Friday, March 21, 2008

Wallpaper like WOW!

Start the video. The sign in the first few seconds says:

Aaron Morse is a genius. He understands that, like time and space, there is no up and down or back and forth. There just ins't a way of putting it in order either. This is something wild and true that he's accomplished to portray via "Timeline," a one-of-a-kind floor-to-ceiling chain of murals showing in the lobby of the spacious and polished Hammer Museum in Westwood. And, just as the title suggests, Morse sticks to using historical (and futuristic) ideas for this epic wall masterpiece. See the surreal, imaginative configurations this 30-something-year-old Los Angeles artist (he's originally from Tuscon, Arizona) has created, before the walls go back to nude in mid-June.
And for the record, that sign doesn't say all that.


Video and photos by Barbara Navarro
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Read art show reviews by other Daily Forty-Niner writers featured in Diversions...

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Notes on the CSULB Fashionistas

The Los Angeles Mercedes Benz Fashion Week wisped through town last week. After reviewing the videos and pictures posted by the Los Angeles Times, however, I was left uninspired. It’s not like I dream of seeing Nina Ricci goddesses or statuesque Chanel models in high-society, high-dollar gowns coming to town. But I more or less agree with headlines like “tabloid runways,” when referring to the scene and the people who put on the LA shows. The heartbeat of this town’s fashion sense: Getting lines from talentless designer-stars, à la Whitney Port, or all the other stars from “The Hills” and all other reality TV series, for that matter. Gross. Gag. Barf.

With the additional factor of a bitter, crumbling economy (I'm being extreme in my description), some major LA fashion designers, like the real fashion designers, (Louis Verdad, anyone?) pulled out of this year’s annual spectacle.

The Wall Street Journal, moreover, continues to report on declining retail sales (in February, the Commerce Department reported a falling 0.6%, for example, and that's severe in the ever nonprofitable world of fashion) and the overall slowing economy, adding fluff to Verdad’s recent statement that the economy had something to do with him not showing. (But if I had to share headlines with Nikki Hilton and the “tabloid runway” newcomer Benji Madden, I think I’d also turn off.)

As any smart fashionista student, I know that the success of the fashion business lies in the careful balances between finance and creativity. Curious of how my fellow schoolmates were coping in this headline-popular economical slump, I set out to campus to find student-fashionistas who looked great, despite, you know, our already tight student budgets.



Notes on the Fashionistas...

Go International: Ayaka Mori, 22, a studio art student who lives in San Pedro, imports her favorite labels from Japan. Her inspiration for what to wear comes from Japanese magazines, too. She enjoys reading Non-No, Cutie, P.S. and Mina, all publications from her native country.
Be Bright: Yasmineh Kafai, 25, from Los Angeles, likes to work bright colors into her outfits. Instead of wearing complete, solid colors, she'll wear a sweater with colorful stripes, for example. This graphic design student says, "What you wear is a reflection of your personality."
Do-It Yourself: Skateboard in one hand and cell phone in another, Gaberiel Martinez, 29, knows a thing or two about balancing technology with more ol' fashioned ambidextrous ways. For example, with his Danger skateboard, Martinez used grip tape to make the eye-catching pattern we see in the picture. Very cool.
Be Yourself, or Not: Freshman Mahogony Yarde goes to the pretty extreme of wearing bright colors both in her clothes and jewelry. She's definitely a communication and black studies student, but when it comes to what she wears, Yarde says, "I love the fact that I can be a million different people by changing my outfit." (And I'm still wondering if she gave me her real name.)

Come with Your Own Soundtrack: Jingles. Clunks. Heels, dangling necklaces. Don't you love it when music plays inside your mind when you meet someone new? These girls, clad in colorful prints and shiny accessories, not only caught my eye, but called to my ear with their very own wearable sound machines. I couldn't help but admire the details they came adorned with, either. Sarah Olson (left), 21 years old and an international business student, pointed out to me that one of her bracelets was actually a souvenir from her encounter with Mexican rock band Kinky, who made their way to Los Angeles for a show Monday night. Sarah's friend Camila Jimenez (right), also 21 and a fashion and marketing student, wasn't shy to add that the dolled-up pair got noticed right away and were invited to meet the band backstage for the after party. I can already tell you, these Calexico girls have a lifetime to make more memories like that, because they're actually cousins!

All photos by Barbara Navarro.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Green, Green, Everywhere Green


The Green Scene on St. Patrick's Day, CSULB
Happy St. Patrick's Day!
Saint Patrick. Does anybody know the true story behind this patron saint's life?? I'll share the bits of what I know—like, how he traveled around Eastern Europe before finally ending up on a tiny island called Ireland, his native country, now where Scotland is; like, how, actually, he lived in southwestern Britain before he was literally carried out of the land by pirates and sold into slavery in Ireland; like, how he might've lived to be 120, according to legend; or, according to another legend, how there were no nights for 12 days after his death on March 17, 461—and I'm not sure staying-out-all-night-long, green-fashioned barflies would like that. But then again, I wasn't in bars looking for who was wearing green today. I found plenty of students, faculty and professors looking cute in a festive green all over the Cal State Long Beach campus!


Who are they? (Click photos to enlarge.)
Column No. 1: Economics Professor, Russ Arslan; Ruth Fabela, 24, San Pedro; Friends Allie Russi, 23, from the OC, and Ryan Sharp, 24, from Laguna Hills, both business marking students; Colleen Donnelly, 21, journalism major (the managing editor at the Daily Forty-Niner, in fact).
Column No. 2: Bonnie Shaw, 48, of Cerritos, studying for teaching creditials; Kevin Forest, 25, San Clemente, pyschology student; Kacy Jacobsen, 22, Napa Valley, political science student.
Column No. 3: Bikes!; Allison Baldwin, the design coordinator for the Daily Forty-Niner, 21, journalism student; beautiful green gardens throughout CSULB campus.
Column No.4: Andy Franks, 21, a journalism student and the top news editor for the Daily Forty-Niner; CAPS faculty member, Kirsten Chun.

Substituting an 8th century bishop for a 20th century drunkard—and a German at that


"It was a joy. Words weren’t dull, words were things that could make your mind hum. If you read them and let yourself feel the magic, you could live without pain, with hope, no matter what happened to you."
Henry Chinaski, Ham On Rye
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How big of a fan of Charles Bukowski are you?

I've read so many of his books and own some of his newer poetry anthologies. I've been to his grave at Green Hills and I live in the town where he died, San Pedro (but, I was born here, so I didn't have a choice; it was just a coincidence that the ol' Buk and I ended up in the same place). Plus, I toured with Esotouric recently!


Bukowski doesn't fit a genre in literature, because it's a lifestyle. I loved reading his books a few summers ago (after I was introduced to John Fante's Ask the Dust) and I loved watching "Barfly." It's a classic movie and it captures L.A. in a way I've never seen before, either with my own eyes or by movie. I definitely recommend you try touring with Esotouric if you're interested in beating your friends out on who's the better fan of Angeleno authors and their history here. Rumor is, they'll be visiting Vroman's in Pasadena this summer, a place where Bukowski was a usual. But if that's too far off, they have trips focused around Raymond Chandler and the Black Dahlia scheduled for pretty soon.

PHOTO:
With the Esotouric group on March 9th, celebrating Bukowski's 14th year death anniversay. Here we stand in front of the Reading Room at the downtown L.A. Public Library, where Buk disvored his God, John Fante.

{Visit ESOTOURIC online. Just click HERE.}

Also be sure to visit the library's Special Collections (2nd floor, to right off the elevators) where you can find Gerald Locklin's memoirs on how he got to know the great ol' Buk in "A Sure Bet." Locklin, a retired English professor from Cal State Long Beach, helped me create today's '5 to Try,' which was dedicated to the greatest barfly of all times, Charles Bukowski.

Cheers!