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TONY COKES AT BEYOND BAROQUE

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WESTSIDE STORIES

WESTSIDE STORIES

Built in 1906, the former Venice City Hall has since 1980 been home to Beyond Baroque. Emerging from the Venice Beat scene as an experimental zine run from a storefront by founder George Drury Smith, Beyond Baroque has evolved into a leading literary arts organisation, providing workshops, readings, film screenings, a publishing imprint and a specialist bookstore boasting 40,000 volumes, including rare and small press publications. It has hosted everything from early Mike Kelley performances to readings by Amanda Gorman, Allen Ginsberg, Bob Flanagan, Amiri Baraka and countless more.

“Presenting Tony Cokes’s work here is about building upon the legacy of Beyond Baroque as a beacon for beat poetry and punk. The musicality and rhythm of Cokes’s work, and its connection to vernacular forms of music and spoken word, will resonate in Beyond Baroque’s theatre.

The initial reason I wanted to include Cokes in the program was because of a series of video works he showed a few years ago at Hannah Hoffman that reflected on the legacy of Paul Revere Williams: a Black architect who helped design Black neighborhoods in Los Angeles, like Pueblo del Rio, as well as commissions for Hollywood stars. I wanted to acknowledge the fate of nearby Black communities like the Belmar Neighborhood, which the City of Santa Monica literally set on fire in 1950 to make way for development, and the Oakwood community in Venice Beach, the only remaining Black community in Southern California within a mile of the beach, which has also been threatened by development.

But actually, we’re not showing those works about Williams, but instead, a more recent commission that explores the relationship between art and real estate through the 1988 Tompkins Square Park Riot, a piece paying homage to Okwui Enwezor, and a piece about the labor of mourning. I wanted to do something that wasn’t the expected thing. That desire runs throughout the program: working with perhaps not iconically ‘LA artists’, and homes that people are not necessarily familiar with, creating a sense of displacement. I want to speak to the unease of this place as a paradise. When the playwright Bertolt Brecht moved to Santa Monica in the 1940s, he complained that it was too beautiful to make any work here. I want ‘Against the Edge’ to convey some of that disquiet.”

With his wife Katia and children, the Nobel Prize-winning author Thomas Mann moved to Los Angeles via Princeton in 1941, having fled Nazism in his home country. Before commissioning his new home in Santa Monica, Mann toured California modernist buildings in 1938 with Richard Neutra, ultimately selecting the Berlin-born, German-Jewish architect Julius Ralph Davidson, who designed some of the first Case Study Houses. The Manns stayed at the house until 1952, Thomas writing his two last novels here, before McCarthyism drove them back to Europe. Since 2016, it has been a residency centre.

“There are few threads that come together in presenting Nicola L.’s work at the Thomas Mann House. Because Nicola L.’s work often brought sexuality to the fore—with her penetrable, vinyl sculptures pointing to the erotic body, and the fetish—one is about queering the space, to speak to Mann’s own complex, closeted homosexuality, which is still very controversial. You find an echo of this in the clear contrast between the house’s California modernist ‘outside’ and its interior, which the Manns furnished in a very traditional, bourgeois, Central European style that really offended the house’s architect.

Nicola L.’s work was also confronting modern architecture as a male-driven language driven by a hegemony of vision, and its almost sterile lack of the sensual (think of how Le Corbusier or Adolf Loos placed sinks right at the entrance of certain villas, demanding you to wash your hands). Nicola L. really rubbed against this, her art pointing to an architecture of sensuality and of community, works that could be felt and smelt and heard.

The work we’re installing at the House is one of Nicola L.’s fabric banners, which she first produced for the 1968 Student Revolt in Paris. It proclaims Nous Voulons Entendre, or ‘We Want to Hear’, but the verb ‘entendre’ can also mean ‘to sound’, or ‘to understand’, which interests me.

As well as highlighting the sensory in relation to modernism, this slogan and its political context connects to a different moment of protest: the anti-fascist radio broadcasts which Thomas Mann recorded in his office in this house, broadcast by the BBC broadcast to Nazi Germany from 1940—43. Radio transmission also brings us back to the John Cage staged on the Pier.”

The ‘demonstration house’ for the planned Miramar Estates, the Spanish-style Villa Aurora was completed in 1928, with luxury features like electric garage doors and a pipe organ to accompany movie screenings. Following the Wall Street Crash, it failed to sell and fell vacant in 1939. In 1943, it was acquired by Lion Feuchtwanger, author of Jew Süß (1925) and his wife, Marta. With Salka and Berthold Viertel’s nearby home, the Villa became a meeting point for émigrés like Bertolt Brecht, Alma Mahler and Arnold Schoenberg. After Lion Feuchtwanger’s death in 1995, it became a residency for artists.

“Lion and Marta Feuchtwanger arrived in Los Angeles in 1941. They bought this place in 1943. It cost $9,000, which was a small sum even then. In Marta’s oral history, the house was so run-down that the couple had to spend the first night in sleeping bags in the garden.

By placing Kelly Akashi’s work here, I wanted to explore the fact that just a few months after the Feuchtwangers arrived here with all their support, Executive Order 9066 was issued, forcing Japanese-Americans into internment camps. So almost the same fate the Feuchtwanglers were escaping in Europe was happening in their ref uge. Many of the Japanese-Americans interned were from Santa Monica and Venice. Akashi’s own father and grandparents had to leave Boyle Heights to be interned at Poston Internment Camp in Arizona.

There’s this overarching narrative that is emerging with the work at Del Vaz that connects here. With shows like ‘Shell’ with Heidi Bucher

(who installed her “Bodyshells” sculptures on Venice Beach in 1972), and others. I was really looking at the protective nature of the shelter, whereas now I want to look at the precarity of place and space and shelter. The work by Julie Becker that will be shown at Del Vaz as part of the program really speaks to this idea too of the precarity, or faultiness, of the “home” in Los Angeles. I think ‘faultiness’ is a good word to use for this idea in LA, where we are literally on a fault line.”

It was during the summer of 2020 that film writer and director Jane Chow was scrolling through the resources at Free the Work, film director Alma Har’el’s talent discovery platform. After a year spent directing commercials and music videos, Chow was eager for opportunities that would allow her to reprioritize her own narrative projects, and her attention was caught by a call for entries for the Deutsche Bank Frieze Los Angeles Film Award. While Chow had never applied for this kind of program before, she was drawn to the Fellowship’s emphasis on professional mentorship and creative support alongside the development of a 3–4 minute short film. “Honestly, I couldn’t have asked for a better first program,” says Chow.

Launched in 2019 to coincide with the inaugural Frieze Los Angeles and driven by a commitment to inclusivity, the Deutsche Bank Frieze Los Angeles Film Award brings together ten shortlisted Fellows to participate in a four-month intensive filmmaking course led by the award-winning, nonprofit Ghetto Film School (GFS), with support from the production company FIFTH SEASON (formerly Endeavor Content). Guided by a thematic prompt, the Fellows develop their projects while learning about the ins and outs of film production from guest speakers representing all facets of the industry, whether cinematographers, writers, producers or executives. The Fellowship ends with a ceremony for the Fellows and their films during Frieze Week, and the announcement of the US$10,000 prizewinner, picked by a jury of esteemed artists and cultural workers. In the past, jurors have included internationally renowned curators Christine Y. Kim and Hamza Walker, acclaimed artist Kehinde Wiley and producer Alana Mayo, a long-time collaborator with Michael B. Jordan and now head of Orion Pictures, which oversaw Billy Porter’s directorial debut.

Brooklyn-born Timothy Offor participated in the first iteration of the Fellowship, applying on a whim following the recommendation of a friend. Like Chow, he viewed it as an opportunity for a change of pace from the freelance grind, where he took on editing and directing gigs, amongst other things. In addition to the sessions at art institutions like the Hammer Museum and the Underground Museum, Offor says he appreciated the

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