A fond farewell to animator Hal Geer

Film

“Hal Geer, my great mentor at Warner Brothers Animation, has passed away at age 100,” writes Geer’s fellow animator Jack Enyart in a recent e-newsletter.

As Enyart recalls, “I was in my 20s when Hal brought me into the department. On his desk, each time he faced me with his sly Bugs Bunny grin, rested a plaque:

Age and cunning will always defeat youth and enthusiasm.

“He didn’t mean it. He was in fact the kindest, wisest, and most subtly encouraging boss I ever had.

“He kept Looney Tunes going. He held the fort, when WB might have shut down the department altogether.

“He dealt skillfully with great talents (and egos) like Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, Bob Clampett and Mel Blanc. I watched… and I learned.

“To my younger colleagues, collaborators, and students: I wish you someone such as Hal.”

Thank you, Jack, for this.

Hal Geer obituary in Variety here.

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Review: No)one. Art House presented by Saint Heron

Dance · Featured


There was nowhere to park – zero spots – at Friday evening’s Immersive Dance Theater by No)One.Art House, an event sponsored by Saint Heron at an off-the-beaten track performance space in West Adams.  

And yet, scores popped up in the residential neighborhood, dropped by Uber or carpool. Once inside purchasing cocktails, the attendees, mostly followers of Saint Heron, milled and chattered in a kind of communal haze. The feeling was wild and free … in utter disregard for the crazy hammering our culture has received, for two non-stop weeks, by a persistently paranoid new administration. For several hours Donald Trump was relegated to an irrelevancy, and America transmogrified into a shining, racially mixed throng of curious, vital and connecting young people.

No)One. Art House, among Los Angeles’s most fluid and audience-pleasing performers, then delivered a dance happening. The room, neither rectangular nor square-shaped, was bathed in blueish light. Stepping into a piercing spotlight, Charissa Kroeger, a beautiful dancer whose corkscrew curls topped up a white coverall, lunged deeply, meandering near to the floor. Three others joined—company founder Christopher Bordenave, lanky Micaela Taylor, and Sam McReynolds. This quartet navigated the room’s minimal footage, in clusters and duets. Encroached by spectators, and at times pushing against them, the foursome bravely rolled out separate snippets of choreography by Danielle Russo and Gustavo Ramirez Sansano.


An ‘off-to-the-racetrack’ soundscape had dancers on all fours, portraying horses in competition. A ramble around an upstairs enclosed loft space provided weaker moments; even with simultaneous video projection it didn’t work. A closing number to “Love Me Tender,” in its physicalization imbuing Elvis’s sappy anthem with real emotion, filled the space with near reverence. A repeating supplicating hand motion made it prayerful.

That the evening was closely choreographed seemed to go appreciated by the audience. Many busied themselves with cellphone capture; others watched, bemused, from perimeters. The crowd’s dynamic bulge and flow was driven by the patterning of scampering dancers.   

When it was complete the deejay pumped up the house music. Having had a drink and socialized, having undergone a strange and fun adventure watching some very good dancers at close range, the audience themselves danced. And that pleasureful evening-capper seemed like a very good way to go.

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Review: Toba Khedoori, detailed draftswoman, at LACMA

Visual arts
by 


If you love drawing, please run, don’t walk, to see LACMA’s exhibition of Toba Khedoori’s work through March 19. It covers two decades of the Los Angeles artist’s practice with 25 stunning works. Usually drawings would be dwarfed by the voluminous spaces of the BCAM building, but Khedoori’s manage to occupy the space beautifully. That is partly because some of her drawings are very very large, and partly because they are often making reference to architectural forms and space. 

Works in the first gallery, for example, are both. These are early works on paper, from the mid-90s and are up to 11’ tall, and they depict repeated architectural or built forms. I find “Untitled (buildings/windows)” (1994) especially compelling. It shows rows and rows of old-fashioned, double-hung windows, with the shades drawn up at different heights, inviting one to think about tenement housing and the people who might be living behind these anonymous apertures. Another drawing which has a similarly enigmatic, although more sinister, effect depicts a series of closed doors lined up behind a metal balustrade. It’s as if you are in prison – confronting the cold blank of solitary confinement.

Khedoori does have other subjects, such as a series of theater seats, and in a middle gallery, a burning fireplace set against a black background adjacent to a burning fireplace set against a white background. The pairing of the latter drawings in the same room challenges us to compare them, and make a choice. In finishing her works, she often coats the paper with layers of encaustic, wax, and oil, which stiffens the paper and gives it a noticeable sheen.


The last room has more intimate pieces, ones that are medium-sized, that are worth contemplating quietly and unhurriedly. There are several mesmerizing geometric works which still retain, deliberately of course, the slight wobble of the hand. And here she shows her off her ability to draw from nature, as well. They look like drawings, but they are oil paintings on linen. “Untitled (leaves/branches)” is a tangle of green oval leaves, pitched at different angles to the light, with their most elegant intertwine of thin, twisting branches. Clearly, the natural world provides a softer, more lyrical inspiration for the artist.

Toba Khedoori, Untitled (doors) (detail), 2005, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, gift of Lenore S. and Bernard A. Greenberg, 1996, © Toba Khedoori, photo © Joshua White/JWPictures.com, courtesy Regen Projects, Los Angeles and David Zwirner, New York/London

Toba Khedoori, Untitled (leaves/branches), 2015, oil on canvas, 24 x 31 3/4 inches, Alex Hank, © Toba Khedoori, photo © Fredrik Nilsen

Toba Khedoori | Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) | thru March 19

Scarlet Cheng is an LA-based arts writer, the former managing editor of Asian Art News. She also teaches art and film history at Art Center College of Design and Otis College of Art and Design.

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Dance · Visual arts
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Music
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