Category: Obama

Yo-Yo Ma, Barbara Cook tapped for Kennedy Center Honors

September 7, 2011 |  8:53 am

Yo Yo Ma
The 34th annual Kennedy Center Honors have announced this year's honorees and as always, arts A-listers will share the evening with pop culture icons. The Dec. 4 ceremony at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts will celebrate singer Barbara Cook, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, saxophonist and composer Sonny Rollins, singer and songwriter Neil Diamond and actress Meryl Streep.

President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama will be seated with the honorees during the televised ceremony, traditionally a star-laden evening of colorful speeches and performances.

“This year, the Kennedy Center celebrates its 40th anniversary by selecting five extraordinary
individuals whose collective artistry has contributed significantly to the cultural life of our nation and
the world,” said Kennedy Center Chairman David M. Rubenstein.

“With her sublime voice and rich performances, Barbara Cook has defined all that is best and brightest in the Great American Songbook. Neil Diamond’s songwriting genius has created one of the most enduring catalogs of American popular music and his live performances have captivated audiences for five decades.

"Yo-Yo Ma’s sterling musicianship makes him one of the most versatile and popular classical music performers in the world and his Silk Road Project has inspired students across the world to love and honor music. Saxophonist Sonny Rollins’ masterful improvisation and powerful presence have infused the truly American art form of jazz with passion and energy. The sheer brilliance and breadth of Meryl Streep’s performances count as one of the most exhilarating cultural spectacles of our time.”

Southern California audiences will have a chance to see Rollins this month at UCLA Live (Sept. 22) and Segerstrom Hall (Sept. 25). Barbara Cook will return to the L.A. area in May for a performance at the Valley Performing Arts Center.

-- Sherry Stern

Photo: Yo-Yo-Ma playing with the Silk Road Ensemble at Walt Disney Concert Hall in April. Credit: Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times

 

Monster Mash: Ennis House sold to Ron Burkle; Egypt's antiquities chief is dismissed

July 18, 2011 |  7:50 am

Ennis

Sold: Billionaire Ron Burkle has acquired Frank Lloyd Wright's Ennis House in Los Feliz for $4.5 million, a substantial discount. (Los Angeles Times)

Ousted: Zahi Hawass, Egypt's head of antiquities, was dismissed Sunday in connection with accusations that he had been too close to the regime of ousted President Hosni Mubarak. (Associated Press)

Moment in history: President Obama recently met with Ruby Bridges, who was the subject of Norman Rockwell's painting "The Problem We All Live With," which recently went on display at the White House. (ABC News)

Public art: The city of West Hollywood is planning to inaugurate a new series of public sculptures along the median of Santa Monica Boulevard. (WeHo News)

Sports icon: A French painter created a portrait of tennis star Roger Federer in four minutes. (MSNBC)

Whodunit: Museums across the country are hosting scavenger hunts revolving around fictional mysteries. (Associated Press)

Battle royale: Joanna Lumley and Robert Lindsay will star in a West End production of "The Lion in Winter." (Variety)

Halted: Two acts were recently denied visas to enter Canada for the Vancouver Folk Festival. (The Globe and Mail)

Also in the L.A. Times: Theater critic Charles McNulty reviews "The Expert at the Card Table" at the Broad Stage's Edye.

-- David Ng

Photo: The Ennis House, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Credit: Liz O. Baylen / Los Angeles Times


Monster Mash: Obama borrows Rockwell painting; with 'gay' word change, canceled opera is back on

July 7, 2011 |  6:42 am

Rockwell

Iconic artist: President Obama is borrowing a painting from the Norman Rockwell Museum that depicts racial integration. The work, titled "The Problem We All Live With," will hang outside the Oval Office through Oct. 31. (Berkshire Eagle)

Show goes on: An opera for kids by the creator of "Billy Elliot " that was canceled is back on after the writer agrees to change the word "queer" to "gay." (BBC News)

In the spotlight: Playwright Christopher Hampton will be honored next season at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis with a festival of his stage work. (Minneapolis Star-Tribune)

Follow that cab: Police investigating the theft of a Picasso sketch from a San Francisco art gallery are hoping to find clues in an impounded taxi that was used as the getaway vehicle. (Reuters)

Keeping busy: Recently released artist Ai Weiwei is believed to be back at work, though he still has not spoken to the press about his time in detention. (New York Times)

Entering the fray: The Diocese of Orange may make a bid for the bankrupt Crystal Cathedral. (Los Angeles Times)

Hiatus: Starting Thursday, Daniel Radcliffe will take a mini-break from Broadway's "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" to promote the new "Harry Potter" movie. (Playbill)

Animal cruelty? The Royal Shakespeare Company has removed a scene showing the mutilation of a dead rabbit from its production of "As You Like It" that is being performed this summer in New York. (Wall Street Journal)

Looking ahead: New York City Opera's first season away from Lincoln Center will include productions at venues around the city. (New York Times)

Broadway bound? A revival of "Jesus Christ Superstar" from Canada appears to be a likely candidate for a Broadway transfer. (New York Post)

Hard times: The oldest continuously operating theater in Boston is going dark. (Boston Globe)

A worthy cause: Works by Andy Warhol and Alexander Calder will be sold at a Sotheby's charity auction in November for children orphaned and otherwise vulnerable in Africa. (Reuters)

Also in the L.A. Times: A new gallery exhibition titled "Super 8" focuses on the world of video art.

-- David Ng

Photo: Norman Rockwell's "The Problem We All Live With." Credit: Norman Rockwell Museum

The writer agreed to change the word to "gay" after a primary school removed 300 children from the community show.

The cancellation sparked accusations of homophobia but Bay Primary school has now said it is happy with the language.

Beached, commissioned by Opera North, will take place, as planned, in Bridlington on 15 July.

The school had complained about the lines: "Of course I'm queer/That's why I left here/So if you infer/That I prefer/A lad to a lass/And I'm working class/I'd have to concur."

Hall told BBC News: "I agreed to change "queer" to "gay" as to me they are synonymous. I would have done this months ago if asked."

The contested lines have now been changed to: "Of course I'm gay/That's why I went away/So if you infer/That I prefer/A lad to a lass/And him working class/I'd have to concur."

'Intense negotiations'

In a joint statement, East Riding of Yorkshire Council and Bay Primary said the school would take part now that the libretto was "an age appropriate text".

They said they were "delighted" that the author had "addressed the points raised by the school".

The council, the school and Opera North all denied being motivated by homophobia.

They said they had never "expressed any concern over the inclusion of a gay character, only some of the language and tone around the character's identity", the statement said.

Playwright Lee Hall and Opera North director Richard Mantle joined BBC Breakfast to discuss the controversy

"The writer has now addressed this," it added.

But in his own statement, Hall said the school had "backed down".

"This is a real victory for people speaking up against discrimination.

"It had been an intractable situation for weeks and the school and Opera North were given no other option but to take a U-turn on their discriminatory position.

"It's clearly a victory for good sense. We cannot silence gay people or any minorities. It's a real victory for collective action."

"They tried to censor me and they failed," he added.

Beached tells the story of a single father trying and failing to have a quiet day at Bridlington beach.

Opera North, which has had a two-year residency in the town, said "intense negotiations" had been taking place since the performance was called off on Friday.

"We have been at pains to work closely with the writers at all times, and have supported their rights of artistic expression throughout," a statement from the Leeds-based company said.

"We have also worked equally hard to ensure that the schools and community groups involved in the project have positive feelings of ownership and identity within the production."

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Monster Mash: Obama speaks at Pritzker ceremony; Julie Taymor said to be owed six months' pay

June 3, 2011 |  8:10 am

Obama

Executive speech: President Obama spoke Thursday evening at a Washington event presenting the 2011 Pritzker Architecture Prize to Eduardo Souto de Moura of Portugal. (Associated Press)

Money due? Producers of Broadway's "Spider-Man" are said to owe ousted director Julie Taymor six months' pay. (Daily Beast)

Crackdown: A group of artists in Beijing were detained by Chinese officials after a show of support for imprisoned artist Ai Weiwei. (Reuters)

Hard times: The financially troubled New York City Opera is said to be slashing its budget by half. (Parterre Box)

Making do: The Los Angeles County Museum of Art will have to improvise after giving up on withheld art loans from Russia for its upcoming exhibition "Gifts of the Sultans." (Los Angeles Times)

Celebrity concert: Tony Bennett will perform at the Metropolitan Opera in New York in September to celebrate his 85th birthday. (New York Times)

I see you: A music and pop culture museum in Seattle is hosting an exhibition devoted to the movie "Avatar." (Associated Press, via Washington Post)

Closed: A museum at the former Nazi death camp in Sobibor, Poland, has shut down due to lack of funding. (Jewish Chronicle)

Also in the L.A. Times: Theater critic Charles McNulty reviews "Extraordinary Chambers" at the Geffen Playhouse.

 -- David Ng

Photo: President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama at the Pritzker Prize ceremony in Washington. Credit: Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images

The word on Alexander Hamilton from Lin-Manuel Miranda [Video]

April 11, 2011 | 11:35 am

The actor, playwright and all-around talent Lin-Manuel Miranda did this hip-hop take on Alexander Hamilton at the White House in 2009. Why are we showing it today? Miranda's "Hamilton Mixtape" at President Obama's Poetry Jam is part of "Rediscovering Alexander Hamilton," a modern bio-drama about the Founding Father premiering Monday night on public television.

Read more about "Rediscovering Alexander Hamilton."

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-- Sherry Stern

 

Streep, James Taylor, Quincy Jones, Sonny Rollins, Van Cliburn, Philip Roth among national arts and humanities medalists

March 1, 2011 |  1:45 pm

MarkdiSuveroWallyJ.Skalij Actor Meryl Streep,  musicians Van Cliburn, Quincy Jones, Sonny Rollins and James Taylor and “To Kill a Mockingbird” author Harper Lee are the household names among this year’s winners of the National Medal of Arts, a career-achievement award that President Obama will confer Wednesday in a ceremony at the White House.

Those known more to aficionados are Abstract Expressionist sculptor Mark di Suvero (pictured); Robert Brustein, the theater critic and producer who founded two leading New England stage companies, the Yale Repertory Theatre  and American Repertory Theatre; and Donald Hall, who was poet laureate in 2006-07. Jacobs Pillow Dance Festival in the rustic Berkshires of Western Massachusetts was honored as an arts institution.

Also announced were the National Humanities Medals, with authors Philip Roth and Joyce Carol Oates as the best-known names. Other honorees are poet/novelist/conservationist Wendell E. Berry;  publisher Daniel Aaron, founder of the Library of America; historians Bernard Bailyn and Gordon Wood; scholars Jacques Barzun of Columbia and Stanley Nider Katz of Princeton; literary critic Robert Gonzalez Echevarria;  and biographer and literary critic Arnold Rampersad.

Roth and Jones become double-dippers, the novelist having won the National Medal of Arts in 1998, while the composer-producer received the National Humanities Medal in 2000.

The National Endowment for the Arts manages the arts medals, while the National Endowment for the Humanities manages the humanities medals.

The White House said that Lee, Streep, Aaron and Barzun are not expected to attend the ceremony, which will be streamed live at 10:45 a.m. Pacific time at www.whitehouse.gov/live.

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-- Mike Boehm

Photo: Mark di Suvero at L.A. Louver Gallery in 2008. Credit: Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times

Shepard Fairey to settle 'Hope' poster case with Associated Press

January 12, 2011 |  9:46 am

Hope

Artist Shepard Fairey and the Associated Press confirmed Wednesday that they are settling out of court their legal case that involves Fairey's "Hope" poster depicting then-Sen. Barack Obama. But a lawyer for the AP added that the news organization is still pursuing its case against Obey Clothing, in which Fairey is a partner and that has reproduced the image on various items of clothing.

Fairey's poster of Obama was inspired by a photograph taken by an AP freelancer in 2006. The AP subsequently accused the Los Angeles artist of copyright infringement, with Fairey maintaining that it falls under fair-use laws.

A settlement means that the March trial between Fairey and the AP in New York will not take place. As part of their settlement, Fairey has agreed he will not use another AP photo in his work without obtaining a license from the news organization. 

The two sides also have agreed to share the rights to make the posters and merchandise bearing the "Hope" image. In addition, Fairey and the AP have agreed to additional financial terms that are confidential.

"I am pleased to have resolved the dispute with the Associated Press," Fairey said in a statement. "I respect the work of photographers, as well as recognize the need to preserve opportunities for other artists to make fair use of photographic images. I often collaborate with photographers in my work, and I look forward to working with photos provided by the AP's talented photographers."

Continue reading »

Jasper Johns, Yo-Yo Ma to receive Presidential Medal of Freedom from Obama

November 17, 2010 |  5:27 pm

Johns The White House announced Wednesday that President Obama will bestow the Presidential Medal of Freedom -- the country's highest civilian honor -- on 15 individuals, including artist Jasper Johns and cellist Yo-Yo Ma.

The awards, which will be presented in early 2011, are intended to honor individuals who have made "especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors."

In a statement, Obama said this year's honorees have "lived extraordinary lives that have inspired us, enriched our culture, and made our country and our world a better place."

 Johns, 80, has long been associated with the abstract expressionist movement and is best known for his paintings depicting American flags and bullseye targets. In 1990, he received the National Medal of Arts, which is the highest national honor an artist can receive.

Regarded as one of the top cellists in the world, Ma has performed as a soloist with most major symphony orchestras and has won multiple Grammy Awards for his recordings. In 2009, Obama selected Ma to serve on the President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities.

The two artists will share the spotlight with an eclectic group of honorees that includes former president George H.W. Bush, German chancellor Angela Merkel, Maya Angelou, Warren Buffett, Jean Kennedy Smith, Dr. Tom Little, Congressman John Lewis, environmental activist John H. Adams, former AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney, humanitarian Gerda Weissmann Klein, civil rights activist Sylvia Mendez, basketball coach Bill Russell and baseball legend Stan "The Man" Musial.

-- David Ng

Photo: Jasper Johns, in an undated photo. Credit: Associated Press

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Scripps College among arts honorees at White House ceremony

October 21, 2010 |  7:00 am

First Lady Michelle Obama hosted a ceremony at the White House on Wednesday honoring youth-oriented arts programs around the country, and one of the honorees comes directly from Southern California.

Scripps College in Claremont was a recipient of the 2010 National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award for its work on the Scripps College Academy, a free, year-round initiative intended to prepare young women for higher education. The program is geared toward disadvantaged students from around the Los Angeles area.

As part of the award, the college is receiving $10,000 to support Scripps College Academy programming and to engage more young women from the community.

In all, 15 organizations were honored at the White House on Wednesday. The first lady presided over the ceremony along with Margo Lion, both of whom serve on the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities.

"You're showing our students that each of them has something valuable to contribute to this life," said the first lady in her speech. "And you're opening their eyes to a world of possibility that awaits them –- one work of art, one relationship, one lifetime at a time."

The awards, formerly known as the Coming Up Taller Awards, had a pool of approximately 400 applicants, which was subsequently narrowed to a field of 50 finalists.

You can watch the award ceremony in the video above. And here's a list of the 15 institutions that received awards at the White House on Wednesday.

Continue reading »

Video from the White House's online chat about arts and humanities

October 20, 2010 | 10:08 am

In case you missed Tuesday's online chat with members of the President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities, the White House has posted a rather lengthy video from the interactive event in which the public was invited to pose questions about the country's arts policy and other cultural issues to committee members.

The video, running 47 minutes, features artist Chuck Close, dancer Damian Woetzel, producer George Stevens Jr. and committee co-chair Margo Lion fielding questions from the online public.

Due to the somewhat windy responses of some committee members, the session wasn't able to cover much ground in the allotted window of time. Questions tended to focus on arts education and how teachers can use the arts in the daily classroom environment.

You can watch the video in its entirety above.

-- David Ng

 

 

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