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^ For immediate release LACMA Public Programs MARCH 2012 Art & Music: THE JAZZ CRUSADERS ELLSWORTH KELLY SELECTS: Casque 24-hour screening of christian marclay’s The Clock Madcap modernism: mid-century D’or cartoons from upa and beyond Talks & Courses Rabbits, Bugs and Trumpets: A Visit to a few Verbal Wonderlands Monday, March 5 | 8 pm Resnick Pavilion | Free, tickets required | Seating is limited | Tickets: 323 857-6010 or reserve online Poetry often inspired the artists whose work is featured in the special exhibition In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States , and they often wrote poetry as part of their creative processes. Author Aimee Bender currently teaches creative writing at USC and has taught courses in surrealist writing. She reads her own work as well as a short story by Leonora Carrington, whose art is featured in the exhibition. Bender is the author of four books, including The Girl in the Flammable Skirt and The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake . Her writing has appeared in Granta , Harper's , The Paris Review, and more, and she has been heard on This American Life and Selected Shorts . In her courses at USC, she regularly uses Shambhala Press's guide called The Book of Surrealist Games . That California Look: Mid-Century Fashion Magic with Curator Kaye D. Spilker Wednesday, March 7, 2012 | 2 pm Bing Theater | Reservations required General Admission: $15 | Tickets: 323 857-6010 or purchase online. Costume Council members: Free | Tickets 323 857-6555 or e-mail [email protected] to RSVP and purchase guest tickets. Los Angeles, with its perfect climate for a year-round indoor/outdoor lifestyle, Hollywood glamour, beach culture, and brilliant promoters, gave the nation sportswear—casually elegant "playclothes" that successfully married fashion and function. Pioneers in the apparel industry from the 1930s to the 1960s used advances in textile technology and creative marketing strategies to bring innovative and sophisticated design to sunbathing and spectacle. From starlets in swimwear to Rudi Gernreich's "topless" swimsuit, the influence of California mid-century designers was paramount in creating a singular, typically American style. Gallery Discussion: The Art of Looking Thursday, March 8 | 12:30 pm BP Grand Entrance | Free with museum admission, no reservations Join museum educators as they offer one-hour facilitated gallery discussions looking in depth at the permanent collection. Tour the galleries of Chinese Art with educator Kristin Bengtson. A Surrealist Friendship: Leonora Carrington and Gloria Orenstein Saturday, March 10 | 2 pm Brown Auditorium | Free, no reservations Terri Geis, curator of academic programs at the Pomona College Museum of Art, and Gloria Feman Orenstein, professor of comparative literature and gender studies at the University of Southern California, discuss multiple issues raised by the exhibition In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States. Indigenous cultures, searches for new myths, and the connections between the ancestral and the living strongly influenced the work of many artists featured in the exhibition. Geis was a research assistant on In Wonderland, and Orenstein was a personal friend of artist Leonora Carrington, a key figure in the surrealist movement. Talk and Book Signing: Bridget Cooks Discusses Exhibiting Blackness Sunday, March 11 | 2 pm Brown Auditorium | Free, no reservations Bridget R. Cooks, associate professor in the School of Humanities at UC Irvine, discusses her new book, Exhibiting Blackness . The first in-depth look at how American museums and institutions have exhibited art by African Americans, the book analyzes the strategies, challenges, and critical receptions of the most significant exhibitions of African American art. A book signing follows the talk. Gallery Course: California Design Saturday, March 17 | 9 am BP Grand Entrance | $35 general admission; $30 LACMA members (parking and refreshments included) | Tickets: 323 857-6010 or purchase online. Get a behind-the-scenes look at the special exhibition that features hundreds of objects, including furniture, ceramics, costumes, textiles, and more—all highlighting the inventive spirit of California designers during the mid- century. The designers and artists whose work is featured range from the noted design team of Charles and Ray Eames to photographer Julius Shulman to swimsuit designer Rose Marie Reid. An introduction and refreshments are followed by a private tour before the galleries open to the public. LACMA educator and program director Mary Lenihan leads the tour. Lecture: An Alternate Modernity—Twentieth-Century Balinese Painting Monday, March 19 | 7 pm Brown Auditorium | $10 general admission, $5 LACMA members, Free Admission for South Asian Art Council member | Tickets: 323 857-6528 or [email protected]. This talk explores the development of art in early twentieth-century Bali. Evidence of artistic originality begins with the transformation of classical Balinese art in the nineteenth century when Balinese painters became interested in modernism and modernity. This talk reassess the story of Balinese art in terms of a dynamic modernism, shedding light on its ingenuity and creativity. This history is examined through Balinese paintings collected by Western artists and scholars in the early twentieth century. Adrian Vickers is Professor of Southeast Asian Studies at the University of Sydney, where he is Program Director for Asian Studies, and Director of the Australian Centre for Asian Art and Archaeology. His books include Bali: A Paradise Created (Penguin, 1989), Journeys of Desire (KITLV, 2005), and A 2 History of Modern Indonesia (Cambridge, 2005). His Balinese Art: Paintings and Drawings of Bali 1800-2010 , will be published by Tuttle in 2012. This program is sponsored by UCLA Center for Southeast Asian Studies . Robert Adams Walkthrough with Matt Ritter Thursday, March 22 | 7 pm BCAM, Level 2 | Free with general admission, no reservations Matt Ritter, botany professor and director of the Cal Poly Plant Conservancy in San Luis Obispo, leads a gallery walkthrough exploring the history of the plants in Robert Adams's photographs in conjunction with the upcoming LACMA exhibition, Robert Adams: The Place We Live, A Retrospective Selection of Photographs (opening March 11). Ritter’s newest publication, A Californian’s Guide to the Trees Among Us , provides an entertaining survey of California’s trees. Gallery Reading: Susan Straight Tuesday, March 27 | 7 pm BCAM, Level 2 | Free, tickets required | Tickets available at the ticket office one hour before program. Author Susan Straight will read an original essay and reflect on Robert Adams’s distinguished landscapes in the exhibition Robert Adams: The Place We Live, a Retrospective Selection of Photographs . Straight is a lifelong Riverside resident and an award-winning author of seven novels. The Southern California landscape, which Straight has called “the language I knew from birth,” figures prominently in her work. Her latest novel, Take One Candle Light a Room , was named one of the best novels of 2010 by the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times . Envy and Kindness, A Reading with Judith Freeman and other guests Friday, March 30 | 7:30 pm Brown Auditorium | Free, no reservations LACMA presents an evening of readings by students and faculty of the University of Southern California's Master of Professional Writing Program. The themes of the evening are envy and kindness, and guest readers include acclaimed author Judith Freeman and students Richard Mathieson, Leonard Pung, Matt Ackels, Elizabeth Inglese, and others. Frida Kahlo's Portrait of Dorothy Hale: Dreams, Dramas, and Revelations Saturday, March 31 | 2 pm Bing Theater | Free, no reservations Years ago, New York–based writer Myra Bairstow became enthralled by Frida Kahlo's depiction of the death of Dorothy Hale, a beautiful socialite whose tragic plunge to death in 1938 generated intrigue among wealthy New York society. Writer and playwright Clare Boothe Luce commissioned Kahlo to paint a posthumous portrait of Hale, Luce's close friend. Intrigued by the story— and by Kahlo's involvement—Bairstow delved more deeply into the circumstances. The result was an off-Broadway play, The Rise of Dorothy Hale . In conjunction with the special exhibition In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United States, Bairstow narrates the saga, illuminating not only Hale's story but also the story of Kahlo's own fascination with it and how her portrait figured into the mystery. The Art of California Wine: Bottle Shocking Saturday, March 31, 2012 | 6:30 pm In 1976, a blind taste test comparing California and French wines (with French judges) resulted in a decided victory for California wines. The 3 episode, termed "The Judgment of Paris" by oenophiles, firmly placed California in the ranks of the world's best wine producing regions. Filmmaker Rober Baizer turned the saga into a hit film, Bottle Shock , in 2008 . Organized by Barbara Baxter of Planet Wine, the event features a tasting of wines similar to those most highly rated in the 1976 test: a white from Chateau Montelena (the focus of the film's plotline) and a red from Stag's Leap Wine Cellars. Following the tasting will be a screening of Bottle Shock , with remarks by Robert Baizer. Representatives of Chateau Montelena and Stag's Leap Wine Cellars will be on hand to discuss what the 1976 victory—and the film—have