on the subject of classical music: Reviewer Richard S. Ginell says the Los Angeles Philharmonic hasn’t been slacking just because it’s August. A recent concert directed by Nicholas McGegan featured a high-powered Handel evening. Los Angeles Times

Advertisement

Brazil on the brink

Brazilian federal police participate in the eviction of the building of the Ministry of Culture in downtown Rio de Janeiro in July.
Brazilian federal police participate in the eviction of the building of the Ministry of Culture in downtown Rio de Janeiro in July.
(Fernando Maia /EPA )

In a Brazil that has been roiled by corruption scandals and power grabs, culture writer Silas Martí examines the events that are leaving the nation’s artists unmoored. “What happens to art institutions caught between an imploding public sector on one hand, and on the other a collecting class whose richest members may be heading to jail?” he writes. There are no easy answers. A stunning, essential piece of journalism. Even Magazine

Endangered: A key house by a Case Study architect

Some of L.A.’s most groundbreaking architecture is residential. It is also some of its most endangered. Architecture critic Christopher Hawthorne looks at the International Style House that J.R. Davidson designed for the Nobel Prize-winning novelist Thomas Mann. The home is for sale and is being marketed as a teardown. Writes Hawthorne: “The uncertainty surrounding the house is a reminder of how unusually fragile the cultural patrimony of Los Angeles remains.” Los Angeles Times

Advertisement

In related news: The German press is going bananas over the pending sale. LAist

Plus: I hope the buyers of the home read an essential new Tumblr account that picks apart the inherent badness of so much McMansion design. Worst of McMansions

Rethinking the Uffizi

A woman admires canvases by El Greco and Diego de Velázquez at the Uffizi Gallery in 2011.
A woman admires canvases by El Greco and Diego de Velázquez at the Uffizi Gallery in 2011.
(Fabrizio Giovannozzi / Associated Press )

One of Europe’s most famous and most visited museums, the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Italy, has a new German director, Eric Schmidt. A former curator at the Getty Museum, he is looking to shake up the institution and make it easier to navigate by opening up new public areas for visitors — including the storied Vasari Corridor, which runs the length of the Ponte Vecchio, the famed 1345 bridge. New York Times

How art catalogs flourish in a digital world

Advertisement
A detail of a work by Andy Warhol in "Three Centuries of American Prints: From the National Gallery of Art," published by Thames & Hudson.
A detail of a work by Andy Warhol in “Three Centuries of American Prints: From the National Gallery of Art,” published by Thames & Hudson.
(Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times)

Digital may have taken a bite out of book publishing, but it hasn’t done so in the world of art catalogs, which thrive on elegant layouts, innovative typographic treatments and fold-out pages featuring sumptuous photographs. There have been some worthwhile online experiments, but ultimately print still reigns supreme in this niche publishing area. Bonus: This story features some very alluring photos of books. Los Angeles Times

A movie for one

The L.A. County Museum of Art has a wild new installation by French conceptual artist Loris Gréaud that consists of a single immersive work: one chair, in a large theater, where a viewer takes in an abstracted film. But Times art critic Christopher Knight isn’t all that impressed: “Sculpt,” he writes, “is pretentious and uninvolving.” The good news is that, unlike a movie theater, the museum offers all kinds of other experiences to make up for the price of admission. Los Angeles Times

Shakespeare in the summer when it’s sizzlin’

Advertisement

Summer Shakespeare,” writes Times theater critic Charles McNulty. “These words can strike fear in the heart of a reluctant theatergoer.” He takes a look at how the Bard’s work is faring in a pair of new productions, which transplant two of the playwright’s comedies to American settings. Los Angeles Times

In other news

An Italian restorer from the Friends of Florence Assn. cleans Michelangelo's David at the Galleria dell'Accademia in Florence.
An Italian restorer from the Friends of Florence Assn. cleans Michelangelo’s David at the Galleria dell’Accademia in Florence.
(Alberto Pizzoli / AFP )

—It’s all in the ankles: Imbalances in Michelangelo’s sculpture of David could be compromising the statue. New York Times Magazine

—New York’s Metropolitan Opera has balanced its budget for a second year in a row but is seeing audiences decline. Wall Street Journal

Advertisement

—A controversial passage from Marina Abramovic’s upcoming memoir about Australian aboriginal people has landed the artist in hot water. Guardian

— How the messy breakup of the Corcoran Gallery of Art and its College of Art & Design still haunts Washington, D.C. Washington Post

—Director Kathryn Bigelow and Light and Space artist Robert Irwin will be the guests of honor at the next LACMA gala. Los Angeles Times

—A group of classical musicians has recorded a benefit album for refugees on-site in a the Calais refugee camp in France. New York Times

—Get ready to selfie! The Broad has announced a survey of the work of Yayoi Kusama, whose “Infinity Mirrored Room” has become a must-see (and must-Instagram) at the museum. Los Angeles Times

—Five-year-old Big Macs as sculpture. Los Angeles Times

Advertisement

—An arts collective project in El Monte has resulted in the creation of a digital archive of its murals. L.A. Taco

Can’t-miss show

An exhibition at the Landing in West Adams titled “3 Women” brings together works by an intergenerational group of artists exploring the tenets of feminist art in ways that “might make your ovaries ache,” writes Times reviewer Sharon Mizota, but “in a good way.” The show features paintings, textiles and installations by Lenore Tawney, Tanya Aguiñiga and Loie Hollowell. On view through Sept. 17. 5118 W. Jefferson Blvd., Los Angeles, thelandinggallery.com.

And last but not least …

A super summer jam, courtesy of Sister Nancy. Just right. The New Yorker

Find me on Twitter @cmonstah.

Advertisement
Advertisement