Friday, December 6, 2019

Fiji: Art & Life in the Pacific


The first substantial project on the art of Fiji to be mounted in the U.S., Fiji: Art & Life in the Pacific, at the Los Angeles County Museum of Arts (LACMA), showcases an eclectic range and quality of the archipelago's artworks from the past two centuries, providing insight into Fiji’s historical and cultural traditions.

Produced from the rich landscape of more than 300 islands, materials represented include a wide variety of timbers for housing, canoes, and weapons; plant materials for textiles, mats, roofing, ropes, and bindings; clay, bamboo, and coconuts for containers; and shells and other marine materials for adornments.

Drawn from major international collections, including the Fiji Museum, British Museum, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (Cambridge), the Smithsonian, and distinguished private collections, the over 280 artworks
are presented in eight thematic sections.

Voyaging focuses on the role and implements of travel by sea. The show-stopping centerpiece is a newly commissioned, fully sailable, 26-foot double-hulled sailing canoe (drua) constructed in Fiji using traditional materials and techniques such as fiber lashings, shells, as well as a pandanus-leaf matting sail and is metal free. Without a fixed bow or stern, drua can sail in either direction by adjusting the mast and sail. The newly constructed dura is a small version of the great 100 feet long vessels of the 19th century, the biggest canoes ever built.

Fiber and Textile Arts features Masi, the magnificent cloth with virtuoso weaving techniques made from the paper mulberry tree bark pulp, for investitures, weddings, or state gifts. The artform is one of Fiji’s most significant symbols of cultural pride.

In Warfare, the multiple clubs on view represent the widest range of their design. In addition to their value as weapons, Fijian clubs and spears are used as ritual objects and expressions of supreme carving and military skill.

Embodying the Ancestors features one of the only three known surviving double-figure hooks made from whale ivory, collected in 1876. While it seems that figures were not worshipped as deities, they were kept in temples and shrines as embodiments of deified deceased individuals, usually ancestors.

In Adorning the Body, key forms of personal ornament consist of whale ivory as the basis for high worth. Breastplates, valued for their subtle design variations and alluring reflective and color properties, were suited for chiefly wear and were made from whale ivory, pearl shell, coir and fibre.

The section on Chiefly Objects highlights the tabua, a polished sperm whale tooth, the most significant Fijian valuable presented as a gift or negotiation tool on important occasions. For Fijians, whale teeth were symbolically associated with the cosmological power of the sea and of chiefs. This section also examines the cultural importance of yaqona, an important drink known generally in the Pacific as kava, still consumed by Fijians socially.

Respecting the Ancestors, provides insight on the early 19th century religious observance of dedicating temples mainly to divine ancestors rather than creator gods. The section features model temples which duplicate the architecture of full-scale temples and were possibly taken as portable shrines on canoe voyages.

Fiji Life highlights implements for the making of masi, an adze for cracking of ivi nuts, a bamboo tube for the transportation of water, and an end-blown trumpet for multiple forms of communication. 

A key domestic object was the wooden bar headrest which offered air circulation and protection for hairdos on tropical nights for sleepers reclining on woven mats. Other works in this section include elaborate multi-chambered pottery vessels that often took the shape of natural forms including turtles or citrus fruits. They were rubbed with hot resin from dakua trees to achieve a glossy varnish.
Illustrating 19th-century Fiji are 22 remarkable historical photographs from LACMA’s recently acquired Blackburn Collection, European watercolors and paintings as well as studio portraits, landscapes, architecture, and other features of daily life.

Organized by Dr. Steven Hooper, director and professor of visual arts and one of the leading Fijian art authorities, as well as his team at the Sainsbury Centre in Norwich, England, the exhibition has been reformatted for the presentation at LACMA, and co-curated by Hooper and Nancy Thomas, senior deputy director, art administration and collections at LACMA, and includes major loans from U.S. Collections. 

Philanthropists Lynda Resnick and Stewart Resnick, brought these works from across the archipelago to the U.S. for this important exhibition.



Following the presentation at LACMA, the exhibition will be on view at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts from September 12, 2020 through January 3, 2021.



Tuesday, November 19, 2019

The Traitor

Known for his films about the darker chapters of Italian history, director and co-writer Marco Bellochio's latest biopic, relates the story of Cosa Nostra's Tommaso (Masino) Buscetta (Pierfrancesco Favino), the first mafia boss who broke the code of silence, the omertà, by becoming an informant, a pentito, to anti-mafia judge Giovanni Falcone (Fausto Russo Alesi). His statements led to the arrest of hundreds of mobsters and the largest anti-mafia trial in history, the Maxi Trial, lasting from 1986 to 1992, in which Buscetta agreed to testify.

Set against a 20 years backdrop of Sicilian mafia history, from 1980 to 2000, Italy's entry for the 2020 Academy Awards Best International Feature Film centers on the struggle between humanity and power. Rather than perceiving himself as a pentito, Buscetta believes that the real traitor is Totò Riina's (Nicola Calì) Corleon mob, who broke the code of honor by abandoning the sacredness of family and respect, in favor of greed and absolute power.

In a career-best performance, Favino's poise as a mobster figure is compelling and convincing. Besides the good performance of Luigi Lo Cascio as Totuccio Contorno, Fabrizio Ferracane shines as the villain Pippo Calò. Providing levity is Vincenzo Pirrotta as Luciano Leggio, one of the highest-ranking bosses brought to trial.


At 152 minutes, the immersive narrative blends mob violence, drama, and a stimulating mega trial lightned by dark comedy. Accentuated by Nicola Piovani’s operaric score, are Vladan Radovic’s tone setting lensing and the vibrant period set designs representing Sicily, Rome, Brazil and the United States.



Friday, November 8, 2019

Depero Halley Replay


In Depero Halley Replay at the Futurism & Co Art Gallery in Rome, Italy, the artistic continuity between two central figures of abstract art, Fortunato Depero’s (1892- 1960) Futuristic Abstractionism of the 1920’s to 1940’s and Peter Halley’s (1953-) Neo-Geometric Conceptualism of the 1980’s are explored.

Curators Giancarlo Carpi and Graziano Menolascina selected 30 key works from private collectors, that delineate the uniqueness as well as artistic similarities of Depero and Halley, in the use of colors, texture and intellection.

Both artists, use space with bright chromatic effects set in a textured urban, tropical or mechanical abstract setting.

In the automated-robotic nature of Depero’s animated characters, a dynamic, futuristic modern life, is expressed with intense colors and geometric language.


Halley’s flat, two dimensional pictorial works, which he defines as flat sculptures, represent the degradation of the human experience and the sense of alienation created by the surrounding physical as well as psychological ‘prisons’ and ‘cells’, symbolized by squares and rectangles. Connecting places and people are disembodied linear conduits. A master of Day-Glo, Halley’s social criticism is illuminated by a fugue of fluorescent acrylic hues while traction in the conduits is created through the use of Roll-A-Tex, a stucco-like texture.


Futurism & Co Art Gallery Via Mario de’ Fiori 68, Rome, Italy. For more information call 06 6797382 or visit www.futurismandco.com



The Irishman


Boasting a powerhouse of gangster actors, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, and Joe Pesci, is director Martin Scorsese's The Irishman, a dramatization about organized crime history's greatest hit.

Adapted by screenwriter Steven Zaillian from Charles Brandt’s compelling nonfiction narrative I Heard You Paint Houses (2004), about top hitman Frank Sheeran's (De Niro) pivotal role in the 1975 mysterious disappearance of the second most powerful man in the country, Jimmy Hoffa (Al Pacino), a Teamsters union president tied to the Pennsylvania based Russell Bufalino (Pesci) and Angelo Bruno (Harvey Keitel) mob.

Performances are top notch and engrossing. Scene-stealing Joe Pesci, playing against his usual hot-headed type, encapsulates the persona of the soft spoken, reflective, restrained and authoritative mafia don. His minimalist gestures set the tone loudly.

In his first collaboration with Scorsese, Al Pacino's rousing performance, as the infamous Jimmy Hoffa, is marked with bursts of explosive violence with interspersed dry humor, even in the most gruesome scenes.

In what may be one of his best performance since Heat (1995) Robert De Niro delivers a shivering rendition as Frank “The Irishman” Sheeran, filled with some of the funniest scenes of his career.

Scorsese uses to chilling effect silence rather than music, to accentuate tension and mood. However, a more publicized creative choice of the film is the use of groundbreaking, de-aging technology used during flashbacks to portray the actors as younger men. Although not yet perfected, the technology is not distracting.

Well assembled are Scorsese's trademark tracking shots and montages by top notch repeat collaborators cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto and editor Thelma Schoonmaker, sharp costume designs by Christopher Peterson and Sandy Powell, and meticulous production design by Bob Shaw.

The Irishman may be Scorsese's best, most powerful and empathetic film of his almost six decade long career. It is slower in pace compared to most of Scorsese's films. However, the masterful performances and technical detail makes the 209 minutes film viewing brisk, culminating in an elegant, contemplative final act.

The Irishman is majestic, one of the best films of the year.


Ford v Ferrari (
Le Mans ’66) (La Grande Sfida)

Two giants of the 1960's car industry, the Italian luxury car manufacturer as well as undefeated world racing car company, Ferrari and the American Ford Motor Company sat together for merger talks at the recommendation of the young Lee Iacocca (Jon Bernthal).

When Enzo Ferrari (Remo Girrone), refuses to sell to the American Ford Motor Company, Henry Ford II (Tracy Letts) sets in motion a technological war to defeat Ferrari in the 1966 world prestigious 24 Hours Le Mans car race.

To design a winning racecar, Ford enlists the only American driver to have ever won at Le Mans, Texan car designer Carroll Shelby (Matt Damon). At the suggestion of Shelby, Ford reluctantly assumed also the boisterous and hot-tempered Ken Miles (Christian Bale), a British technical genius and maniac car racer.


Matt Damon and Christian Bale deliver powerful renditions as friends and collaborators who posses unequaled determination and ambition.
Known for his physically transformative performances, Bates had to lose significant weight to portray Miles, just after gaining it for his role as former Vice President Dick Cheney in the feature Vice (2018).


Balancing the action and comedy, are the emotional counterpoints with Ken's wife Mollie Miles (Caitriona Balfe) and his endearing son Peter Miles (Noah Jupe).

The film is led by the confident direction and expertise of James Mangold known for his extensive film genre repertoire, including musical biopics (Walk the Line), westerns (3:10 to Yuma), superhero (Logan), and romantic-comedies (Kate and Leopold).


Technical craftsmanship takes center stage in Ford v Ferrari's old style Hollywood charm, mid-budget, based on true events film.

State-of-the-art, loud, propulsive sound design by David Giammarco and Donald Sylvester captures screeching tires while racing at 200 mph through dangerous 

curves in the dark and torrential rain. Phedon Papamichael's visceral low to the ground and behind the wheel cameras and lensing transport one into the driver's seat. Racetrack scenes are phenomenally edited for maximum adrenaline by Andrew Buckland and Michael McCusker, along with Marco Beltrami's effective score.

At a running time of 2h 32m, Ford v Ferrari is bolstered by Mangold's confident direction, riveting executions of racing mechanics and compelling performances.


A fun, thrilling ride for both racing fans and general audiences.




Joker

One of the best, although violent cinecomic features realized
about Marvel DC Comic's most villain character, Joker, is based on Todd Phillips and Scott Silver’s original script focusing on the genesis of this multifaceted street clown artist in Gotham city.

Good performances by the high caliber cast includes Robert De Niro as Murray Franklin, Marc Maron and Zazie Beetz but it is Joaquin Phoenix, in the title role, who steals the show. To chilling effect, Phoenix redefines and personifies the Joker, bringing to greater dramatic depth the clown's dark, violent, powerfully disturbing and unstable affect.

Phoenix's unequaled performance, Todd Phillips' immaculate direction, and technical brilliance led to the Best Soundtrack Stars Award by Hildur Guðnadóttir and the 76th Venice film festival Golden Lion Award.


Thursday, November 7, 2019

Weathering with You (Tenki No Ko)

Representing the country's 2020 Academy Awards Best International Feature Film submission, Japanese anime writer director Makoto Shinkai, who obtained international recognition with Your Name (2016), returns with a romantic mythical-magical tale, grounded in a mix of Shinto philosophy and folklore with modern genre tropes.

Hina (Nana Mori), is a teenage orphan girl who has the power to change the weather through prayer. Together with runaway Morishima Hodaka (Daigo Kotaro), she sells her power to dispell the rain in favor of sunshine for private occasions. However, Hodaka and Hina soon learn that affecting weather change comes with a cost.


The CG aided photorealistic artwork is phenomenally detailed with lush 3D backdrops, splashes of reflective light and vibrant pastel color palette. A compelling soundtrack by returning Japanese rock band Radwimps combines pop tunes with a classic symphonic score.

Midnight Family

In a city of nine million people, Mexico City has a fleet of just 45 government provided ambulances. The shortfall, is made up for by competing private emergency response teams with limited medical skills, certification and resources.
In this riveting, raw, cinéma vérité documentary, director, editor, cinematographer and producer, Luke Lorentzen focuses on the ambulance workers' experience rather than that of the patients. We meet the charismatic Ochoa family and their 17 years old son Juan as their race against other ambulances to provide medical assistance. They have to pay a bribe of $17 for each call they respond to while attempting to collect a transportation fee of $185 from either the patient or from the hospital they reach.

Lorentzen crafted a fascinating film with impeccaple technical detail and momentum coupled by profound questions about this ambigous industry and the importance of governmental oversight.


Parasite

It is no surprise that director Joon-ho Bong's Parasite is the very first South Korean feature to be ever awarded the top 2019 Cannes Film Festival Palme D’Or and is South Korean's official 2020 Best Foreign Language Academy Award entry.

In what may be director Joon-ho Bong’s most radical social disparity commentary, Parasite's thrilling edge of the seat cross-genre cinematic masterpiece is thematically provocative and stylistically suggestive while offering one of the most viscerally entertaining features on screen.

Apparent is Bong's self-assured strokes of well paced, seamless tone transitions of comedy, drama-thriller and horror. The narrative, about the impoverished Kim family who obtain jobs at the opulent Park family’s home through fraudulent means, is filled with brilliantly surprising and unexpected plot twists. Bong probes the extent one is driven to gain or protect what is perceived as being one's rightful posession.

Coupled by exceptional framing is the cinematography by Hong Kyung-pyo and production designer Lee Ha-jun. Expertly pivoting the script are co-writers Jin Won Han and Joon-ho Bong. 

Across the board superb performances include Kang-ho Song and Chang Hyae-jin (as Kim parents Ki-taek and Chung-sook), Choi Woo-shik and Park So-dam (as adult Kim son and daughter Ki-woo and Ki-Jung), Lee Sun-kyu and Jo Yeo-jeong (as Mr. and Mrs. Park) and Jung Ji-So and Jung Hyun-Joon (as teenage daughter Da-Hye and young son Da-Song).