The Argonaut Newspaper — May 16, 2019

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Contents

VOL 49, NO 20 Local News & Culture

ARTS & EVENTS

News

Cover Story Photo by Morleigh Steinberg

A ‘Culture of Noncompliance’ The NRDC found in excess of 400 stormwater runoff violations at Santa Monica Pier, plus additional violations at Ballona Creek in Del Rey and Culver City ........................... 8

The Warrior Candidate Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, an Iraq veteran running for president, thrills an anti-war crowd in Santa Monica ............................ 9

This Week

FOOD & DRINK Bru’s Wiffle turns the most important meal of the day into a celebration at its new Marina del Rey location ................... 29

Safe at Home Arcane Space’s ‘Tucked In’ captures

Art in Action The Venice Family Clinic Art Walk & Auction celebrates 40 years with a bash at Google Venice ................................... 10

makes a big splash with two days of seaside fun ......................................... 11

Trina Merry’s thought-provoking human canvases that defy the eye & male gaze come to life at the Getty Villa ................... 12

Waffle Party

the quietly courageous interior world of one child’s cancer journey through a mother’s eyes ................................... 10

The Return of ARTsea The marina’s arts festival on the beach

Body of Work

Giving Back Herb Alpert on the ‘mystery of art,’ philanthropy and 25 years of awarding his own “Genius”-style grant . ........................ 34

Westside Happenings Get sucked into the satirical drama of “Violence: The Misadventures of Spike Spangle, Farmer” at The Actors’ Gang . ...... 30 Eat like an Aztec or samba by the sea ....... 31 ON THE COVER: Blending her subjects seamlessly into their surroundings, New York body painter Trina Merry creates hyper-real optical illusions, like this one in front of the Brooklyn Bridge, to dazzle the eye, promote body positivity and challenge the male gaze. Image by Trina Merry. Design by Michael Kraxenberger.

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L etter s Wetlands Coverage Reads Like Public Relations Copy Re: “A Big Yellow Warning Sign,” News, May 2 The Argonaut’s coverage of invasive weed management at the Ballona Wetlands Ecological Reserve has avoided discussion of how hundreds of thousands of dollars in public and private grants have been spent on weed management in a very small corner of the reserve, and whether that money has achieved, or is even on a path to achieving, what it was intended to achieve. The Argonaut has published no fewer than three articles related to an invasive species removal project along Culver Boulevard in Playa del Rey. Friends of Ballona Wetlands and The Bay Foundation jointly applied for, and received, an additional $90,000 from the Coastal Conservancy via a recommendation from the local Santa Monica Bay Restoration Commission. (Another topic yet to be covered by this paper is Assembly Bill 1511, which would place the commission under the administrative purview of the conservancy at the request of the

The Critical Line

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foundation and as supported by the friends). The most visible section of this ongoing project is below the bluffs and to the right of Culver Boulevard as one drives east about a hundred yards past the light at Nicholson Street. This site is currently overrun with the very invasive species referenced in the article (euphorbia terracina, crown daisy, black mustard) and many others like wild radish, sweet clover and

Bermuda buttercup. The record shows that important management best practices were not followed for this project. Preparatory steps such as local native seed collection did not begin in earnest until almost two years after the project commenced, rather than in the years leading up to the project, as is customary. Previous methods of communication to the public

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E D I T ORIAL Managing Editor: Joe Piasecki, x122

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Arts & Events Editor: Christina Campodonico, x105 Staff Writer, News: Gary Walker, x112 Contributing Writers: Amy Alkon, Bliss Bowen, Andrew Dubbins, Shanee Edwards, Richard Foss, Danny Karel, Kyle Knoll, Jessica Koslow, Angela Matano, Brian Marks, Nicole Elizabeth Payne, Paul Suchecki, Andy Vasoyan, Audrey Cleo Yap Editorial Interns: Joseph Cahn, Tygre Patchell-Evans, Nathan Faust, Matthew Rodriguez

Letters to the Editor: letters@argonautnews.com News Tips: joe@argonautnews.com Event Listings: calendar@argonautnews.com ART Art Director: Michael Kraxenberger, x141 Graphic Designer: Kate Doll, x132

Renee Baldwin, x144; Kay Christy, x131 Rocki Davidson, x108; David Maury, x130

Business Circulation Manager: Tom Ponton distribution@argonautnews.com Associate Publisher: Rebecca Bermudez, x127 Publisher: David Comden, x120 The Argonaut is distributed every Thursday in Del Rey, Marina del Rey, Mar Vista, Playa del Rey, Playa Vista, Santa Monica, Venice, and Westchester. The Argonaut is available free of charge, limited to one per reader. The Argonaut may be distributed only by authorized distributors. No person may, without prior written permission of The Argonaut, take more than one copy of any issue. The Argonaut is copyrighted 2018 by Southland Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or in part in any form or by any means without prior express written permission by the publisher. An adjudicated Newspaper of General Circulation with a distribution of 30,000.

V.P. of Operations David Comden President Bruce Bolkin

Visit us online at ArgonautNews.com

(Continued on page 9)

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N e w s

A ‘Culture of Noncompliance’ NRDC says local water quality agency is shirking its duty to enforce local cities’ stormwater runoff violations By Gary Walker The agency charged with monitoring water quality standards throughout the Greater Los Angeles region found that local cities have committed more than 2,000 water quality violations within a five-year period, but the violators suffered little if any consequences. The lack of enforcement by the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board, according to Santa Monica-based environmental advocacy nonprofit the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), helped contribute to more than 100 million gallons of contaminated runoff spilling into the ocean. The NRDC found in excess of 400 violations of the Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System permit at Santa Monica Pier, 78 violations at the Pico-Kanter stormwater station in Santa Monica, and 139 at Ballona Creek in Del Rey and Culver City. In a May 1 letter to California Environmental Protection Agency Secretary Jared Blumenfeld, NRDC Water Quality Analyst Corinne Bell asked Blumenfeld to encourage the board to address what they call an urgent water quality problem. “Right now, there is a prime opportunity to address this issue. This past year, water quality stakeholders throughout Los Angeles County worked collaboratively to help pass Measure W, which will generate about $300 million annually for stormwater management projects in the county. These funds can be applied to both the watershed and city projects,” Bell wrote. “Action by the state board would improve the watershed planning process would help ensure meaningful progress to improve water quality.” Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Board Executive Director Renee Purdy challenged Bell’s characterization of her agency failing to enforce water quality standards.

NRDC found more than 400 stormwater runoff violations at Santa Monica Pier “Their characterization of uncited and unenforced violations is incorrect. They have a misunderstanding of the water board’s enforcement policy,” Purdy asserted. “We are doing our review of the report. We do think that there are some

“I was shocked when I saw the number of violations. When you look at the numbers, they’re a lot over a short amount of time.” — Corinne Bell, National Resources Defense Council discrepancies in the report and how [its findings] are being used.” Bell said her organization found out about the lack of enforcement through a public records request of data collected by the regional water board and utilized a state database, the California Integrated Water Quality System, to verify their findings. “I was shocked when I saw the number

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water quality standards more often than the numbers reflect. “We don’t dispute that have been of exceedances water quality standards. But all of these violations are being addressed by the permitees,” she said. “NRDC did not mention that there have been at least two administrative civil liability cases that the board has brought against permitees.” Purdy added that many of the locations with reported violations utilize devices that are designed to prevent runoff from entering the ocean through storm drains, and that runoff is diverted to the Hyperion Treatment Sewage Plant in Playa del Rey during dry seasons and other periods without a lot of rain. Heal the Bay water quality scientist Annelisa Ehert Moe says the violations match up with what her water quality organization has seen at the same sites for years. “It’s not entirely surprising, because we’ve seen these dry weather exceedances in our annual Beach Report Card with similar dry weather grades,” Ehert Moe said. “Their approach has been to gives cities leeway until they reach their goals, but it’s created this culture of noncompliance.” Bell said her organization is essentially looking for the water quality board to do two things to rectify the current situation. “The regional water quality board is working on a new MS4 permit. We would like them to make sure that they are creating a strong and enforceable permit, and we would like to see that permit enforced,” she said. Last year, Santa Monica installed a 1.6-million gallon stormwater tank under the pier that can capture and clean more than a million gallons of polluted water. Water near the Santa Monica Pier has historically been among the most polluted areas on the Westside.

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The Warrior Candidate Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, an Iraq veteran running for president, thrills an anti-war crowd in Santa Monica By Gary Walker Among the crowded field of Democratic presidential hopefuls, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D- Honolulu) has yet to find her breakout moment. But on the evening of May 13, the Iraq War veteran was welcomed like a returning heroine as a standing room only crowd cheered, sang and waved “Tulsi for President” signs inside the Santa Monica Public Library’s Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Auditorium. A four-term congresswoman, Gabbard was visiting the area last Monday as part of a Santa Monica Democratic Club series introducing as many presidential candidates as possible to its members and local residents (Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota is expected to visit on May 28). The Malibu and Pacific Palisades Democratic clubs co-hosted Gabbard at the library. Gabbard told the crowd that part of the reason she decided to run for president was her experience of the war in Iraq and ultimate disillusion with the idea of armed conflict with a stated goal of regime change. “Both of my deployments influenced my decision to run for Congress and now for president. I saw how important it is to have people in positions of power who know the human costs of war,” Gabbard said to thunderous applause. Gabbard pledged to fight for more research on climate change and reiterated her opposition to the Trump administration’s push to open California coastal waters to offshore drilling. “We’ve seen the devastation of communities and our marine life after oil spills. And we’ve seen bipartisan opposition to offshore drilling in Congress,” she said,

Letters

(Continued from page 6)

about this project, such as a newsletter and social media site, have been discontinued, and it is very difficult to get timely information as to what steps are being taken to address the current situation. When local media doesn’t seek out more information than what it is provided freely by the subjects of the articles they publish, readers get only a partial understanding of important issues, and policy-makers are under no pressure to address shortcomings. As an early 20th century editor once remarked, in slightly paraphrased form, “Whatever [someone] desires to get pub-

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii (far right) discussed fighting pro-war policies and homelessness during her local visit citing opposition from not only Democrats visit with Syrian dictator Bashar al-Asbut also Republican U.S senators. sad, whom international human rights But it was Gabbard’s foreign policy group have accused of using chemical positions ─ including stronger collaboraweapons against Syrian citizens. tion with longtime U.S. allies and “We need to have the courage to talk “bringing our troops home from Iraq,” to leaders with whom we disagree, which she pledged to do if elected with adversaries and not just with our president — that earned her applause from friends,” responded Gabbard, who in the decidedly anti-war crowd. Audience February said “Assad is not the enemy of members cheered whenever Gabbard the United States because Syria does not mentioned the folly of overseas military pose a direct threat to the United States.” action to overthrow foreign governments During a brief question and answer and booed in solidarity whenever she period, Poverty Matters Executive talked about the length of the wars in Iraq Director Susie Shannon gave Gabbard and Afghanistan. an opportunity to weigh in on one of Los But it wasn’t all a campaign rally. Santa Angeles’ most pressing matters. Monica Democratic Club President Jon “Do you support housing as a basic Katz, who co-moderated the event with human right?” asked Shannon, a longMalibu Democratic Club President Jan time homeless and affordable housing Albrecht, pressed Gabbard on her 2017 advocate.

lished is advertising; whatever [that person] wants to keep out of the paper is news.” Walter Lamb Playa del Rey Editor’s Note: Lamb is president of the nonprofit advocacy group Ballona Wetlands Land Trust. Don’t Piecemeal Affordable Housing into Marina del Rey Re: “Affordable Housing Isn’t Necessarily Fair,” Letters, April 25 Absent a specific “affordable housing” policy for Marina del Rey, the county should issue an

RFP to the multi-family housing development community to construct an “affordable housing” complex on Parking Lot 11 (14101 Panay Way). This complex would be designated solely for “affordable housing” and would have mandated, proportionate divisions between very low, low- and moderateincome targeted tenants – with a percentage for “seniors” in each income strata. High land acquisition costs are generally one of the most significant reasons why “affordable housing” is not financially feasible in more affluent areas. This is where the public sector can be of prominent assistance. As an inducement or incentive

“Of course,” Gabbard answered, noting that she had visited Skid Row on a prior visit to Los Angeles. “The lack of affordable housing is one of the leading causes why people become homeless. Hawaii, my home state, is the No. 1 state in per capita homelessness. In the House [of Representatives] we recently passed a bill adding $1 billion toward homelessness, but we need a lot more resources.” As a Honolulu City Councilwoman, Gabbard sponsored 2011 legislation that allowed city workers to confiscate personal property stored on city streets, which is often the case for homeless people. The Los Angeles City Council recently settled a lawsuit over a similar ordinance that civil rights lawyers claimed targeted the homeless during encampment cleanups, but the Honolulu ordinance remains in effect. Gabbard denied her bill targeted the homeless, which at least one council colleague said it did. The Argonaut was unable to speak with Gabbard despite multiple attempts. As much as the Santa Monica crowd was energized by Gabbard’s presence and policy positions, Gabbard’s overall campaign got off to a rocky start, with her campaign manager and consulting team jumping ship shortly after she announced her candidacy in January. But a lot can — and will — happen before Democrats choose a nominee to take on Trump in 2020. The first Democratic president debates take place in late June, and with as many as 20 candidates (including Gabbard) poised to qualify, tomorrow’s frontrunner is anybody’s guess. gary@argonautnews.com

for a proposed developer/lessee to respond to the suggested RFP and ultimately enter into an agreement/ ground lease with the county, the county would convey a leasehold interest for the proposed development at a rental rate of $1/year for the term of the ground lease. This would be the subsidy from the public sector to create a more financially feasible plan for development. Public parking eliminated by the development could be partially offset by including some public parking in the parking garage built for the new complex. The public section could be fee-based at current market rates, and resident

parking could be separated by gates. New affordable housing would be a more efficient process than the piecemeal methodology currently being imposed through negotiations with lessees during proposals for new development, renovations and/or ground lease extensions. Lamont Roberts Marina del Rey

We Want to Hear from You! So do your neighbors. Send your opinions on local issues to letters@ argonautnews.com.

May 16, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 9


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A Cozy, Safe Room of Her Own Morleigh Steinberg’s ‘Tucked In’ captures the quietly courageous interior world of her daughter’s cancer journey Photo by Morleigh Steinberg

By Lisa Beebe “Tucked In,” a new photography exhibit at Venice’s ARCANE Space, offers a peek into a world that isn’t often documented. Each image in the gallery captures an arrangement of small toys and dolls, many of which are tucked into tiny beds where they appear to be resting or reading. In other scenes, the toys appear to be taking care of each other—a small stuffed animal pushes the stroller of a tiny piglet in one, a coterie of My Little Ponies keep each other company at a makeshift table set with coins as dinner plates in another. These detailed, imaginative set-ups look like something a child might make on her bedroom floor—and that’s exactly what they are. Mom, photographer and dancer-choreographer Morleigh Steinberg (who’s done creative consulting for U2) captured these vignettes of a child’s playthings during a tumultuous period in her family’s life. When Steinberg’s daughter Sian was 7 years old, she came home from school one day too tired to play and was soon diagnosed with T-cell leukemia. As Sian

Steinberg’s daughter’s tiny world of toys went through cancer treatment, Steinberg discovered that her daughter was setting up little scenes with her toys. She says, “I walked into her room and I’d see them tucked into different corners. She would do them in all sorts of places like under the bed or under a couch.” Steinberg believes that creating these little worlds gave her daughter a feeling of control over what she was experienc-

ing. She says, “I think for me, it was a validation that she was taking care of herself in a way that I might not be able to take care of her. It was comforting for me to see that despite the very disruptive world that our family was living in, she could manage it by doing this, making these little creations, these miniature perfectly-formed little universes.” Steinberg started photographing Sian’s creations as a way to document them, and continued to do so during the three years that her daughter was in treatment. Today, Sian is a healthy 21-year-old. Her mother never expected to share these photos with the public, but she is doing so in the hopes that “Tucked In” will help other people—especially parents of children with cancer—understand that children find ways to cope. (The exhibit’s May 9 opening doubled as a benefit for Cancer Support Community Los Angeles, which provides free counseling, education and programming for individuals and families impacted by cancer.) Steinberg says, “I want to encourage people to come with their kids or by themselves. We’ve got

some baskets of things, so people can play. They can make worlds. I want it to be interactive.” So Steinberg installed lavender carpet in the gallery to match the carpet of Sian’s bedroom floor in the photos, and she intentionally hung some of the photos low, where kids can see them. “I didn’t want to put them all in a line like a formal art exhibit,” she says. “They have to be playful, they have to be kind of patch-worked together, like Sian’s work.” Steinberg’s choices have the desired effect. The gallery space feels as cozy and colorful as the scenes Sian made with her toys. If you want to get down on the floor, and tuck a Barbie or a troll doll into bed, you’re welcome to do so. Take a photo while you’re at it. “Tucked In” is on view through May 26 at ARCANE Space, 324 Sunset Ave., Unit G, Venice. Gallery hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursdays through Sundays. Visit arcanespacela.com for more info.

Art in Action With a bash at Google & hands-on workshops, the Venice Art Walk celebrates its 40th birthday By Kelby Vera For 40 years, the Venice Family Clinic Art Walk & Auction (also known as the Venice Art Walk for short) has spotlighted Venice’s arts scene and given back to Venice Family Clinic primarily through a silent auction and tours of local artists’ studios. This year the beloved arts event not only highlights works donated by 200 compassionate creatives and honors painter Laura Owens, but also invites you to get crafty through a series of workshops held during its free community party at Google’s Venice campus this Sunday. ` “The workshops are really a nice initiative, welcoming attendees into the creative process themselves,” explained event publicist Jessica Trent. “People can be inspired by and even bid on amazing art, but they can also have a hand at creativity themselves.” Amid food trucks, live music, the silent auction and a beer & wine garden, you can learn how to craft paper flowers from creative florist Sara Kim at noon or 2:30 p.m., learn beautiful lettering techniques from artist, teacher, and author Nicole Miyuki Santo at noon, 1:15 p.m. 2:30 p.m. or 3:45 p.m., or create your own lush PAGE 10 THE ARGONAUT May 16, 2019

Jens Lucking brings his talents for surreal portraiture to the Venice Family Clinic Art Walk & Auction yarn tapestries from Trudy Perry’s Fire per person) —but hey, it’s for a good Horse Studio at 1 p.m., 2 p.m. or 3:30 p.m. cause! A percentage of sales from each (Tickets for these workshops range from class booked will go toward supporting $25 to $55.) There will also be a raffle and Venice Family Clinic, which offers a “Family Fun Zone” with crafts and healthcare services to nearly 30,000 activities for all ages. people in need. Radical Souls Collective can help you Lucking, who has participated in the art make macramé plant hangers at noon, walk for the past seven years and creates 1:30 p.m. or 3 p.m., while photographer whimsical family portraits from superimJens Lucking welcomes a small number of posed images—(think a giant laughing attendees into one of his surreal images. baby sitting on the roof a midcentury He hosts five interactive portrait sessions modern home while mom, bro & sis hang from noon to 4 p.m. — (which cost $500 by the pool)—is thrilled to return and

share his creative skills with participants. “It’s nice to be able to share this passion for photography and get the public excited about it,” he said. “And also give a little behind the scenes kind of look.” Inspired by his series of work called “Hammer Time,” portrait session groups will pose as if they’re valiantly trying to repair a retro gold Ford. The photo is given a quirky twist by having the youngest or daintiest of the group straining to lift up the front of the car while someone else works underneath. Continuing to support Venice Family Clinic is important to the European-born photographer, who said, “I love the work Venice Family Clinic is doing in our community. Living in Venice, I feel how much an organization like VFC is needed to help the vast number of people in need and without the means for care.” The Venice Family Clinic Art Walk & Auction happens from noon to 6 p.m. Sunday, May 19, at Google Venice (340 Main St., Venice). The event is free and open to the public, but workshops ($25+) and studio tours ($40) are ticketed. Purchase tickets at theveniceartwalk.org.


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ARTsea returns to Mother’s Beach for two days of art, music, food & seaside fun

By Christina Campodonico You could say this year’s ARTsea is making up for lost time. After bursting onto the scene in the summer of 2017, the public arts festival took a hiatus last year as Marina “Mother’s” Beach closed for renovations. With the beach back in business, ARTsea returns for a second round — this time for two days instead of one. “We’re back with twice as much,” says Carol Baker of the Los Angeles County Department of Beaches and Harbors. “I think there’s a great mix and mashup of artists and galleries and performers, and it will be very fun.” This weekend’s live music and dance performances, art installations, gallery displays, food trucks, a wine & beer garden, artisans’ marketplace and various interactive workshops kick off at 11 a.m. Saturday, creating an ephemeral pop-up arts district in Marina del Rey through 6 p.m. Sunday. Here are five ways to maximize your fun during this celebration of art, the ocean and Los Angeles County’s creative diversity. 1. Go Around the World with Music in Two Days The varied cultural strains of Los Angeles converge at ARTsea’s main stage, where on Saturday you can hear Peruvian surf pop by La Chamba at 4:30 p.m., Dengue Fever’s Cambodian-influenced rock at 6:30 p.m., or relive the ’60s-defining sound of the Grateful Dead

Dengue Fever brings their international fusion of classic Cambodian songs and rock to the ARTsea stage with L.A.-based tribute band Grateful Shred at 8:30 p.m. On Sunday, Jazzy Ash and the Leaping Lizards bring the bayou-buoyed sounds of The Crescent City to SoCal at 11 a.m., while Boogaloo Assassins blend Latin soul, funk, salsa and boogaloo (which traces its roots to Afro-Cuban dance rhythms) to close out the music side of ARTsea from 5 to 6 p.m.

Production for Events and Festivals for Community Arts Resources (CARS), which has partnered with Beaches and Harbors to organize ARTsea. “They look as if you’re walking among some sort of sea life,” she says, “and in the evening they’ll be lit.” You can also find some Zen in San Diego artist Jose Sainz’s wind garden, a collection of feather flags along the beachside of ARTsea that will hopefully 2. Try Out Global Dance Flavors with flutter with the wind. Contra-Tiempo & Friends “It will be like a sculptural garden,” says Hearing all these lively beats may make Perez-Seda. With the wind blowing and you want to get up and dance. Fortunately, some sand between your toes, go ahead urban Latin dance theater troupe Contraand say, “Ohmmm!” Tiempo and friends have got the dance floor covered. On Sunday from 1 to 2 4. Time Travel with Blast Ice Cream p.m., Contra-Tiempo will get you moving While you have your mouth open, why and grooving with their “Sabor Session,” not take your taste buds out of this world teaching Afro-Latin social dances and (or time period) with something a little showing an excerpt from their repertoire. unusual — say liquid nitrogen frozen ice Betty Rox leads Caribbean dance jam cream? sessions at 1:30 p.m. Saturday and noon Blast’s Prohibition-era themed ice Sunday; Kati Hernandez teaches an cream truck serves up tongue-tingling Afro-Cuban dance session at 2 p.m. sundaes inspired by old-school flavors Sunday; and Bollywood Step Dance and delivered through a very entertaining brings the colorful and energetic dance (and harmless) plume of liquid nitrogen stylings of Indian cinema to life at 12:30 “smoke!” p.m. Saturday. Treat your kid or inner child to a classic flavor like the So Much S’More (graham 3. Meditate in an Octopus’ Garden cracker crust ice cream, marshmallow After shaking your booty and bobbing cream & chocolate sauce) or Total Recall your head, take time to chill out under (vanilla ice cream & whip topped with Aphidoidea art collective’s giant sea crushed peanuts and a duo of chocolate creature installations, which resemble and butterscotch sauce). Both will make plankton, seaweed and even jellyfish, you wax nostalgic for youthful summer observes Mariana Perez-Seda, Director of days spent at fairgrounds, as will the

Kettle Corn sundae topped by “steaming” yet frozen bits of the classic carnival snack. If you’re looking for something a little more mature, go for the High Fashion, a “complex sundae” inspired by an old fashioned cocktail and served with madefrom-scratch cherry bourbon sauce, chocolate bitters, cold smoked Applewood bacon and a burnt sugar orange glaze. 5. Go to Craft Camp & Make Something Memorable ARTsea’s eventful weekend offers plenty of opportunities to make memories, but why not also walk away with a one-of-akind souvenir? You can make your own at the Craft Camper, a bright blue vintage travel trailer, where visitors can channel ocean breezes into a nautically themed wind chime. The Silver Lake-based craft experience company Makers Mess also hosts a workshop on how to do block printing “farmers market-style” and lessons on how to make flower crowns inspired by the sea. Third to fifth graders can also learn how to enter their artwork into Beaches and Harbors’ ongoing “Can the Trash!” clean beach poster contest. ARTsea happens from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday (May 18 & 19) at Marina “Mother’s” Beach and adjacent parking lots #10 and #11, 4101 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey. Admission is free. Visit artsea-mdr.com for the full event schedule. May 16, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 11


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FULL-BODIED Painter Trina Merry’s living, breathing human canvases reclaim art history from the male gaze By Bliss Bowen “Body painting” often evokes images of children receiving face paint on their cheeks at community fairs, or elaborate “sleeves” inked on limbs by tattoo artists. But Trina Merry’s live body paintings, which she calls “performances,” create stunning optical illusions, the most transformational of which cause nude models to seemingly disappear into their surroundings: the bulge of a young man’s closed-eye becomes buried beneath a painted-on American flag, a nude rises ghostlike from an amphitheater’s stone stairs, a semi-reclined woman blends into the scenery of Florence, Italy—like she is dreaming its architecture into being—and the Tower of Pisa seamlessly sprouts from another woman’s head. Merry says it is all part of her effort to “reclaim the fine art nude in the public space.” She’ll be painting live models for “Bodies of Evidence,” a demonstration at the Getty Villa this Saturday (International Museum Day) and Sunday (May 19). According to Merry, the path toward her unconventional artwork began with a moment that sounds as cinematic as the PAGE 12 THE ARGONAUT May 16, 2019

films she once studied at Azusa Pacific University: she was struck by lightning in a car! Consequently “super sensitive to electricity,” she left her Hollywood art department job and moved to Yosemite for 10 months to heal, during which time she

experiences for others, and “try to pioneer something that other people weren’t doing.” Graffiti painting in San Francisco, where she “camouflaged people into a mural,” was followed by time in Santa Fe and then New York,

— and to remote communities where she’s hiked mountains with indigenous body painters to collect pigment from the earth and cut sugar cane to create body paint. Nowadays, she has access to nontoxic, FDA-approved paint in a broader color range. But the human body’s temporary canvas remains integral to the message of “The nude in art history has usually her work. been women, and it’s largely been painted “I value temporal experiences. I think it’s a reflection of what life is, and that art by men. It was a means of not only should reflect life,” she observes. objectifying them, but also obsessing “Performance art is exceptionally valuable and important to the contempoabout and possessing them.” rary art conversation. Working with the — Visual artist Trina Merry human body as a surface, and honestly also somewhat as the subject matter, is important especially as we’re trying to painted, contemplated her options, and where she’s lived for five years. deal with concepts of body image, hung out with musician friends who It’s one thing to be faked out by the sight gender, identity, treatment of women, and eventually coaxed her into getting body of a woman scantily clad in lingerie that race, because through body paint, in a lot painted onstage at a show. turns out to be painted on. It’s quite of ways, color goes away.” “The experience was so cool,” she another to suddenly discern a man, woman Her illusions depend on precise framing recalls, and she subsequently engaged in and child within a tree’s gnarled bark. and the flattest lighting possible, particuconversations and classes that helped her Such moments of poetic visual awakening larly in outdoor environments. (She uses realize she wanted to wield the paintbrush are a signature of Merry’s work, which an app to navigate and chart the position herself and facilitate body-painting has taken her as far afield as Easter Island of the sun.) This weekend’s show is


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designed to bring attention to the Getty Villa’s antiquities collection, including Egyptian, Greek and Roman nude sculptures. Models will be vulnerably revealing themselves even as they’re “hiding in plain sight” in exterior and interior locations around the Getty Villa. “I want to reclaim the fine art nude in the public space,” Merry says. “The nude in art history has usually been women, and it’s largely been painted by men. It was a means of not only objectifying them, but also obsessing about and possessing them within private quarters.” Although she has opened up her painting to both men and women (“gender is an interesting conversation”), she has been focusing more on women with body issues since Donald Trump’s election. Shocked by the way he spoke about women and their bodies, she decided she needed to “hold safe space for other women, to be empowered and to support them and also to try to work through that myself on a personal level,” she says, “because that encouraged a lot of other men to behave similarly, which is unfortunate. I truly believe that women

supporting women is one of the most powerful things in the world, and the days of the good old boys are coming to an end.” Photographs and videos Merry makes to document her work extend it into other mediums, and become “an interesting practice of compassion, to see how another person sees,” she says. But what really draws her, still, is the “performance” of live body painting. “The person is alive, and it’s just a moment. The art piece can have a heartbeat; it can have a breath; there’s a twinkle in the eye. You don’t get that twinkle-in-the-eye personal experience when you’re casually walking by a normal painting.” Trina Merry conducts live body painting demonstrations from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday and Sunday (May 18 & 19) at the Getty Villa, 17985 Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu. Admission is free, but timed-entry tickets are required. Parking is $20. Call (310) 440-7300 or visit getty. edu. Visit trinamerry.com for more info on the artist.

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Eye on Education Increase Camp & Class Enrollments This Summer

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May 16, 2019 Eye on Education – Special Advertising Section

PAGE 15


WESTCHESTER WONDER KIDS PRESCHOOL Teaching your kids the wonders of the world NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR SUMMER AND FALL 2019 Enrolling ages 2 – 6 years.

We offer an enriching and nurturing environment with a focus on STEAM. Our curriculum encourages creativity, imagination, critical thinking, social responsibility, self-assurance and empathy. Christine Saleebey (310) 642-1827 Located in Westchester near LMU (lic. 197409279)

Westside Neighborhood School

Westside Neighborhood School (WNS), a Preschool-8 independent school in Playa Vista, has a mission to create a community of lifelong learners that nurtures students from diverse backgrounds to reach their full potential and inspires them to contribute to the world with confidence, creativity, curiosity, conscience and compassion. WNS opened a brand-new state-ofthe-art play-based preschool, STEAM Academic Learning Center, and full-sized Gymnasium in August 2017. Students, teachers, parents, and our

neighboring businesses and friends are thrilled about the expansion as it not only allows more room for educational growth, but opportunities for community use as well. In addition to the brand new preschool, WNS offers a Parent-Toddler Program. Classes take place Tuesdays and Saturdays for children ages 18-32 months and parents. For more information about WNS, please visit wns-la.org or contact by phone: 310-574-8650 or email: admissions@wns-la.org.

PAGE 16 Eye on Education – Special Advertising Section May 16, 2019

EBS Children‘s Institute

We’ll focus on your child’s strengths and the goals that are important to you both. Our team uncovers what motivates your child to play and interact in a fun, trusting and safe environment that allows your child to learn and reach his or her potential. We make long-lasting connections, so your child feels at home. Our therapists understand that impactful change happens when everyone works together to create opportunities for children to confidently master the skills they need to meet the challenges of an evolving world.

EBS Children’s Institute of Los Angeles offers Speech and Language Therapy, Occupational Therapy, ABA/ Behavior Therapy, Child Psychology, Feeding/Swallowing Therapy, Physical Therapy and Social Skills programs carefully designed for your child. Using a multidisciplinary approach, in-depth We welcome you to give us a call at evaluations and intervention, our team 424-331-9291 or visit us on the web inspires participation to improve the at www.ebscila.com. lives of those we serve. EBS Children’s Institute is a community of people committed to enriching the lives of children and families. Our work is guided by principles we believe form a life of meaning, accomplishment and joy: commitment to diversity and inclusion, communication, respect and collaboration.


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Goethe International Charter School Begins Its Middle School Expansion Goethe International Charter School (GICS) is a non-profit, public school located in West Los Angeles. GICS educates the “whole child” with a focus on physical, intellectual, emotional and ethical development. As an authorized International Baccalaureate Primary Years Programme (IB PYP) World School with a focus on global awareness, language acquisition and inquiry-driven learning, the school will be expanding through 6th grade in the upcoming 2019-2020 school year. The current curriculum is based on the California Common Core State Standards and is delivered through the IB PYP. The expanded 6th grade will continue this approach as the school establishes the IB Middle Years Programme. An IB education is based on academic rigor whereby students make connections between traditional subjects and the “real world,” while

also developing bilingualism. GICS currently offers a TK-5 50/50 model dual language immersion program with German as the target language. For those who need additional support in English, there is a German Language Acquisition option available beginning in 3rd grade where students receive core instruction in English. Spanish Language Acquisition is provided for all students in grades 3-5. At the middle school level, Language Acquisition is provided in either Spanish or German with core instruction delivered in English for all students. For more information about programs and space availability please call (310) 306-3484. GICS is located at 12500 Braddock Drive, Los Angeles CA 90066 www.goethecharterschool.org

PAGE 18 Eye on Education – Special Advertising Section May 16, 2019

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Project Scientist Project Scientist has a fun-filled program for your daughter this summer! The Summer STEM Academy immerses girls ages 4-12 in STEM through fun-filled experiments, weekly field trips to top science and technology companies, hands-on curriculum with credentialed teachers, and daily meet-and-greets with thriving female STEM professionals right here in Playa Vista at the Brickyard! This summer, girls will learn many exciting topics and visit inspiring STEM companies during these fun themed weeks: June 24-28: All Aboard! Transportation: Past, Present and Future — Learn how transportation systems work together to keep us moving and tinker with tried and true vehicles to create new platforms for efficient mobility. Field trip expedition hosted by Virgin Hyperloop One. July 1-5: How It’s Made — Take apart and breakdown well-known and beloved items and gain appreciation for the processes and people

who make them. Field trip expedition hosted by Santa Monica Studio and Sony. July 8-12: Genetics, DNA & Dissection — Spend the week dissecting and analyzing what makes each of us unique. We will study Gregor Mendel and his peas, Punnett squares and DNA all week long. Field trip expedition hosted by Abbott. Get 10% off with code SCIENTIST10. Sign up now at www.ProjectScientist.org!


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Crossroads School for Arts & Sciences is a leader in innovative academic, arts and enrichment curricula for rising K-12 students. Summer at Crossroads offers a wide variety of opportunities and experiences, including classes for academic credit, hands-on workshops and outdoor activities. Students are empowered to develop skills, enjoy learning and grow in areas of special interest under the guidance of expert teachers and excited program staff and coaches. From arts and aquatics to volleyball and world civilizations, students can sign up for a one-week specialty program or spend the summer doing a variety of engaging activities. There’s something for everyone this summer! • Session 1 (June 17-21): One-week camps and intensives • Sessions 2 and 3 (June 24-July 26): Two-, three- and five-week classes and programs. School is closed Thursday, July 4, and Friday, July 5.

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May 16, 2019 Eye on Education – Special Advertising Section

PAGE 19


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Across 1 __ vu 5 Command from Kirk 13 Drink word for “strained” 19 [Sigh] 20 Unsuccessful competitors 21 One-footed creature 22 Cracked river barriers? 25 Spiced up 26 Sign of contempt 27 In a lab, it’s often white 28 “Yesterday!” 30 Cart count 31 Pop by 33 Org. with quarantine authority 35 Western alliances 37 How the satisfied stand 39 “Psych!” 40 What a generous mechanic might do after a wreck? 44 Indistinct mass 46 Deck-enclosing option 48 Brainchild 49 Mani-pedi locale 50 David or Saul? 53 “Sunday Morning” channel 55 __-de-sac 56 Felt 57 Greek X 58 Jolly syllables 60 Words of defeat 62 Chipotle alternative 64 Kind of artery 65 DNC chair Tom 66 Pittance 68 Request to the local marriage oath writer? 72 Some dishwashers 73 Gap rival

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Memoir, for one Down 59 “Try it” Odist’s inspiration 1 Some diaper 61 Creations with Rib changers colorful blocks Best Female 2 Panache 63 Crunchy snack Athlete, e.g. 3 1607 settlement 64 Regret Eur. country in 4 Selling point 66 See 93-Across the Olympics 5 Abolish 67 Breakfast staple since 1992 6 Spooky 69 Hurting Dulles alternative 7 Like about 25% 70 __ Mawr College Place to stay of Russia’s 71 Gets ready to Business card no. population play Variety headline 8 Part of MVP 73 Scrabble for director Lee’s 9 “The A-Team” 8-pointer U.S. debut? muscle 74 Rainy Calf spot 10 Singer’s skill 77 Driving aid With 66-Down, 11 World Heritage 80 It covers the when Lady Site org. House Macbeth says, 12 Subtle “Over 81 Encircle “Leave all the rest here!” 83 Thin Mints seller to me” 13 Member of the 84 Trendy berry Nonprofit fam 85 Finger reporting app 14 Flexible lunch 88 Has Coal carrier hour 90 “Girls” Emmy Magician’s tote? 15 Directory name nominee Clancy’s “The __ 16 College Bd. result Hoffmann of All Fears” using a 1-to-5 91 “Oh, that’s More-thanscale adorable!” stretchy 17 Consider 94 Make a mess of, statement 18 Throws in as traffic “The Yodeling 23 Golfer’s wedge, 98 Swipe again? Cowgirl” in “Toy e.g. 99 Slingshot feature Story” films 24 Delicious 100 January Novelist Rand 29 Musical timbre birthstone Rodeo 32 Ph.D.’s next 102 Queens squad contestants, at hurdle 106 2014 Lizzie times 33 French sweetie Borden portrayer Quiet order 34 Crab Key villain Christina Run smoothly 36 Wild attempt 107 Flight safety It’s dropped for 37 Lunchbox equipment? emphasis staples, initially 108 Crunchy side Implied 38 Protected while 109 Port opener Pioneer 35mm sailing cameras 40 Silicon Valley field 111 See 119-Down 112 Advanced Talks about 41 Ryder of teaching deg. woks? “Stranger Things” 114 Machu Picchu Shmoo creator 42 Works denizen Tapered cigar 43 Chopin work 115 Peter the Great, __ Brasi, “The 45 Creamy soups e.g. Godfather” 47 Mends, as a 117 Mar. arrival, in enforcer rattan chair theory Frank 51 Stark in “Game of 119 Dr. who 111-Down Regular guys? Thrones” 120 “__ tree falls ... ” Headliner 52 Muffet fare 54 Nurse 121 USCG reception


AT HOme The ArgonAuT’s reAl esTATe secTion

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“Rarely do you find French Country-style architecture in North Kentwood, but you will be impressed with this stately two-story, three-bed, two bath, home, boasting a family room and private office,” says agent Jane St. John. “The formal entrance belies a warm, welcoming charm with relaxing shades of light grays and warm antique whites. The living room boasts a beautiful fireplace with a mantle, lovely hardwood floors, and east-facing windows that bring in morning light. A bright white kitchen with a laundry area and Dacor range leads to the open dining area and family room with fireplace. Two bedrooms and a full bath complement the downstairs floor plan. The upstairs has a spacious master suite with a private office and built-ins, a fireplace, and a luxurious bathroom with spa tub and a west-facing private balcony. Downstairs, French doors lead to a covered patio, perfect for dining alfresco, and an outdoor area with a gas firepit, children’s playhouse, chicken coop, and mature plum trees.”

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May 16, 2019 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section PAGE 21


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©2017 Coldwell Banker Real Estate Corporation. Coldwell Banker is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate Corporation. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned and Operated by NRT Incorporated. Coldwell Banker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by the seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals.

PAGE 22 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section May 16, 2019


Dream big. The Stephanie Younger Group 310.499.2020 | DRE 01365696 stephanieyounger.com @stephanieyoungergroup

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5625 Crescent Park West #134 Open Sunday 2 - 5pm 3 Bed | 3 Bath | $1,499,000

5625 Crescent Park West #207 Open Sunday 2 - 5pm 2 Bed | 2 Bath | $1,089,000

2848 Westwood Blvd Open Sunday 2 - 5pm 3 Bed | 3 Bath | $1,349,000

8331 Bleriot Avenue Open Sunday 2 - 5pm 3 Bed | 2 Bath | $1,450,000

7833 Naylor Avenue Open Sunday 2 - 5pm 3 Bed | 2 Bath | $999,900

8174 Manitoba Street #3 Open Saturday 2 - 5pm 2 Bed | 2.5 Bath | $795,000

7569 Midfield Avenue Open Saturday and Sunday 2 - 5pm 3 Bed | 2 Bath | $945,000

5700 West 75th Street Open Saturday and Sunday 2 - 5pm 3 Bed | 1.5 Bath | $1,149,000

7807 Truxton Avenue Shown by Appointment 3 Bed | 2 Bath | $1,150,000

8505 Gulana Avenue #6103 Shown by Appointment 2 Bed | 2.5 Bath | $777,000

Compass is a real estate broker licensed by the State of California and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. License Number [DRE 01991628]. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale or withdrawal without notice. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other professional advice outside the realm of real estate brokerage. Icons courtesy of Flaticons.com. Stephanie Younger DRE 01365696

May 16, 2019 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section PAGE 23


Go Ahead, Have It All

New Luxury Single-Family Homes with Bluff Views, an Easier Commute and Only Minutes from the Beach

TH E S PAC E YO U N E E D I N S I LI CO N B E AC H Setting the standard for luxury living in Silicon Beach, The Collection at Playa Vista offers spacious, open and airy home designs with all the style you deserve. Just steps from crave-worthy eateries, minutes from the beach and close to the office – your perfect Westside home is ready and waiting. S I N G L E- FA M I LY LUXU RY H O M E S F R O M T H E LOW $2 M I L L I O N S O PE N H O U S E S T H I S W E E K E N D

PlayaVista.com

BROKERS WELCOME

Plans, pricing, square footages, products, amenities and community/neighborhood information are subject to change. Models do not reflect racial preference. Home pictured does not represent actual homesite for sale. © 2019 Playa Vista. All rights reserved. CA DRE license #01896289.

PV022016_PlayaVistaAd_Argonaut_FNL | 9.81” x 8.85” | Run Date: 5/16 The ArgonAuT PRess Releases

Panoramic ocean Views

“This luxurious living space offers four beds and eight baths,” says agent Bill Ruane. “Enjoy ultra-refined beach living with high ceilings, opening to the sea. The professional chef’s kitchen boasts a breakfast bar and wood finishes. Also offered are an office, paneled library, and home gym. A fabulously expansive family room with a full bar steps out to a sunny patio. Enjoy unobstructed ocean views from the master. The elevator reaches the roof deck with swim spa. An outdoor kitchen boasts 360 degree views.” Offered at $8,885,000 Bill Ruane RE/MAX Estate Properties 310-877-2374

PAGE 24 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section May 16, 2019

incredible ocean Views

“Incredible views are offered from this spacious one-bed, one-bath home, with quintessential coastal living,” says agent Charles Lederman. “With floor-to-ceiling windows, ample storage and a generously-sized patio for entertaining, this viewcentric gem is ready for you to customize to your liking. Ideally situated in the West Tower South, with year-round AC and heat, along with access to Marina City Club's plethora of amenities. Ideally located near Abbot Kinney, shopping centers, LAX, and so much more.” Offered at $582,500 Charles Lederman Charles Lederman & Associates 310-821-8980


Enjoy the Real Estate Experience You Deserve!

Manager BRE#1323411

Broker Assoc. BRE#01439943

The ArgonAuT open houses

open

Address BurBank Sun 2– 4 7818 N Glenoaks Blvd. Cheviot hills Sun 2-5 2848 Westwood Blvd. Culver City Sun 2-5 5609 Canterbury Dr. el segundo Sat, Sun 2-4 137 Virginia St. Sat, Sun 2-4 406 W. Grand Ave. Sat, Sun 2-4 412 W. Grand Ave. Sun 2– 4 601 Lomita St. Sun 2- 4 305 Kansas Street # D Sun 2- 4 506 Sheldon St. inglewood Sat, Sun 2-5 508 West Fairview Blvd. ladera heights Sun 2-5 6263 Fairfax Ave. Mar vista Sun 2-5 12629 Caswell #5 Marina del rey Sun 2-5 13072 Maxella Ave. #6 Sun 2-5 4730 La Villa Marina #L Sun 2-5 4338 Redwood Ave. #B113 Sun 2-5 3028 Thatcher Ave. Sun 2-5 4346 Redwood A204 Sun 2-5 13080 Mindanao Way #87 Sun 2-5 825 Dickson St. Sun 2-5 13078 Mindanao Way #215 Playa del rey Sat 2-5 8174 Manitoba St #3 Sun 2-5 7840 W 81st St. Sun 2-5 8710 Delgany Ave. #10 Sun 2–4 6209 Ocean Front Walk Sun 2-5 8120 Saran Dr. Playa vista Sun 2-5 6241 Crescent Park #105 Sun 2-5 5625 Crescent Park West #207 Sun 2-5 5625 Crescent Park West #134 redondo BeaCh Sun 2–4 2421 Sebald Ave. santa MoniCa Sun 2-5 231 Bay St. #4 west la Sun 2-5 11722 Ohio Ave. #202 westChester Sat, Sun 2-5 7569 Midfield Ave. Sat, Sun 2-5 5700 West 75th St. Sat, Sun 2-5 7808 Goddard Ave. Sat, Sun 2-5 7325 Ogelsby Ave. Sat, Sun 1-4 6345 85th Pl. Sun 2-5 6432 W 82nd St. Sun 2-5 7400 W 89th St. Sun 2-5 8139 Naylor Ave. Sun 2-5 8107 Georgetown Ave. Sun 2-5 7821 Dunbarton Ave. Sun 2-5 6653 West 82nd St. Sun 2-5 8331 Bleriot Ave. Sun 2-5 7833 Naylor Ave.

Bd/BA

2/2 Single story with fireplace, large lot 3/3 Family-friendly floorplan near planned Google campus 2/2.5 Culver City townhome with private garage/in unit washer/dryer 3/2.5 Brand new townhome, open floor layout 4/3 Brand new, open floor layout, rooftop deck 4/3.5 Brand new, open floor layout, rooftop deck 4/2.5 Entertainment home, city, & mountain views, 3 car garage 4/4 End unit, completely remodeled, open floor layout 4/4 Brand new home, open layout, city views

ERA MATILLA REALTY | 225 CULVER BLVD | PLAYA DEL REY Deadline: TUESDAY NOON. Call (310) 822-1629 for Open House forms YOUr liSTiNg will AlSO AppEAr AT ArgONAUTNEwS.COm

price

Agent

compAny

Bill Ruane

RE/MAX Estate Properties

310-877-2374

$1,349,000

Stephanie Younger

Compass

310-499-2020

$865,000

Stephanie Younger

Compass

310-499-2020

Bill Ruane Bill Ruane Bill Ruane Bill Ruane Bill Ruane Bill Ruane

RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties

310-877-2374 310-877-2374 310-877-2374 310-877-2374 310-877-2374 310-877-2374

$650,000

$1,179,000 $1,539,000 $1,599,000 $2,129,000 $1,195,000 $2,349,000

phone

3/1 Development opportunity in La Tijera Village

$619,000

Stephanie Younger

Compass

310-499-2020

3/2 Beautiful landscape corner lot w/ bonus room

$915,000

Robert Pitts

Robert Pitts Estates

310-915-6500

2/1 Reduced! Lovely updated, great location, 2 car pkg

$644,000

Michelle Pine Rappoport

KW Santa Monica

310-210-8504

3/3 Tri-level end unit town home 2/2.5 Extensively renovated end-unit townhome 2/2 Enjoy resort style living 3/1.75 Beautifully remodeled home, situated in Oxford Triangle 2/2 Live the California vacation lifestyle 2/2.5 The Marina del Rey vacation lifestyle 2/1.5 Situated on one the best streets in the heart of the Oxford Triangle 2/2 Live the California vacation lifestyle in luxurious condo

$995,000 $949,000 $1,199,000 $1,500,000 $969,000 $1,299,500 $1,550,000 $1,025,000

Wendy Kaye Jesse Weinberg Jesse Weinberg Denise Fast Denise Fast Denise Fast Denise Fast Denise Fast

KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties

310-210-6855 800-804-9132 800-804-9132 310-578-5414 310-578-5414 310-578-5414 310-578-5414 310-578-5414

2/2 Private two-car garage and in-unit laundry 3/3 Ocean views from the master bedroom 1/1.5 Extensively renovated south facing unit near the beach 4/8 Beach front property, panoramic ocean views 4/4.5 Luxury and natural light in every square inch

$795,000 $1,795,000 $529,000 $8,885,000 $2,199,000

Stephanie Younger James Suarez Weinberg/Lesny Bill Ruane Stephanie Younger

Compass KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach RE/MAX Estate Properties Compass

310-499-2020 310-862-1761 800-804-9132 310-877-2374 310-499-2020

3/2.5 Spacious single-level 2/2 Luxurious unit in Playa Vista 3/3 Opulent two story condo with dual balconies

$1,525,000 $1,089,000 $1,499,000

Peter Wendel Stephanie Younger Stephanie Younger

Coldwell Banker Compass Compass

310-418-3464 310-499-2020 310-499-2020

3/2 12,000 s.f. double lot with fruit trees, updated in 2006

$1,299,000

Bill Ruane

RE/MAX Estate Properties

310-877-2374

2/3 www.231bayst.com

$1,950,000

James Suarez

KW Silicon Beach

310-862-1761

Amy Nelson Frelinger

Douglas Elliman

310-951-0416

Stephanie Younger Stephanie Younger Stephanie Younger James Suarez Carla Zeoli James Suarez James Suarez James Suarez James Suarez Stephanie Younger Stephanie Younger Stephanie Younger Stephanie Younger

Compass Compass Compass KW Silicon Beach RE/MAX Estate Properties KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach Compass Compass Compass Compass

310-499-2020 310-499-2020 310-499-2020 310-862-1761 310-803-7087 310-862-1761 310-862-1761 310-862-1761 310-862-1761 310-499-2020 310-499-2020 310-499-2020 310-499-2020

3/2.75 Turnkey condo in the heart of West LA 3/2 Beautiful cottage with spacious yard and backyard patio 3/1.5 Spacious home and yard on large corner lot 2/2 Entertainer's dream home and backyard 4/3 www.7325ogelsby.com 3/3.5 Kentwood remodel w/ permitted garage conversion (ADU) 4/3 www.6432w82nd.com 4/3.5 Open living area, high ceilings, hardwood floors 4/4 www.8139naylor.com 4/2 www.8107georgetown.com 5/6 In-home movie theater, mini golf, and spacious layout 4/3.5 Beautifully remodeled home with designer touches 3/2 Stunning Mediterranean bungalow in Westchester 3/2 Development opportunity with ideal layout

$898,000 $945,000 $1,149,000 $949,000 $1,395,000 $1,799,000 $1,550,000 $1,825,000 $1,650,000 $1,300,000 $2,695,000 $2,350,000 $1,450,000 $999,900

Open House Directory listings are published inside The Argonaut’s At Home section and on The Argonaut’s Web site each Thursday. Open House directory forms may be emailed to KayChristy@argonautnews.com. To be published, Open House directory form must be completely and correctly filled out and received no later than 3pm Tuesday for Thursday publication. Changes or corrections must also be received by 3pm Tuesday. Regretfully, due to the volume of Open House Directory forms received each week, The Argonaut cannot publish or respond to Open House directory forms incorrectly or incompletely filled out. The Argonaut reserves the right to reject, edit, and/or cancel any advertisng at any time. Only publication of an Open House Directory listing consitutes final acceptance of an advertiser’s order.

May 16, 2019 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section PAGE 25


legal advertising

Having It Tall I’m a 6’2” woman. What’s the ideal way for me to respond when people (almost always men and total strangers) ask, out of the blue,“How does a woman your height find boyfriends?” —Annoyed I’d opt for the macabre approach, delivered totally deadpan: “Actually, I stretch short men on a rack in my basement. You can sometimes hear the screams from the side yard.” Responding with shocking humor — in an uber-cool tone — gives you the upper hand in a way an enraged response to their rudeness would not. And yes, people who say this to you are rude — assuming you don’t go around wearing a sign that reads “Hey, strangers, ask me anything! Nothing’s too impolite or too personal!” Of course, when people overstep (as maybe 6,055 other people have done previously), it’s natural to get angry — to go loud and ugly in calling them on their rudeness. However, that sort of directness — explicitly telling them that

they’ve wronged you — is probably counterproductive. Social psychologist Elliot Aronson finds that people are highly prone to “self-justification” — the ego-defending denial that they’ve behaved badly. Making matters worse, our fight-orflight system reflexively reacts to verbal attacks in the same adrenalized way it does to physical attacks. So, angry directness from you is likely to provoke a rudester into amping up the ugly — turning around and deeming you rude, wrong, and “Wow...testy!” for your response. Ultimately, using humor as I suggested — an over-the-top statement, delivered flatly —allows you to restructure the power balance, shifting yourself out of the victim position. You’re clearly informing the person they’ve crossed a line, with minimal aggression on your part. This is important because, as a tall girl, your energy is best put to more productive ends — folding yourself up like origami to fly in coach and fighting the Statue of Liberty for the extremely tall guys of Tinder.

Meek My Day! My style is basically grunge rocker girl: ancient jeans, a vintage rock T-shirt, and bedhead. I need photos of myself, so late Saturday afternoon, I did a photo shoot with a professional stylist, makeup artist, and photographer. Long story short, I despise all the photos. They dressed me in “nice lady” clothes I hated and put too much makeup on me, including lipstick, which I never wear. I’m normally pretty assertive, so I don’t understand why I didn’t speak up for myself. —Irritated

to direct your “attention, behavior, thoughts, and/or emotions.” This, in turn, empowers you to do what you know you should — like eating your green beans instead of going with what your impulses are suggesting: face-planting in a plate of fries and soldiering on to do the same in a bowl of chocolate frosting. As I explain in my “science-help” book, “Unf*ckology: A Field Guide to Living with Guts and Confidence,” our mental energy to keep our executive functions powered up gets eroded by stress, fatigue, hunger, and even seemingly minor mental chores — like choosing When your style is grunge femme — between the 30 slightly different kinds of bedhead and jeans that appear to be balsamic at the supermarket. Basically, loaners from a wino — it’s a major as the day draws on and you put bummer to pay for photos that make weight on your executive functions, you you look like you sell high-end real wear out their ability to be there for you. estate via bus bench ads. So, what can you do to avoid repeatIt’s especially bummerific when you ing this experience? Try to schedule could have spoken up but instead just went along like a lap dog in a bee outfit. tiring, emotionally taxing projects earlier in the day. It also helps to figure out But the reality is, your ability to assert ahead of time where your boundaries yourself — which comes out of a set of lie — stylistic or otherwise. Then, when cognitive processes called “executive functions”— can get a little beaten down. somebody does something you’re not comfortable with, you’ve pre-identified it Executive functions are basically the as a no-no, which makes it easier for COO (chief operating officer) of you — the cerebral department of getting stuff you to stand up for yourself — calmly and firmly. Remember, “every picture done, through, among other things, tells a story” — and it’s best if yours planning, prioritizing, holding sets of doesn’t seem to be about the time the facts in mind, and making choices. lady at the Estee Lauder counter held And then there’s the executive function you down, made you up, and then that crapped out on you: “inhibitory control,” which, as cognitive neuroscien- pulled out her Ruger and forced you into mom jeans. tist Adele Diamond explains, allows you

Got a problem? Write to Amy Alkon at 171 Pier Ave, Ste. 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or email her at AdviceAmy@aol.com. ©2018, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Alkon’s latest book is “Unf*ckology: A Field Guide to Living with Guts and Confidence.” Follow @amyalkon on Twitter and visit blogtalkradio.com/amyalkon.

PAGE 26 THE ARGONAUT May 16, 2019

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 088278 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: JUST CUT IT OUT. 3709 Medford St. Los Angeles, CA 90063. COUNTY: Los Angeles. Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: 201825710217. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Golden State Paramount LLC, 3709 Medford St. Los Angeles, CA 90063. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Limited Liability Company. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 04/2019. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Darren Cauley. TITLE: Secretary, Corp or LLC Name: Golden State Paramount LLC. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: April 3, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 4/25/19, 5/2/19, 5/9/19, 5/16/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 097988 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: BARBETTE. 7511 Santa Monica Blvd. West Hollywood, CA 90046. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Barbette, LLC, 7511 Santa Monica Blvd. West Hollywood, CA 90046. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Limited Liability Company. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 5/2018. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Sean Macpherson. TITLE: Managing Member, Corp or LLC Name: Barbette, LLC. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: April 12, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 5/9/19, 5/16/19, 5/23/19, 5/30/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 102857 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: DTO LAW, DTO. 2321 W. 10th Street Unit 307 Los Angeles, CA 90006. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Marcos Tarango, 6459 W. 80th Place Los Angeles, CA 90045, William Delgado, 9709 US Hwy. 42 Prospect, KY 40059, Megan OíNeil., 54 Hillview Ave. Redwood City, CA 94062. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Limited Liability Partnership. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 4/2019. I declare that

all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Marcos Tarango. TITLE: Partner, Corp or LLC Name: Delgado Tarango OíNeil LLP. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: April 18, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 5/9/19, 5/16/19, 5/23/19, 5/30/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 114956 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: REVAMP AMPLIFIER SERVICE. 5907 Melrose Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90036. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Andrew Arahood, 5907 Melrose Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90036. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 7/2009. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Andrew Arahood. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: May 1, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 5/9/19, 5/16/19, 5/23/19, 5/30/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 116506 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: SPINE GROUP BEVERLY HILLS. 8929 Wilshire Blvd., #200 Beverly Hills, CA 90212. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) John J. Regan, MD, Inc., 8929 Wilshire Blvd., #302 Beverly Hills, CA 90212. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 4/2019. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ John J. Regan, MD. TITLE: President, Corp or LLC Name: John J. Regan, MD, Inc. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: May 2, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or com-

mon law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 5/9/19, 5/16/19, 5/23/19, 5/30/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 116508 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: DOCS SURGERY CENTER. 8436 3rd Street, Suite 700 Los Angeles, CA 90048. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Doctor Outpatient Center for Surgery, Inc., 8436 3rd Street, Suite 700 Los Angeles, CA 90048. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 4/2019. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Khawar Siddique, MD. TITLE: President, Corp or LLC Name: Doctor Outpatient Center for Surgery, Inc. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: May 2, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 5/9/19, 5/16/19, 5/23/19, 5/30/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019099454 Type of Filing: Original The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: BLOCKSENSYS; 5710 Crescent Park East Apt. 413 Playa Vista, CA 90094. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Abdulrahman Fahad Sindi, 5710 Crescent Park East Apt. 413 Playa Vista, CA 90094. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business Name or names listed above on: N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: Abdulrahman Fahad Sindi. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: April 15, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 4/25/19, 5/2/19, 5/9/19, 5/16/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019104926 Type of Filing: Original The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: IMPACT CONSULTING; 5720 W. Centinela Ave. #226 Los Angeles, CA 90045, PO Box 451964 Los Angeles, CA 90045. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Carole Neal, 5720 W. Centinela Ave. #226 Los Angeles, CA 90045. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business Name or names listed above on: N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: Carole Neal. TITLE: Owner. This

statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: April 19, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 4/25/19, 5/2/19, 5/9/19, 5/16/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019110721 Type of Filing: Original The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: HAMILTON ARCHITECTS; 12240 Venice Blvd., Ste. 25 Los Angeles, CA 90066. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) John Patrick Hamilton, 12240 Venice Blvd., Ste. 25 Los Angeles, CA 90066. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business Name or names listed above on: 07/2002. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: John Patrick Hamilton. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: April 26, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 5/16/19, 5/23/19, 5/30/19, 6/6/19 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019112230 Type of Filing: Amended. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: NELSON MANAGEMENT CO; 930 Westbourne Dr., #100 West Hollywood, CA 90069. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Vivian R Nelson, 930 Westbourne Dr., Apt. 100 West Hollywood, Ca 90069. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business Name or names listed above on: 4/2019. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: Vivian R Nelson. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: April 29, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 5/9/19, 5/16/19, 5/23/19, 5/30/19


The ArgonAuT PRess Releases Playa del Rey

“This extensively renovated one-bed, one-and-a-half-bathis near the beach,” say agents Jesse Weinberg and Vivian Lesny. “Upgrades include white oak floors throughout, recessed lighting, and an updated kitchen with quartz countertops and new stainless-steel appliances. The spacious living room offers tons of natural light and opens to an expansive balcony. The bedroom offers an en-suite, spa-like bath. The boutique complex has a rooftop sun deck with ocean views, recreation room, and sauna.” Offered at $529,000 Jesse Weinberg & Vivian Lesny KW Silicon Beach 800-804-9132

GoRGeous maRina Views

“This open floor plan home, offers marina views and boasts three bedrooms and two bathrooms,” says agent Eileen McCarthy. “The spacious living room leads to a large patio with ocean views, perfect for entertaining. The highly upgraded kitchen includes a large granite center island and stainless steel appliances. Other features include recessed lighting and upgraded bathrooms. All amenities offered at Marina City Club.” Offered at $999,000 Eileen McCarthy Marina Ocean Properties 310-822-8910

Playa Vista Home

“This sophisticated three-bed, three-bath home offers impressive luxury in a fantastic Playa Vista location,” says agent Stephanie Younger. “Step through the front door to a magnificent great room with soaring ceilings, a stately fireplace, and large windows infusing the space with light. The gracious layout features three beautifully scaled rooms, boasting opulent design details. The upstairs master suite includes an impeccably renovated spa bathroom and a private outdoor patio.” Offered at $1,499,000 Stephanie Younger Compass 310-499-2020

2 bed + 2 ba $3,800/mo

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unfurnished 1 + 1 $3,200/mo Furnished 1 + 1 $4,000/mo

Studio 1 bed + 1 ba 1 bed + 1 ba 2 bed + 2 ba

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charleslederman@aol.com www.MarinaCityrealty.com

Call today for a free appraisal!

May 16, 2019 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section PAGE 27


Marine veteran. A celebration of her life is planned for Saturday June 22.

Classified advertising Auto PArts/ service

unFurnisHeD APArtments

Discounted tires & Brakes The Trusted Auto Repair Experts 13021 W. Washington Blvd. call Juan (310) 305-7929

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PArt-time JoBs seniors HelPinG seniors We are hiring caregivers who would love to help other seniors. Flexible hours! Ideal candidates are compassionate people who want to make a difference! Must be local and willing to drive. Please apply by visiting the Careers page of our website www. inhomecarela.com or by calling our office at (310) 878-2045.

Full time JoBs Head of Development for a tv & content Production Company. Mail to 419 Venice Way, Los Angeles, CA 90291

clAsses & seminAr Art class for Adults Basic & Advanced Contact Patchara for Info. (310) 612-5891

unFurnisHeD Houses Westchester House for rent 3 bedrooms 1 bath, large backyard 1 year lease, $3500p/m 1 dog allowed, no co-signers, contact Tammara 323.345.3277

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June loved the sunshine of coastal California and seemed to run on solar power. A native of Buffalo, NY, the license plate on her VW Beetle epitomized her good spirits: I C SUN.

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June M. Dikeman, 93, a 53‐year resident of Playa del Rey and a community volunteer, died of complications from an infection on May 6, 2019.

BookkeePinG & AccountinG

sWeDisH BoDyWork A nice mature woman offers rejuvenating massage to help clients w/relaxation contact 310-458-6798

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CALL FOR AppOintMent On-Site MAnAGeR (310) 558-8098 & (310) 391-1076

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In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations in memory of June Dikeman may be made www.cityofhope.org/giving/donate O b I t U A r y

Classifieds 2

30+ Homes yard sale

5/1 9• 9am-4pm. lots of good stuff! e of Walgrove, W of Beethoven, n of venice, s of rose Directional signs & maps will be posted throughout the neighborhood.

Devoted to her family, June is survived by her daughter Debra, son‐in‐law Jeff, son Clark, daughter‐in‐law Pam, granddaughters Jennifer and Michelle, great‐grandson Scott, and great‐granddaughter Bella June. June will be buried in private services at Holy Cross Cemetery next to her husband of 38 years, Wilfred “Bill” Dikeman, a Marine veteran. A celebration of her life is planned for Saturday June 22. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations in memory of June Dikeman may be made to the City of Hope: www.cityofhope.org/giving/donate

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June exercised regularly and formed a close circle of friends. As a volunteer Deputy Commissioner of Civil Ceremonies since 1998, she wed over 3000 couples at the LA County Courthouse.

Got Junk? Advertise your Yard Sale for as little as $24.95 Call The Argonaut (310) 821-1546 x100

PAGE 28 – THEMAy ARGONAUT’s PAGE 28 At THEHome ARGONAUT 16, 2019 Real Estate Section May 16, 2019

Fictitious Business nAme stAtement File no. 2019119703 Type of Filing: Original The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: IPM INSTITUTE, BACK TO THE ONE; 12405 Venice Blvd., #211 Los Angeles, CA 90066. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Camille Harris, 12405 Venice Blvd., #211 Los Angeles, CA 90066. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business Name or names listed above on: N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: Camille Harris. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: May 7, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 5/16/19, 5/23/19, 5/30/19, 6/6/19 orDer to sHoW cAuse For cHAnGe oF nAme case no. 19smcP00181 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES. Petition of KATHY KELLEMANN, for Change of Name. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: 1.) Petitioner: Kathy Kellermann filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a.) Katherine Ann Kellermann to Kathy Kellermann 2.) THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing

to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 06/28/2019. Time: 8:30 AM. Dept.: K Room: A-203. The address of the court is 1725 Main Street Santa Monica, CA 90401. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Los Angeles. Original filed: April 17, 2019. Lawrence Cho, Judge of the Superior Court. PUBLISH: The Argonaut Newspaper 4/25/19, 5/2/19, 5/9/19, 5/16/19 orDer to sHoW cAuse For cHAnGe oF nAme case no. 19smcP00214 SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES. Petition of RYAN ANTHONY HOUTZ, for Change of Name. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: 1.) Petitioner: Ryan Anthony Houtz filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: a.) Ryan Anthony Houtz to Ryan Anthony Funk 2.) THE COURT ORDERS that

all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 08/09/2019. Time: 8:30 AM. Dept.: K. The address of the court is 1725 Main Street Santa Monica, CA 90401. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county: Los Angeles. Original filed: May 6, 2019. Lawrence H. Cho, Judge of the Superior Court. PUBLISH: The Argonaut Newspaper 5/9/19, 5/16/19, 5/23/19, 5/30/19

“youtH GrouP” (5/9/19)


F ood

&

D r i n k

Don’t Waffle about the Wiffle Marina del Rey’s newest breakfast spot turns the most important meal of the day into a celebration

The Chocolate Waffle Party at Bru’s Wiffle is a celebration of Oreos, whipped cream and chocolate sauce

By Jessica Koslow

invited our whole extended family to brunch at Bru’s Wiffle. The menu options were impresBru’s Wiffle sive. Even though it wasn’t his 3105 Washington Blvd., birthday, my dad celebrated with Marina del Rey the banana split waffle loaded (310) 881-9162 with ice cream, whipped cream, bruswiffle.com bananas, strawberries and chocolate sauce. My husband I remember the day I drove down Washington Boulevard and ordered the Smoked Salmon Scramble, a waffle topped with saw the sign for Bru’s Wiffle. “Wha? Where’sa Café Buna?” I eggs, mozzarella, smoked salmon and slices of avocado, sprinkled blurted out to myself. Turns out, Café Buna has eased with diced red onion. It truly felt like a party as the dishes paraded on down the road to the space out of the kitchen to our table. formerly occupied by Joni’s Coffee Rosters, and leaving room By the end of the meal, everyfor this new casual breakfast spot one at our table was glowing with a satiated smile. But what’s a in Marina del Rey. And if there’s anything I love as brunch birthday celebration without a song and a sweet for much as pancakes, it’s waffles. the birthday guy? Lucky for me, Bru’s Wiffle Bru’s Wiffle knew what to do. specializes in both (more panOur eyes popped as a plate cakes coming soon). overflowing with chocolate gooey “My full name is Ebru,” says goodness arrived in front of my owner Ebru Fidan Caplan. “My husband with a lit candle: It was friends started to call me Bru. a chocolate pancake stuffed with When I was looking for a name chocolate whipped cream and for my restaurant, one of my peanut butter, dripping with friends said, ‘What about Bru’s housemade chocolate sauce and Waffle?’ I wanted something dotted with Oreos. different. My other my friend said, ‘What about Bru’s Wiffle? It Caplan was raised in Turkey. When she was a young girl, sounds like waffle.’ I loved it!” her parents owned a boutique This past February, my husband’s birthday was creeping up, hotel on the country’s Mediterranean coast. Caplan helped her and I wanted to plan something mom cook, and the two would special. My husband and I have often introduce their guests to many things in common — one of which is our love of waffles. I Turkish cuisine.

Caplan studied hotel management in college and her career path took her on a 25-year journey in the restaurant business, working long hours for lunch and dinner. “I wanted to make waffles, pancakes and crepes,” she says. “I love waffles!” Caplan loves chocolate, too. As evidenced by my husband’s chocolate birthday surprise and the house favorite “Chocolate Waffle Party — a chocolate waffle stuffed with butter cream and topped with Oreos, whipped cream and chocolate sauce. In 1995, Caplan came to L.A. for language school and fell in love with the city. Five years later, she followed her heart and moved here, and in 2010 she opened the Santa Monica location of Bru’s Wiffle. “I love every single dish on the menu,” she says. “I created the menu and put everything I like. I love spicy food. So my favorites are Chicken on Fire [waffle + grilled onions, grilled jalapeños, Oaxacan cheese and Bru’s blazing sauce] and beef chorizo quesadilla bun burger, but also Bru’s French Toast [strawberries, bananas, blueberries, mango, peanut butter, fresh whipped cream and cinnamon sourdough bread], the avocado fries and the (Continued on page 32)

May 16, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 29


We s t s i de

happen i n g s

Compiled by Nicole Elizabeth Payne Thursday, May 16

Friday, May 17

AI: The Future of Work, 6:30 p.m. The AI LA Community partners with Google to discuss how artificial intelligence and robotics will disrupt the workplace and create new opportunities. Free, but RSVP. Google Venice HQ, 320 Hampton Drive, Venice. facebook.com/AI.LA. Community

Mar Vista Seniors Club, 9:30 to noon. Each Friday the Mar Vista Seniors Club meets for trips, tours, speakers, bingo and live entertainment. Ages 50+. Mar Vista Recreation Center, 11430 Woodbine St., Mar Vista. Byron Stalcup (310) 351-9876

Del Rey Neighborhood Council Land Use and Planning Committee, 7 p.m. The committee meets on the third Thursday of each month at Del Rey Square, 11976 Culver Blvd., Del Rey. delreync.org “Thirdsdays,” 8 p.m. Enjoy two sets of improvisational jazz at the Industry Café & Jazz, 6039 Washington Blvd., Culver City. No cover; donations encouraged. (310) 202-6633; industrycafela.com Turtle Races at Brennan’s, 9 p.m. Each third Thursday of the month, local Irish pub Brennan’s resumes its 45-year tradition of turtle racing. Brennan’s, 4089 Lincoln Blvd., Marina del Rey. No cover. (424) 443-5119; brennansla.com Genius Loci Presents, 9 p.m. A slice of the Baja surf, music and yoga festival comes to life in Venice with music by Henry Pope, Littlefoot and more. Townhouse & Del Monte Speakeasy, 52 Windward Ave., Venice. (310) 392-4040; townhousevenice.com

Open Temple: Shabbat Take Me Higher, 7:15 to 9:30 p.m. Finger foods served at 7 p.m., Shabbat services begin at 7:15 p.m., and Shabbat After Dark starts at 9 p.m. Electric Lodge, 1416 Electric Ave., Venice. Free. RSVP to (310) 821-1414 or info@opentemple.org. Sweatpants Series, 7:30 p.m. Venice singer-songwriter Monica Aben teams up with fellow musician Tom Sless for an evening of live acoustic music that invites you to get comfy and support Safe Place for Youth. Amiga Wild, 2124 Lincoln Blvd., Venice. $10 suggested donation. sweatpantsseries.com

dance floor going. Townhouse & Del Monte Speakeasy, 52 Windward Ave., Venice. No cover. (310) 392-4040; townhousevenice.com John Hammond, 10 p.m. Grammywinning Blues Hall of Famer John Hammond stops by McCabe’s Guitar Shop, 3101 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica. $35. (310) 828-4497 mccabes.com/concerts

Saturday, May 18 Roga, 8 a.m. Meet under the Santa Monica Pier sign at the top of the ramp for a brisk two- or five-mile run. Walkers welcome. Afterward, Casey Van Zandt leads a yoga class. Bring your own mat. Santa Monica Pier, 200 Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica. Free. santamonicapier.org Wake Up Waves, 9 to 11 a.m. Start the weekend with fresh air and family fun for kids ages 2 to 10. Kids enjoy an interactive storytime by Story Pirates, music, dancing, playing and more. Pier Playground, 1600-1622 Ocean Front Walk, Santa Monica. Free. wakeupwiththewaves.com

Venice Vandals Comedy Show, 8 to 10 p.m. Sit under the stars and enjoy some of the best Los Angeles comics at this monthly Venice comedy showcase. BYOB. Lone Wolfs, 2545 Lincoln Blvd., Venice. $10. Tickets at the door. DJ Jedi & Anthony Valadez Dance Party, 9 p.m. Deejays are on the decks spinning new and old soul, funk, blues, rock, hip-hop, beats, breaks and anything else that gets the

Free Legal Housing Clinic, 10 a.m. to noon. The third Saturday of each month the California Women’s Law Center hosts a free legal housing clinic. Experienced housing attorneys meet with guests on a first come, first serve basis to help with legal issues facing tenants in the beach cities.

VCH, 720 Rose Ave., Venice. Free. (323) 951-1041; info@cwlc.org Lawn Bowling Open House, noon. The Santa Monica Bowls Club hosts an open house for guests to experience lawn bowling. Wear, flat, smooth-soled shoes; equipment provided. Douglas Park, 2439 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica. Free. (310) 440-9400; smbowls.org Strikers Band, 1 to 3:30 p.m. Listen to live music, nibble on light refreshments and dance the afternoon away. Doors open at 12:30 p.m. Culver City Senior Citizens Center, 4095 Overland Ave., Culver City. $5. (310) 253-6700 Santa Monica Windjammers Yacht Club Open House, 1 to 4 p.m. Enjoy an open house every third Saturday of the month with complimentary refreshments and a tour of the facility overlooking the marina. SMWYC, 13589 Mindanao Way, Marina del Rey. Free. (310) 827-7692 Marketing 101: The Essentials, 1 to 4 p.m. This three-hour workshop provides effective marketing solutions for your business followed by a one-on-one with an awardwinning expert. Santa Monica College Bundy Campus, 3171 S. Bundy Dr., Rm 123, Mar Vista. $45. marketing101essentials@gmail.com; Venice Beach Tech & Startup BBQ, 1 to 6 p.m. Celebrate the summer weather at a networking BBQ with

great tunes, outdoor games, sports and VR experiences. Podshare Venice, 522 Venice Blvd., Venice. $9 to $40. eventbrite.com Valley Baroque Ensemble, 2 p.m. This violin, flute and cello trio spirits you through the world of Italian and German Baroque music from Bach to Vivaldi with stops at Corelli, Tartini and Handel. El Segundo Public Library, 111 W. Mariposa Ave., El Segundo. Free. (310) 524-2728; eslib.org “A Musical Memoir of an Irish Immigrant Childhood” Book Discussion, 2 to 3 p.m. Author Leora O’Carroll speaks about her mother Maureen O’Carroll’s life as an acclaimed cellist and the memoir they wrote together. Lloyd TaberMarina del Rey Library, 4533 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey. Free. (310) 821-3415; lacountylibrary.org Music by the Sea, 2 to 5 p.m. A scenic harbor view is the backdrop for a country rock-a-billy concert by JB & The BC Riders. Fisherman’s Village, 13755 Fiji Way, Marina del Rey. (310) 301-9900; visitmarinadelrey.com Eat See Hear Outdoor Movie: “Get Out,” 5:30 to 11 p.m. Bring your own blankets, cushions and even your canine to this screening of Jordan Peele’s Oscar-winning horror flick. Enjoy gourmet food trucks and the high energy electronic beats of

O n Sta g e – T he w ee k i n local theater compiled by Christina campodonico Photo by Ashley Randall

The ensemble of “Violence: The Misadventures of Spike Spangle, Farmer” Meta Musical:“Pippin” @ Westchester Playhouse The Kentwood Players present Stephen Schwartz’s award-winning musical about the son of Charlemagne’s search for adventure and meaning in his life and the band of theatrical players who help tell his tale. Now playing at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays through June 22 at Westchester Playhouse, 8301 Hindry Ave., Westchester. $25 to $27. (310) 645-5156; kentwoodplayers.org

Music on a Mission:“The Magic Flute” @ The Broad Stage Santa Monica College Opera Theatre and the SMC Symphony perform Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s classic “singspiel” (sung and spoken) fairytale opera about a young prince on a quest to rescue the distressed Pamina, daughter of the Queen of the Night. Performed with English subtitles. Limited engagement: 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday (May 16 to 18) at The Broad Stage, 1310 11th St., Santa Monica.

PAGE 30 THE ARGONAUT May 16, 2019

$15 to $25. (310) 434-3005; smc.edu/eventsinfo A Musical for Mom:“Hot Flashin’” @ Odyssey Theatre This new original musical comedy tells the stories of five women in their “middle to late years” who’ve seen it all. With grown children and limited incomes against rising costs of living, the quintet manages to find humor in life’s stressful situations. Last shows: 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday (May 16 to 19) at Odyssey Theatre, 2055 S. Sepulveda Blvd., West L.A. $33.75 to $37.50. (310) 477-2055; hotflashinmusical.com Grief in Bohemia:“a D..th .n V.n.c.” @ Pacific Resident Theatre Penned and performed by actress Mary Jo Deschanel (yes, she’s related to Zooey), this brand-new play explores how the lives of eight women are changed by an unexpected death in Venice, Calif., in 1975. Last shows: 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday (May 17 to 19) at Pacific Resident Theatre, 703 Venice Blvd., Venice. $25 to $30. (310) 8228392; pacificresidenttheatre.com

Murder, She Wrote: “And Then There Were None” @ Morgan-Wixson Theatre Based on Agatha Christie’s classic whodunit, this tale of murder and mystery focuses on the guests marooned at a lonely island resort and how they die ... one by one. Now playing 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and at 2 p.m. Sundays through May 24 at Morgan-Wixson Theatre, 2627 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica. $20 to $23. (310) 828-7519. morgan-wixson.org Hollywood Confessions:“Wild Son: The Testimony of Christian Brando” @ Santa Monica Playhouse Based on interviews conducted by playwright and media veteran Champ Clark, this solo show set under the white-hot glare of fame and Hollywood features actor John Mese as Marlon Brando’s troubled, headline-making son. Now playing 5:30 p.m. Sundays through May 26 at Santa Monica Playhouse, 1211 4th St., Santa Monica. $20. (800) 838-3006; wildson.brownpapertickets.com Morality Play:“Crime and Punishment” @ Edgemar Center for the Arts This provocative adaptation condenses

Fyodor Dostoevsky’s tome on the murderous inclinations of a young and arrogant Raskolnikov into a 90-minute psychological thriller, featuring three actors only. Now playing at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays through May 26 at Edgemar Center for the Arts, 2437 Main St., Santa Monica. $15 to $25. (323) 960-7822; onstage411.com/crime American Idiot: “Violence: The Misadventures of Spike Spangle, Farmer” @ The Actors’ Gang Co-written by Academy Award winner Tim Robbins, this satire of militarism and media manipulation tells the story of a down-on-his-luck farmer sucked into a whirlwind of celebrity and patriotism. Now playing 8 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays through June 22 at The Actors’ Gang, 9070 Venice Blvd., Culver City. $25 to $50, or pay-what-you-want at the door on Thursdays. (310) 838-4264; theactorsgang.com


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Disco Shrine before the screening at 8:30 p.m. Santa Monica High School Amphitheater, 601 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica. $8 to $21. eatseehear.com We Are The West Underground Concert Series, 8 p.m. to midnight. Jeremy Little with his stellar band and San Francisco’s 30-member male choir Conspiracy of Beards join inventive folk-pop five-piece We Are The West in the next installment of their Underground Series—parking garage concerts that happen each Saturday before a full moon. 701 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica. facebook.com/wearethewestmusic

Sunday, May 19 7th Annual Neighborhood Yard Sale, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Join your neighbors, register online, set up your items in front of your house or garage and sell all those items you’ve been meaning to get rid of. Mar Vista. (310) 699-0980; venice-marvistayardsale.com Makers Lab – Vision Boards, 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Bring and arrange meaningful photos, magazine images and quotes on a board collage-style to guide you to your future goals. Art supplies, snacks and refreshments provided. Maalou Salon, 11955 Washington Blvd., Culver City. $47. thesehandscollective.com Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Celebrating 40 years, the art walk and auction highlights the works of nearly 500 Los Angeles-area artists and supports the Venice Family Clinic’s mission to provide quality healthcare to those in

need. Enjoy live music, a beer and wine garden, food trucks, artisanal workshops and a family-fun zone. Google Los Angeles, 340 Main St., Venice. veniceartwalk.org Authors on Architecture: Gonzales on Architects of Southern California, 2 p.m. Author Antonio Gonzales discusses his new book “Architects Who Built Southern California” as well as the work of some of Los Angeles’ forgotten architects. A book signing follows the discussion. Santa Monica Public Library, 601 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica. Free. (310)458-8600; smpl.org Music by the Sea, 2 to 5 p.m. A scenic harbor view is the backdrop for a samba and bossa nova concert by Brasil Brazil. Fisherman’s Village, 13755 Fiji Way, Marina del Rey. (310) 301-9900; visitmarinadelrey.com

Monday, May 20 Magic Mondays, 7:30 p.m. Albie Selznick hosts a rotating cast of master magicians and variety acts at 8 p.m. each Monday, with a special interactive performance in the lobby a half-hour before show time. Santa Monica Playhouse, 1211 4th St., Santa Monica. $40. (310) 450-2849; magicmondayla.com

Tuesday, May 21 Sierra Club Airport Marina Group, 7 p.m. Join this roundtable to discuss PDR gas health concerns. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Burton Chace Park Community Room, 13650 Mindanao

Way, Marina del Rey. Free. (310) 613-1175

Wednesday, May 22 Los Angeles County Beach Commission, 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. This 20-member body appointed by the L.A. County Board of Supervisors reviews Beaches and Harbors’ policies, contracts and capital projects and meets the fourth Wednesday of each month at the Burton Chace Park Community Room, 13650 Mindanao Way, Marina del Rey. Maria Wong (310) 821-5245; beaches.lacounty.gov Soundwaves Series: “Vivid Reveries,” 7:30 p.m. Clarinetist Michelle Zukovsky and pianist Gloria Cheng perform Alban Berg’s “Four Pieces,” a set of expressionist miniatures from 1913, and Witold Lutoslawski’s “Five Dance Preludes,” based on Polish folk music. Santa Monica Public Library, 601 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica. Free. (310) 458-8600; smpl.org

Thursday, May 23 64th Annual Westchester Rotary Book Sale, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. May 23 through May 28. In addition to thousands of used books, this year to promote summer reading for K-8th graders, the Rotary is selling new Scholastic children’s books. Funds raised are used to support the club’s annual community and international service projects. Ralph’s parking lot, 8824 S. Sepulveda Blvd., Westchester. darlene.fukuji@gmail.com

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“Light & Shadow: Capturing Early Santa Monica History,” through June 15. The Santa Monica Library and the Santa Monica History Museum provide a peek into their photographic archives, capturing the history of the Santa Monica Bay area. Santa Monica History Museum, 1350 7th St., Santa Monica. (310) 395-2290; santamonicahistory.org

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EEEEEATSCON LA @ Barker Hangar Scoop up the latest eats and foodie talk on May 18 & 19 at Barker Hanger (3021 Airport Ave., Santa Monica), where over 20 of L.A.’s hottest restaurants (including Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams) will be serving up flavorful bites and celebrity speakers like “Crazy Rich Asians” star Awkwafina, actress Cameron Diaz and “Glee” alum Darren Criss will offer their takes on today’s culinary scene. Tickets are $30. Visit theinfatuation.com/eeeeeatscon.

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D r i n k

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(Continued from page 29)

grain bowl [farro, barley, bell peppers, spicy crispy chickpeas, kale, crispy Brussels sprouts, cucumber, feta cheese, avocado].” The restaurant makes everything fresh daily, from the chocolate sauce with real Belgian chocolate to the freshly squeezed orange and grapefruit juice. “There’s no microwave in our kitchen,” Caplan assures. “I believe good, fresh ingredients make a huge difference.” This new local favorite, open daily except for Mondays, recently started serving mimosas, Bloody Marys, sangria and the local Venice beer Lucky Duck. Bru’s Wiffle’s Chicken Their happy hour is from 8 to on Fire waffle

11 a.m. Tuesdays through Fridays, with items like Hello Morning (crispy chicken, waffle, egg any style) for $11.95 and the Breakfast Sando (eggs, bacon, turkey sausage patty and cheddar cheese on a milk bun served with breakfast potatoes) for $10.95. Café Buna might be a tough act to follow, but Bru’s Wiffle has wooed the neighborhood with its tasty breakfast, brunch and lunch fare — and waffles. “I love Marina del Rey,” says Caplan. “Our neighbors come and welcome us. I feel like we have a new family here.”


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‘The Mystery of Art’ Twenty-five years after starting his own “Genius”-style grant, Herb Alpert is driven to sustain the vitality of art and its never-ending mystique

PAGE 34 THE ARGONAUT May 16, 2019

Photo by Dewey Nicks

By Christina Campodonico Ask Grammy Award-winning trumpeter Herb Alpert what it is about art that really gets him excited, and he can’t quite put his finger on it. “That’s a really good question, but it’s a hard answer because I love the mystery of art,” he says. “What is that thing that makes you listen to a record and say, ‘Wow, that gives me goose bumps?’ You can’t identify it. You know that you feel something, but it’s in these otherworldly categories. … You just turn the brain off and feel it because it’s all about a feel.” Following his gut has been a hallmark of Alpert’s career from developing the Tijuana Brass’s uniquely “Ameriachi” sound to co-founding A&M Records with the mission of making the recording artist the “centerpiece” of the label. That go-with-your-gut gusto has extended to his philanthropy, which saved New York’s Harlem School of the Arts from closure in 2010. Via his Santa Monica-based foundation, Alpert donated $500,000 to the school, which provides free to low-cost arts training to youth in northern Manhattan, after reading about the educational center’s plight in the New York Times. “You’d have to ask my knees about that one,” he jokes. “It was a knee-jerk experience.” The Herb Alpert Foundation has since given $7 million to fund the school’s programming and scholarships, with an additional $9.5 million earmarked for the renovation of the school’s façade and interiors starting this summer. Locally, Alpert’s foundation has given $10.1 million to make tuition free for music majors at L.A. City College and his name is on the music schools of UCLA and CalArts. On Monday, Alpert celebrated 25 years of the Herb Alpert Award in the Arts (HAAIA), a $75,000 unrestricted prize given to five exceptional mid-career artists (you could call it Alpert’s own version of the MacArthur “Genius Grant”), with a reception in New York City that gathered alumni honorees and selection committee panelists as well as this year’s award winners. Announced last Friday, they are choreographer Pam Tanowitz, filmmaker Beatriz Santiago Muñoz, singer-songwriter-bassist Meshell Ndegeocello, playwright Lloyd Suh and artist-poet-activist Cecilia Vicuña. Before Alpert headed out on tour with his wife singer Lani Hall (of Sérgio Mendes & Brasil ’66 fame), we caught up with the 84-year-old to discuss his namesake award, why he continues to back worthy causes and the state of arts education today.

Herb Alpert with wife Lani Hall, with whom he still tours The Argonaut: What kinds of artists are you hoping to support through your foundation’s grant and through the use of your good name? Herb Alpert: I think real art is in the hands of those that take the road less traveled, the ones that are just expressing themselves as honestly as they can. I really feel that jazz relates to all the art forms because it’s all about freedom, it’s all about expression, it’s all about imagination, and it’s all about truth telling. The

organization and the program. … and we’re all looking for the same thing. We’re all looking for creative people that are doing something special. It’s really rough out there being an artist. You have to have good timing on your side, and an abundance of luck, so we try to pick out the artists that have those qualities that you can’t really ... Well, let’s see, how do I put it? These are artists that deserve to be heard, deserve to be seen, from our point of view, and that’s the objective.

“I didn’t want to buy a Van Gogh painting or a Monet or Picasso and hang it on my wall for my own satisfaction. I wanted to do something that I felt was smart to do with my money to help the arts survive.” –Herb Alpert great artists that I have met through the years, whether they be musicians, or actors, or writers, poets, sculptors, or painters, they have one thing in common: they tell the truth. They’re truth seekers, and I think the beauty of it is, it doesn’t matter whether they’re Democrats, Republicans, Independents, Libertarians. Who cares? I mean, as long as we’re hearing the truth from people, that’s what we need. The Argonaut: Are there any specific qualities you encourage HAAIA selection committee panelists to seek out in an artist? Alpert: I’m not involved in the process, so that’s the beauty of it. It’s really in the hands of the people that are running the

The Argonaut: Do you think it’s easier or harder now for artists to make it as artists nowadays? Alpert: I think it’s much harder now, because the competition is worldwide. It’s not just in our little city here, it’s all over. ... And when you go to YouTube and you see how some artists have over 77 zillion hits ... And others have 12, 14, it’s like everyone’s looking for that viral effect, but it’s not that easy. Luck has to be on your side, talent has to be on your side, and above all, timing. So unless an artist is really passionate about what they’re doing, and believe in what they’re doing, I wouldn’t even attempt to become an artist in today’s environment—a professional artist, that is.

The Argonaut: Philanthropy is a huge part of what you do. Why have you kept philanthropy such a major part of your life as an artist? Alpert: I didn’t want to buy a Van Gogh painting or a Monet or Picasso and hang it on my wall for my own satisfaction. I wanted to do something that I felt was smart to do with my money to help the arts survive. I felt that it was important for me to give back. I had this opportunity when I was 8 years old. … I had a chance to pick up a trumpet that was on a table in my grammar school. When I picked it up… I couldn’t make a sound out of it to begin with. But when I did, it was talking for me, because I had a hard time expressing myself, and the horn has been a good friend of mine, and it obviously changed my life. I feel like kids need to have this opportunity at an early age. If they want to paint, sculpt, write music, poetry, it doesn’t really matter, as long as they get their creativity juices out, I think it’s an important ingredient to become a total human being. They don’t have to be a professional, but I think just having that experience is worthwhile. The Argonaut: What do you think needs to be improved or enhanced in our music education system? Alpert: It needs to be funded properly. It needs to have people that are passionate about spreading the word and starting at an early age. That’s why I’m so excited about having kids have this experience, because they’ll pass it on and they’ll encourage others when they grow up and hopefully, be able to do something similar to what I’m doing and maybe on a different scale. Music is an important ingredient in everyone’s life. Can you imagine music without borders? I think what’s so beautiful now is happening because of the internet, we’re seeing what’s happening all over the world with different types of sounds and music and art. It’s all kind of getting together. This is why we have this opportunity to make this a really special world that we’re living in, and I think we need an ethical revolution. There are a lot of problems that could be solved with just honest folks getting together. The Argonaut: Why is philanthropy important in 2019 versus previous years? Alpert: I think some crazy stuff is happening in this country and in the world and… that’s the way I feel and why I do my part—my little part—in helping people to understand how vital the arts are


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to what we do as a society and as human beings. … Our politicians don’t seem to get it. They don’t seem to get the beauty of art and the force of it and what it means to our society. This country was started by creative people. We have so many reasons why we need to keep creativity alive. We have to not just talk about it; we have to put our money where it belongs. And starting with young kids, I think, is a perfect way to get it rolling. The Argonaut: Looking back at 25 years of the Herb Alpert Award in the Arts, what are you most proud of? Alpert: That I’m able to do it. I’m proud that my trumpet took me a long ways, and it’s not only fed me, but it’s helping to feed some great artists that deserve to be heard. Visit herbalpertfoundation.org to learn more about the foundation or herbalpertawards. org to read about this year’s winners of the Herb Alpert Award in the Arts.

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May 16, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 35


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PAGE 36 THE ARGONAUT May 16, 2019


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