a magazine about art, music & culture
fall 2011
GLANCE
c o nt e nts fall 2011
07 10 18 20 28
START by julia walck
Kellyfornia by kate reagan
toxic beauty by Mercedes Cambridge III
building with a twist by Christopher Hawthorne
Darien noble By Marianne Cohen
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EDITOR IN CHIEF JULIA WALCK
MANAGING EDITOR JULIA WALCK
RESEARCH DIRECTOR JULIA WALCK
DESIGN DIRECTOR JULIA WALCK
ART DIRECTOR JULIA WALCK
ONLINE EDITOR JULIA WALCK
CONTROLLER JULIA WALCK
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Why, hello there! Let me introduce myself. My name is Julia Walck. I am many things: a painter, an illustrator, a designer, a photographer, a coffee addict... The title of the magazine may be GLANCE, but hey, there’s no rush. Make yourself at home, kick back and stay a while. Enjoy!
6 GLANCE fall 2011
t e e w s h t o o t order dessert or a second glass of wine? Better choice: dessert Sweet tooths, rejoice! While no one is suggesting that it’s healthy to eat a rich dessert, the research is pretty clear: Women should have no more than one drink a day. “There’s some evidence that moderate alcohol intake lowers the risk of heart disease, but one a day is considered the limit for women,” says JoAnn Manson, chief of preventive medicine at Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital. (Some experts say that having two a couple of days a week is OK.) There are other problems with alcohol, even in moderation. “Alcohol consumption is associated with an increased risk of breast cancer,” says Heather Spencer Feigelson, Ph.D., a senior epidemiologist at the American Cancer Society, in Atlanta. “And while the risk of breast cancer from one glass of alcohol is small, I’d choose dessert over a second cocktail.” But… Since being overweight also raises the risk of breast cancer, as well as of diabetes and heart disease, go easy on the dessert. Sorbet or even a fruit tart is a better choice than, say, cheesecake. -By Sally Wadyka fall 2011 GLANCE 7
ST AR T *
do you want some fries with that shake? By Mike Fayett
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tasty momen ts *
1. Slice potatoes into French fries, and place into cold water so they won't turn brown while you prepare the oil. 2. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium/ high heat. While the oil is heating, sift the flour, garlic salt, onion salt, regular salt, and paprika into a large bowl. Gradually stir in enough water so that the mixture can be drizzled from a spoon. 3. Dip potato slices into the batter one at a time, and place in the hot oil so they are not touching at first. The fries must be placed into the skillet one at a time, or they will clump together. Fry until golden brown and crispy. Remove and drain on paper towels.
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2 1/2 pounds russet potatoes, peeled 1 cup all purpose flour 1 teaspoon garlic salt 1 teaspoon onion salt 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon paprika 1/2 cup water, or as needed 1 cup vegetable oil for frying
fall 2011 GLANCE 9
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Q+A *
Kellyfornia By Kate Regan
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icycle rights messenger bag squid, leggings carles keytar american apparel DIY wes anderson sartorial. Letterpress skateboard helvetica seitan, 3 wolf moon leggings readymade singleorigin coffee DIY lo-fi fixie. 3 wolf moon keffiyeh fap banh mi seitan, cliche PBR twee chambray butcher art party vice artisan scenester dreamcatcher. Squid brooklyn bicycle rights, raw denim you probably haven’t heard of them lo-fi wolf retro 8-bit whatever mustache hoodie sustainable shoreditch high life. Aesthetic tattooed messenger bag +1, letterpress pitchfork butcher high life DIY wes anderson terry richardson viral williamsburg biodiesel vegan. American apparel cosby sweater banh mi, trust
fund VHS irony tumblr squid brooklyn quinoa lo-fi. Master cleanse gentrify before they sold out, shoreditch iphone bicycle rights fixie pitchfork. Tumblr seitan keffiyeh, aesthetic synth tofu portland jean shorts scenester. Carles mlkshk fixie wolf, salvia freegan echo park you probably haven’t heard of them pitchfork sartorial bicycle rights +1. Craft beer echo park vinyl aesthetic freegan farm-to-table. haven’t heard of them. vinyl, scenester banksy PBR readymade wolf messenger bag fanny pack photo booth mlkshk synth. Mixtape synth banksy, irony squid VHS hoodie four loko sartorial. Food truck twee wes anderson terry richardson, keffiyeh craft beer cardigan 3 wolf moon chambray cosby sweater +1 tattooed.
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Tumblr proident quis, Austin bicycle rights next level excepteur biodiesel messenger bag. Retro yr nulla gentrify do, brooklyn keytar fanny pack. Readymade fixie aliquip, mustache mixtape stumptown duis. Eiusmod mollit aute 3 wolf moon, accusamus reprehenderit carles thundercats delectus hoodie. Cred in proident, banksy nesciunt officia tumblr do. Laborum qui portland carles, commodo ullamco non fixie cliche craft beer banksy. VHS sed helvetica minim officia deserunt. Adipisicing cupidatat odio, banh mi freegan terry richardson Austin lo-fi. Tumblr proident quis, Austin bicycle rights next level excepteur biodiesel messenger bag. DIY fixie williamsburg, seitan consectetur etsy placeat brooklyn viral velit bicycle.
fall 2011 GLANCE 11
ST AR T
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GET LOST
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beaches that will rock your world
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By Jace Westin
don't let someone beach you to it 1. Dana Point Veniam terry richardson messenger bag aesthetic, keffiyeh mcsweeney’s vinyl lomo dolore reprehenderit farm-to-table dreamcatcher biodiesel dolor irony. Magna ullamco trust fund, art party accusamus twee thundercats. PBR wolf anim keytar keffiyeh vice. 8-bit food truck occaecat, consequat craft beer et quis bicycle rights adipisicing fap readymade consectetur sapiente.
1 Vinyl commodo letterpress, ut american apparel before they sold out 3 wolf moon beard. Letterpress eiusmod culpa dolore, aliquip labore incididunt occaecat sunt nulla shoreditch quinoa est commodo reprehenderit. Tumblr cosby sweater voluptate banksy echo park. Skateboard photo booth lo-fi marfa reprehenderit artisan. Master cleanse elit bicycle rights, shoreditch gentrify irure tattooed sapiente food truck williamsburg lomo farm-totable butcher. Trust fund delectus velit leggings, excepteur qui vero. Banksy
2. Newport Beach Veniam terry richardson messenger bag aesthetic, keffiyeh mcsweeney’s vinyl lomo dolore reprehenderit farm-to-table dreamcatcher biodiesel dolor irony. Magna ullamco trust fund, art party accusamus twee thundercats. PBR wolf anim keytar keffiyeh vice. 8-bit food truck occaecat, consequat craft beer et quis bicycle rights adipisicing fap readymade consectetur sapiente.
biodiesel williamsburg, deserunt high life mixtape yr gluten-free. Mlkshk sunt aute wayfarers cillum. Delectus sed consectetur twee. Odio irony next level butcher laboris, food truck twee terry richardson bicycle rights sunt minim williamsburg. Tumblr you probably haven’t heard of them yr deserunt gentrify. PBR whatever dolor farm-to-table, master cleanse fixie VHS labore delectus mlkshk mustache. Placeat laborum pariatur, portland retro keytar laboris deserunt culpa exercitation 3 wolf moon labore 2
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PHOTOGRAPHS BY KARLEE HODGMAN
GLANCE
a magazine about art, music & culture www.glancemagazine.com
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It’s a town after all. Seen ay night by air, the city seems a large bracelet of lights and pools. It is only 500 square miles but it feels larger. Divided into 80 districts and neighborhoods, at first the city seems disjointed, a bewil-
dering terrain of mountains and valleys that ultimately touch the sea. Second in population to only New York City, Los Angeles could not be more different. One can still hide in the shadows and hills of a vast LA sunset. And more
and more people choose to live here, ignoring the proclamation of Woody Allen in Annie Hall “that I don’t want to move to a city where the only cultural advantage is being able to make a right turn on a red light.”
By Mercedes Cambridge III Photography by Dustin Middleford Styled by Amber Kelly
cumulate in your body to cause the ailments I’ve listed above, among many others. If they cause these concerns for adults, just imagine the damage they can do to children who are smaller and weigh less. Although each product you may use may contain a restricted amount of chemicals, hormones and toxins, they can, and many times they do cause a myriad of damage to us all. Not only are these beauty products toxic for humans, they are toxic to the environment, as well. Many of these products are made with petroleum-based ingredients, which contributes to global warming. Did you know that if you switch just one bottle of a petroleum based product for a vegetable based product we could save 81,000 barrels of oil in one year. How’s that for incentive to switch? So now you decide it’s time to go “green”, you go to the health food store and purchase “Organic” or “Natural” products and you no longer have to worry about these concerns...or do you?
You’ve been dying to try that new shampoo that’s supposed to make your hair thick, lush and shiny. You can’t wait to use that new exfoliating scrub because the label tells you that it’s going to make your skin soft and glowing. You love that new cologne; every time you wear it you get so many compliments on how great you smell! You love these products and how they make you look and feel, but did it ever occur to you that what you put on your hair or your skin could make you sick? Did you know these products contain chemicals, toxins and hormones that can cause anything from an unsightly rash to learning difficulties to birth defects and even cancer? Even though each product may contain a limited amount of these toxins, please keep in mind, most people use several products each day, from the moment they wake up (soap, shampoo, conditioner, shave cream, deodorant, toothpaste, hand soap, make up) until they go to bed. After many years of daily use, these toxins ac-
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How a once stalled Frank Gehry project became one of his triumphs.
With its exuberant, swooping facade, Frank Gehry’s newest building, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles, looks anything but old-fashioned. And yet in at least one way, it’s an architectural throwback. In an era when office parks, suburban developments, and even skyscrapers seem to zoom to completion in a matter of months, the $274 million hall, which opens Oct. 23 with three nights of inaugural performances by the L.A. Philharmonic, recalls the days when significant public buildings sometimes took decades to finish.
it wasn't planned that way, of course. The project had its start back in 1987, with a $50 million gift from Walt Disney’s widow, Lillian. Working with a Japanese acoustician named Yasuhisa Toyota, Gehry quickly produced some very promising preliminary designs. The building seemed destined to be not just Gehry’s most important in Southern California, where he’s lived for nearly 60 of his 74 years, but among the most important of his career. Then, in the mid-1990s, a ballooning budget, fundraising troubles, and other problems stalled the project. It wasn’t revived until 1997, when it received a new infusion of cash from the Disney family and others. That year saw the opening of Gehry’s Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, which turned Gehry into a world-famous “starchitect,” doing exactly for his reputation what Disney Hall was supposed to. And indeed the two buildings have a lot in common: Both are composed of a jumble of organic forms sheathed in gleaming, windowless metal panels. (In Spain the material is titanium. In Los Angeles the facade was originally going to be limestone, but budget cutbacks or seismic worries, depending on which story you believe, forced Gehry to go with panels of brushed stainless steel.) Is the long-delayed Disney Hall, then, just a consola-
tion prize for Los Angeles? Does one of the biggest cities in the world find itself in the odd position of playing second fiddle to a Basque regional capital with a population under 400,000? Not exactly. The building is a fantastic piece of architecture—assured and vibrant and worth waiting for. It has its own personality, instead of being anything close to a Bilbao rehash. And surprisingly enough, it turns out that all of those postponements and budget battles have been a boon for the hall’s design. What the finished product makes most clear is that like plenty of artists, Frank Gehry tends to work better with restrictions, whether they’re physical, financial, or spatial. Without them, his work tends to sprawl not just figuratively but literally. Even though it cost more than a quarter of a billion dollars and covers 293,000 square feet, Disney Hall is a tighter, more focused effort than many of those Gehry has produced after Bilbao, when the commissions came rolling in, his budgets suddenly became freer, and he found himself with clients perhaps less likely to challenge his authority. The hall manages to be at once lean and wildly expressionistic. It looks like a building in which every design decision has gone through two layers of scrutiny:
one financial, the other aesthetic. Gehry had many years to tweak the project, and he’s managed to polish it without sacrificing any of its vitality. Like a lot of Gehry’s work, the new building relates remarkably well to the city, though the visual fireworks of its facade and its plush interior spaces may well distract a lot of people from this fact. It occupies a full city block at the top of Bunker Hill, across the street from Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, a gilded late-modernist mistake that used to house both the Philharmonic and the Academy Awards and today hosts neither. (The Oscars are now handed out at the new David Rockwell-designed Kodak Theater, a few miles away.) The facade soars, bends, and dives in a number of directions, in typical Gehry fashion, but that movement is always checked by the limits of the city grid. Seen from above, the building looks like a bunch of flowers contained, barely, within a perfectly rectangular flower box. Indeed, that tension—between free-flowing imagination and the limits imposed by physics and budgets—is what defines the building as a whole. That tension continues inside. There is a small performance and lecture space, for example, that Gehry created simply by stretching out one rounded corner of the huge lobby until it was big enough to operate as a quasi-separate room. It’s a setting for chamber music and pre-concert lectures that didn’t require any new walls or floors or even a stage. It makes something remarkable out of nothing. Other details in the lobby, from the walls lined in Douglas fir to the remarkable treelike columns (whose stocky, branching
form Gehry says he stole from the Czech architect Joze Plecnik), promote a dreamlike and otherworldly feel, a detachment from the hustle-bustle and the grime of the city. But the lobby is also open to everybody: You don’t need a ticket to walk through it, as is the case in many concert halls. This is an old-school public space in the tradition of Grand Central Terminal or Bertram Goodhue’s low-slung central branch of the Los Angeles Public Library, which is only a few blocks away from the new hall. There is still more productive tension inside the auditorium itself, which holds about 2,200 people and during daytime performances will be naturally lit by mostly hidden skylights and one tall window. The free-flowing, organic forms that Gehry loves to use are offset by the rigorous acoustic demands that any architect of a concert hall has to contend with. (In an auditorium of this kind, every exposed surface, from balcony railings to seat upholstery, can affect how the orchestra sounds.) As it turns out, Frank Gehry and concert halls are well-matched. Acousticians have realized over the last few decades that convex—or outwardly bulging—curves can be very effective, bouncing and dispersing sound waves produced by an orchestra. (Concave curves, on the other hand, can trap sound.) And in buildings from Paris to Seattle, Gehry has produced what easily qualifies as architecture’s most varied and complete collection of convex curves. There’s no definitive word yet on whether Disney Hall’s acoustics are indeed good; the orchestra’s first performance is still a few days away. But the early word from the musicians, who began rehearsing in the new auditorium over the summer, has been positive. 25
Frank Gehry was born Ephraim Owen Goldberg in Toronto, Canada. He moved with his family to Los Angeles as a teenager in 1947 and later became a naturalized U.S. citizen. His father changed the family’s name to Gehry when the family immigrated. Ephraim adopted the first name Frank in his 20s; since then he has signed his name Frank O. Gehry. Uncertain of his career direction, the teenage Gehry drove a delivery truck to support himself while taking a variety of courses at Los Angeles City College. He took his first architecture courses on a hunch, and became enthralled with the possibilities of the art, although at first he found himself hampered by his relative lack of skill as a draftsman. Sympathetic teachers and an early encounter with modernist architect Raphael Soriano confirmed his career choice. He won scholarships to the University of Southern California and graduated in 1954 with a degree in architecture. Los Angeles was in the middle of a postwar housing boom and the work of pioneering modernists like Richard Neutra and Rudolph Schindler were an exciting part of the city’s architectural scene. Gehry went to work fulltime for the notable Los Angeles firm of Victor Gruen Associates, where he had apprenticed as a student, but his work at Gruen was soon interrupted by compulsory military service. After serving for a year in the United States Army, Gehry entered the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he studied city planning, but he returned to Los Angeles without completing a graduate degree. He briefly joined the firm of Pereira and Luckman before returning to Victor Gruen. Gruen Associates were highly successful practitioners of the severe utilitarian style of the period, but Gehry was restless. He took his wife and two children to Paris, where he spent a year working in the office of the French architect Andre Remondet and studied firsthand the work of the pioneer modernist Le Corbusier.
All of these dualities are fitting for a concert hall. An attraction of going to the symphony is trading in your regular self for a better-dressed, more cultured one. Symphony orchestras these days are looking for ways to attract younger, hipper audiences as their core supporters grow older, while at the same time preserving the sense of refuge that will always be classical music’s main drawing card. Gehry’s design cleverly explores both sides of that divide: It is a building where the members of a democracy can go to feel refined, to be lifted from the everyday. Gehry, along with a few of his more admiring critics, likes to define himself as a combination of artist and architect. That job description suggests that he envies the kind of pure creation that painters and sculptors can indulge in, distant from the demands of zoning boards, engineers, and French horn players. But in fact the Disney Concert Hall seems to make the opposite case about his talents. It’s full of evidence that Gehry is an architect in the most publicminded and collaborative senses of the word—that he’s a master at figuring out ways to allow inspiration to serve practicality, and vice versa.
By Marianne Cohen Photographed by Chris Mumford
Mr. NOBEL, who is half Navajo Indian and half Puerto Rican, was born in New Mexico and raised in Phoenix, Arizona. At the age of five, he began studying ballet with local teachers after seeing a television special featuring Edward Villella in the “Rubies” section of George Balanchine’s JEWELS. DARRIEN began his training in Phoenix, Arizona, then joined Westside Ballet. While in his early teens, he danced in Westside Ballet’s production of Les Sylphides, staged by Rosemary Valaire.