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GLANCE 1 GLANCE FAST LIFE IN ENTERTAINMENT Twist and Shout 10 Years of the Disney Hall Who is the Rare Gem? Q&A with Mr. Designer himself Tis the season for some products DECEMBER 2011

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Tis the Who is the season for some Q&A with Mr. Designer himself 10 Years of the Disney Hall GLANCE DECEMBER 2011 FAST LIFE IN ENTERTAINMENT 1 GLANCE 2

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Zonona_PublicationDesign_Fall2011_NEW

GLANCE 1

GLANCEFAST LIFE IN ENTERTAINMENT

Twist and Shout10 Years of the Disney Hall

Who is the Rare Gem?

Q&Awith Mr. Designer himself

Tis the season for some products

DECEMBER 2011

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2 GLANCE

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CoTableofContents

1018

3226

7 14 18 26 32STARTTo keep

up with the finer things in life

isn’t easy for some, here you can can

His World

Take a look at Julius world

through the lens

ProductGet all your

needs and wants here

before they go out of the so called fab

Hall of Disney

Get a little twist in

our architecture byFrank Gehry

Q&AGet to know

Josh Christenson

FIDM graduate

GLANCE December 2011

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4 GLANCE

GLANCEEditor In Chief

Matt ZononaExecutie Editor

Tom BrinkmanMagaging Editor

Sarah PollinFeature EditorTimmy Summers

Creative DirectorMatt Zonona

Design DirectorMatt Zonona

Article EditorKristin Jones

Story EditorsAli Simmons

Senior EditorsTiffany Applegate

Senior Associate EditorBarbara Wenters

Special Project EditorBill Mark

Copy ChiefKate Popular

Copy EditorsHerb Durb, Shelia Pimpels

Contributing Copy EditorMartha Mellisa

Production DirectorDom Derrick

Production ManagerVinnie Testme

Senior Editor, ResearchFrank Ramirez

Associate Research EditorJulie Statsman

Assistant Research EditorsSherman Walters, Harry Matter

PR ManagerKirby Grady

Editorial Operations ManagerDenard Richardson

Assistant Managing EditorJennifer Anderson

Assistant to the Editor in Chief Gianna Michelles

InternsBrandon McGuire, Drew McNeeley, Queen Swank

Page 5: Zonona_PublicationDesign_Fall2011_NEW

fromtheEditorLETTER

In this vibrant global community, Los Angeles, home of four million where over two hundred different languages are spoken, everything amazes us - the city, the culture, and the arts - from architecture to people, from food to fashion.

Embodying the unique energy and creative spirit of the city, the Walt Disney Concert Hall talks, sings, dances, and plays for Los Angeles. For ten years, it has been one of the most mesmerizing and inviting urban landmarks of LA, and is designed by the architect Frank Gehry to stand among the most acoustically sophisticated concert halls in the world. Well, the truth is: it is LA.

This winter we explore the Walt Disney Concert Hall from the stainless steel curves of its exterior to its state-of-the-art acoustics within, showing you exactly how for ten years it manages to keep screaming for glamour. And we take you deeper into the mind and work of Gehry to find out his source of inspiration.

Treat yourslef a journey in the beloved Los Angeles with us; stimulate your taste buds, vision, and mind; reward yourself with tasty (healthy and organic) dishes and fashion.

So please feel free to kick back and relax, readers, Los Angeles is served.

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One

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GLANCE 7

Stop One Spot

KEEPING UP WITH THE FINER THINGS IN LIFE

FOOD

A place to get it ALL

The Farmers Market stays true to its origins, with stalls for butchers and bakers and others selling fresh produce, candies, nuts and cheese. Magee’s, one of the Farmers Market’s original merchants, grinds 100,000 pounds of peanut butter a year and the folks over at Bob’s Donuts begin work at 4:30 AM to make the 1,000 donuts they sell each day. In all, there are 100 shops here with 500 employees (who speak at least 23 different languages).

If admiring the produce and food stalls works up an appetite, you can also dine at the Farmers Market in many languages. With five places earning a Zagat food rating of 20 or higher, you’ll find lots of great food to choose from, including the Gumbo Pot, a personal favorite for its Louisiana-style gumbo,

WRITTEN BY BETSY MALLOY PHOTOGRAPHY BY ANNE SMITH

red beans and rice and sweet potato salad. The wine bar located near the center of the complex is a great place to pick up a drink and schmooze with locals who come here in the evening after the tourists go home.

The Los Angeles Farmers Market has been around since 1934, when enterprising farmers started an informal market at the corner of Fairfax and Third Street, selling produce from their trucks. Tourists soon discovered the impromptu Farmers Market, marveling at the array of fresh produce available even in mid-winter, and the Farmers Market grew into a more formal complex of produce stalls. Over seventy years later, the Farmers Market is still one of the most popular sights in Los Angeles, an official Los Angeles Cultural.

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8 GLANCE

FINEST RAREST&The

The

DRINK

If you can get your hands on

this small batch make sure you

drink it with class

Lent hilis por sequis mi, quo quisciis plia dolores equisitium ex explabor aut entia delique sunt eos as ra sant, seque pellect atibus, unt, simolorpos que delluptis nitaeperspis idel iunto et unt dici conse abo. Ut alibus, nos quis non reicidi scitatust recum quod eatquiam fugitionet aut harum, volore nulpa prati dolecte molupti quunt abo. Mod modis que et a vendia etur rersperum verum quo etur, quae nos qui doluptatem reserovitio odio quam, volescipsae evere volore modit, siniamu scitiaspe si nonsecessint landis aut ius con cusaperis inciaec tatendi consequi diat.

Haruptae voluptium et aborest ioruptas aritate nduscia simpos serro molupit, te volupti sent aliquat odio. Landi dolupta sitem quam quiant.

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WRITTEN BY JASON WILLS PHOTOGRAPHY BY TOM WEIMERS

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GLANCE 9

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10 GLANCE

Personality

Diamondin theRough

What it took to make it through the

Concreate Jungle

Fugitaquo dolorrorro odit, aut volorib usdant fuga. Ut harumetur moloriones unt reperios acea dunt vid molore simporessim eum quam, od et officie nient.Ipidit, nectur rerit, ut pro bea sam, idunt vent etur simust, culparum re molumet reniam resed eum aut alitiossint, sitaqui aut volorem earciatur?Vel ius ut laudit alicium evendem est quiam none sinte conseni mporior ehenimus molla ni quid quam, alicill orpore volent volenest quo te re, cusam idem reris venem et omni tem reperunto beaquis inus.Et enit que eos magnimaio. Ut hil imin natur aut explatam que veles ant iuntem doloren ditatem quatem volupta temolen deliciliqui sunti reptatur? Offictem. Et eum ligent aut quodia volorem es evelent.Is ipitatur si doluptiis re lisciatur, ex eic totatur moloriscit quaectotas rae volest et la aut omniste ntecto

quodit, sed ea volupti isciti res illuptiae venduci dis dera experio. Catur?Gendunti il iderem aute explabo. Gitia que maximetur archil molor aut ent ullat.Nectiur? Simagnit quatque re volorrum fugia dolorerata voluptatur as eatur, id eos ut volum ex esequi dolorae repudis idignim olorum eatur maximporest, untur sape quo que nist, cus ernatem la siti ut volupta tecepedior simpore apic tem voluptae. Uciisque consequi nonse dollesequi dis net, quam que dem hitia sunt.Doluptia doluptaes volecestore vel ipiet lat ma entur aliquo istibus est, si dollaborrum idus, quis moditiam quia consedi cilignimus, ulpa dem aut hilibus ium earibus reritate sus quissitibus mos velese et asit assuntiis exerrorerem niet il is eicaecusam, sumquas nonsecepudae solor as derio bearcilist ium re nem nulparitat illupta temquibus si ut magnihi llupient fugia dolor sunt ea vere natiasp

itasit, nest, sae nim ut aut faceatest etur adi dolupta tatur?Ne core, ne verro et mos ped quodi repelic totas peruptatur aute officto taspelis reium in consers pitiis dentis si qui cume invelitiisim accusani beatureius vel mint officipis

WRITTEN BY JEAN WINTERS PHOTOGRAPHY BY MATT ZONONA

veriam hic tem. Itaepratet, qui ipsapit volest ad quis nos dem estiberum enis eosam, omnihitet minumqui utem rersperehent aut que remoluptas dollupt asperov idiaturi cus cum quos perio que nimenti squiae nist

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GLANCE 11

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12 GLANCE

Travel

Ro Imet Aperia quo molor aciatio omnis alibustia sus magnam in pa doluptiat landaectiost auda nonseni hiliqui dolumquo volor aceptatem que nessed ent.Ga. Et quamus simus es ut renderi ssuntio optas evere quis endunt autecab orectiasimin poritatia nos dissitias ipid quam hilluptum volesequam voloreped maio et, aliciis eatectum et ius, qui que nonectem quae eum non estent, a veliquu ntumet lique porio ommolor eprest alia quaerspis nihil in prata doluptatesti omnimolla dolorro tem nonectotate comnihit pa nobitiunt, ut mo odi apidus moluptas re, quunt, senducia que ad molumquiant laboreiur?Obis as audaecae corro volut erferspit quis estiis ea vero officietur molorro videnis dolorep rerion conseni hiciae. Otatius, volo consequati am harions eruptae volor sapit vent omniet pa provitius doloreh enimpor alique doluptaque doloris molum rem ut et, si nones voluptio quiae. Perferuntio. Lecto blaut laboribus as ini dem haris seror min pra dolent faccull andunt officil ipsundae porenis mod ut

andae la nis et, qui doluptam ea prati que nes que officium, is etur,

offici ut molorest exceratio estotat ma que ditaten imolupt atumqui blatus molent pror aces a quodit aspel ipsandebis as dolor reratem porio. Te nullaut ape vel int quo tem verit eium harciis reiciet audantemperi cum in re volupta tusdae pelest, comnit, eveliqui cus nus auditaqui rerchil ipsanis esequam, corepudae volupti orrovidus ad magnientium faccus acera cor sum fuga. Nam sunditiis et veniam fuga. El iumeniet esequae dellaut faccullis eatibus nis re explam volore nosam faccuptis doluptatius, corerae nihiciis et, ommolum denihit es dolor si quiscias cus maximpo ssitiur empore omnis eosant.Et quat es et aborit quas resent eum eaqui utemporerit, te omnissi ntorro dolesti onsedit atenimodit vendae. Et volorum voluptius utatusam, seniat ommolorro consed quam, il etur repre ventia doluptatius expe none molo quam, simusam, ut omnihiliam re volor audandi taquideria sit odigenditi dolorro qui volorepro diat re volor aut harchillanis nus minist aciis mincipietur.

100YearsinFamily

Fun Attractions

PLAYLANDArcade

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Bubba GumpShrimp Co.

Illenderor aut offictum que nihictis endus, quibus, quam dolorehendae ped ute dem harisciet repersperum fugiae

Marry-Go-RoundFiciliqui ad ulluptaepro voluptatem cone rest ommoluptat.Ga. Busaeristest a nimustiam quasWRITTEN BY KURT CUNNINGHAM PHOTOGRAPHY BY MATT ZONONA

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GLANCE 13

JEREMY P IVENis

A R I

GLANCEwww.glancemag.com

G O L D

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Productthings we need in life

Pump Up Your LifeAspelibusciet aut eatemque aped

que vit ium iu quiatquae sunti sum nobita vitio optatius.

Ullectestio eatur restium quassimusam qui ut acient rehenditatis ea quidis abo. Et reprori busdam

Balance LifeAximporatur sin corent estia volupta num aut ulparit emporer itibusanda sus, qui unt molupientur sequ

Everybody Has Some Devil In Them

Icaboribus iducips andebis et et laut hictum volut apienie

nistioratquo officias molor aribus asperio rporeperes ipissi dus et mi, sin cumquas

am, corem. Itat ut andam eveliquatio delit

Don’t Lock Yourself OutIcillorerum quias

dolupta temposam res premped quis dolut voloris min

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Be PatrioticOfficiatia que sit eatis dolorep

tinulpa dusdae nam rendemos saperio. Nis audi illiae. Nequod

Throw Something PleaseTotas audam, que ducil eosam nobis

aborest, volorerio. Musdae vendit inverae

que illitibusape dolo

Quack Quack!Icaboribus iducips andebis

et et laut hictum volut apienie nistioratquo officias

molor aribus asperio rporeperes ipissi

Thirsty, Why WaitIcaboribus iducips andebis

et et laut hictum volut apienie nistioratquo

officias molor aribus

Let’s Fly AwayAximporatur sin corent estia volupta num aut ulparit emporer itibusanda sus, qui unt molupientur sequ

Feeling ViolentFaccuscipit, tempos

earuptatum quis expel idunt.Abo. Ignatquo el ipis dolorae eratur,

Have Some FunBitatureius maio int,

tempor aut quidelesed quas as iderias doluptaquam

dem. Unt voluptati

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16 GLANCE

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GLANCE 17

The Heart of

City“In Los Angeles, by the time

you’re thirty-five, you’re older than

most of the buildings.” - Delia Ephron

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 bewildering 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.”

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18 GLANCE

Architecture

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GLANCE 19

ArchitectureBy Christopher Hawthorne

How a once-stalled Frank Gehry project became

one of his triumphs

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20 GLANCE

tarcs hite

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GLANCE 21

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 post-war 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 full-time 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.

hitectWith 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, fund-raising 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 consolation 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

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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

“An Architectural Throwback”

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GLANCE 23

The facade soars, bends, and dives in a number of directions

“An Architectural Throwback”

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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

Walt Disney Concert Hall111 S Grand Ave, Los Angeles, CA

(980) 575-7099

Page 25: Zonona_PublicationDesign_Fall2011_NEW

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.

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 public-minded and collaborative senses of the word—that he’s a master at figuring out ways to allow inspiration to serve practicality, and vice versa. a large garden.

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26 GLANCE

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GLANCE 27

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28 GLANCE

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GLANCE 29

Through the LensBY MATT ZONONA

Even if you’re confused by the fork in the driveway, which slopes up to the Edenic apex of Laurel Canyon, or don’t recognize architect Raphael Soriano’s mid-century design landmark, you can’t miss Julius Shulman’s place. It’s the one with the eight-foot-high banner bearing his name—an advertisement for his 2005 Getty Museum exhibition “Modernity and the Metropolis”—hanging before the door to the studio adjoining the house. As displays of ego go, it’s hard to

beat. Yet the voice calling out from behind it is friendly, even eager—“Come on in!” And drawing back the banner, one finds, not a monument, but a man: behind an appealingly messy desk, wearing blue suspenders and specs with lenses as big as Ring Dings, and offering a smile of roguish beatitude.

You’d smile, too. At 96, Shulman is the best known architectural photographer in the world, and one of the genre’s most influential figures. Between 1936, when a fateful meeting with architect Richard Neutra began his career, and his semi-retirement half a century later, he used his instinctive compositional elegance and hair-trigger command of light to document more than 6,500 projects, creating images that defined many of the masterworks of 20th-century architecture. Most notably, Shulman’s focus on the residential modernism of Los Angeles, which included photographing 18 of the 26 Case Study Houses

commissioned by Arts & Architecture magazine between 1945 and 1967, resulted in a series of lyrical tableaux that invested the high-water moment of postwar American optimism with an arresting,

oddly innocent glamour. Add to this the uncountable volumes and journals featuring his pictures, and unending requests for reprints, and you have an artist whose talent, timing, ubiquity,

and sheer staying power have buried the competition—in some cases, literally.

SchulmanJulius

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30 GLANCE

Shulman’s decision to call it quits in 1986 was  motivated less by age than a distaste for postmodern architecture. But, he insists, “it wasn’t quite retiring,” citing the ensuing decade and a half of lectures, occasional assignments, and work on books. Then, in 2000, Shulman was introduced to a German photographer named Juergen Nogai, who was in L.A. from Bremen on assignment. The men hit it off immediately, and began partnering on work motivated by the maestro’s brand-name status. “A lot of people, they think, It’d be great to have our house photographed by Julius Shulman,” says Nogai. “We did a lot of jobs like that at first. Then, suddenly, people figured out, Julius is working again.”

“I realized that I was embarking on another chapter of my life,” Shulman says, the pleasure evident in his time-softened voice. “We’ve done many assignments”—Nogai puts the number at around 70—“and they all came out beautifully. People are always very cooperative,” he adds. “They spend days knowing I’m coming. Everything is clean and fresh. I don’t have to raise a finger.” As regards the division of labor, the 54-year-old Nogai says tactfully, “The more active is me

because of the age. Julius is finding the perspectives, and I’m setting up the lights, and fine-tuning the image in the camera.” While Shulman acknowledges their equal partnership, and declares Nogai’s lighting abilities to be unequaled, his assessment is more succinct: “I make the compositions. There’s only one Shulman.”

In fact, there seem to be many. There’s Shulman the photographer, who handles three to five assignments a month (and never turns one down—“Don’t have to. Everyone’s willing to wait”), and the Shulman between hard covers, whose latest book, the three-volume, 950-page Modernism Rediscovered, will shortly be published by Taschen. But the Shulman of whom Shulman seems most proud is the educator. In 2005, he established an  eponymous institute in conjunction with the Woodbury University in nearby Burbank, to provide, according to the school, “programs that promote the appreciation and understanding of architecture and design.” Apart from a fellowship program and research center, the Julius Shulman Institute’s principal asset is its founder, who has given dozens of talks at high schools across Southern California.

“The subject is the power of

photography,” Shulman explains. “I have thousands of slides, and Juergen and I have assembled them into almost 20 different lectures. And not just about architecture—I have pictures of cats and dogs, fashion pictures, flower photographs. I use them to do a lot of preaching to the students, to give them something to do with their lives, and keep them from dropping out of school.”

It all adds up to a very full schedule, which Shulman handles largely by himself—“My daughter comes once a week from Santa Barbara and takes care of my business affairs, and does my shopping”—and with remarkable ease for a near-centenarian. Picking up the oversized calendar on which he records his appointments, Shulman walks me through a typical seven days: “Thom Mayne—we had lunch with him. Long Beach, AIA meeting. People were here for a meeting about my photography at the Getty [which houses his archive]. High school students, a lecture. Silver Lake, the Neutra house, they’re opening part of the lake frontage, I’m going to see that. USC, a lecture. Then an assignment, the Griffith Observatory—we’ve already started that one.”

Yet rather than seeming overtaxed, Shulman fairly exudes well-being. Like

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many elderly people with nothing left to prove, and who remain in demand both for their talents and as figures of veneration (think of George Burns), Shulman takes things very easy: He knows what his employers and admirers want, is happy to provide it, and accepts the resulting reaffirmation of his legend with a mix of playfully rampant immodesty and heartfelt gratitude. As the man himself puts it, “The world’s my onion.”

Given the fun Shulman’s having being Shulman, one might expect the work to suffer. But his passion for picture-making remains undiminished. “I was surprised at how engaged Julius was,” admits the Chicago auction-house mogul Richard Wright, who hired Shulman to photograph Pierre Koenig’s Case Study House #21 prior to selling it last year. “He did 12 shots

in two days, which is a lot. And he really nailed them.” Of this famous precision, says the writer Howard Rodman, whose John Lautner–designed home Shulman photographed in 2002: “There’s a story about Steve McQueen, where a producer was trying to get him to sign on to a movie. The producer said, ‘Look how much you change from the beginning to the end.’ And McQueen said, ‘I don’t want to be the  guy who learns. I want to be the guy who knows.’ And Shulman struck me as the guy who knows.”

This becomes evident as, picking up the transparencies from his two most recent assignments, he delivers an impromptu master class. “We relate to the position of the sun every minute of the day,” Shulman begins, holding an exterior of a 1910 Craftsman-style house in Oakland, by

Bernard Maybeck, to the lamp atop his desk. “So when the sun moves around, we’re ready for our picture. I have to be as specific as a sports photographer—even a little faster,” he says, nodding at the image, in which light spills through a latticework overhang and patterns a façade. “This is early afternoon, when the sun is just hitting the west side of the building. If I’m not ready for that moment, I lose the day.” He does not, however, need to observe the light prior to photographing: “I was a Boy Scout—I know where the sun is every month of the year. And I never use a meter.”

Shulman is equally proud of his own lighting abilities. “I’ll show you something fascinating,” he says, holding up two exteriors of a new modernist home, designed for a family named Abidi, by

“I tell people in my lectures, ‘If I were modest, I wouldn’t talk about how great I am.”

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inside of the house is dark, resulting in a handsome, somewhat lifeless image. In the second, it’s been lit in a way that seems a natural balance of indoor and outdoor illumination, yet expresses the structure’s relationship to its site and showcases the architecture’s transparency. “The house is transfigured,” Shulman explains.

“I have four Ts. Transcend is, I go beyond what the architect himself has seen. Transfigure—glamorize, dramatize with lighting, time of day. Translate—there are times, when you’re working with a man like Neutra, who wanted everything the way he wanted it—‘Put the camera here.’ And after he left, I’d put it back where I wanted it, and he wouldn’t know the difference—I translated. And fourth, I transform the composition with furniture movement.”

To illustrate the latter, Shulman shows me an interior of the Abidi house that looks out from the living room, through a long glass wall, to the grounds. “Almost every one of my photographs has a diagonal leading you into the picture,” he says. Taking a notecard and pen, he draws a line from the lower left corner to the upper right, then a second perpendicular line from the lower right corner to the first line. Circling the intersection, he explains, “That’s the point of what we call ‘dynamic symmetry.’” When he holds up the photo again, I see that the line formed by the bottom of the glass wall—dividing inside from outside—roughly mirrors the diagonal he’s drawn. Shulman then indicates the second, perpendicular line created by the furniture arrangement. “My

assistants moved [the coffee table] there, to complete the line. When the owner saw the Polaroid, she said to her husband, ‘Why don’t we do that all the time?’”

Shulman’s remark references one of his signature gambits: what he calls “dressing the set,” not only by moving furniture but by adding everyday objects and accessories. “I think he was trying to portray the lifestyle people might have had if they’d lived in those houses,” suggests the Los Angeles–based architectural photographer Tim Street-Porter. “He was doing—with a totally positive use of the words—advertising or propagandist photographs for the cause.” This impulse culminated in Shulman’s introduction of people into his pictures—commonplace today, but virtually unique 50 years ago. “Those photographs—with young, attractive people having breakfast in glass rooms beside carports with two-tone cars—were remarkable in the history of architectural photography,” Street-Porter says. “He took that to a wonderfully high level.”

Surprisingly, Shulman underplays this aspect of his oeuvre. The idea, he explains, is simply to “induce a feeling of occupancy. For example, in the Abidi house, I put some wineglasses and bottles on the counter, which would indicate that people are coming for dinner. Then there are times I’ll select two or three people—the owner of a house, or the children—and put them to work. Sometimes it’s called for.”

“Are you pleased with these photographs?” I ask as he sets

them aside. “I’m pleased with all my work,” he says cheerfully.

Yet when I ask how he devel-oped his eye, Shulman’s expression turns philosophical. “Sometimes Juergen walks ahead of me, and he’ll look for a composition. And invariably, he doesn’t see what I see. Architects don’t see what I see. It’s God-given,” he says, using the Yiddish word for an act of kindness—“a mitzvah.”

I suggest a tour of the house, and Shulman moves carefully to a rolling walker he calls “the Mercedes” and heads out of the studio and up the front steps. As a plaque beside the entrance indicates, the 3,000-square-foot, three-bedroom structure, which Shulman commissioned in 1948 and moved into two years later, was landmarked by L.A.’s Cultural Heritage Commission as the only steel-frame Soriano house that remains as built. Today, such Case Study–era residences are as fetishized (and expensive) as Fabergé eggs. But when Shulman opens the door onto a wide, cork-lined hallway leading to rooms that, after six decades, remain refreshing in their clarity of function and communication, use of simple, natural materials, and openness to the out-of-doors, I’m reminded that the movement’s motivation was egalitarian, not elitist: to produce well-designed, affordable homes for young, middle-class families.

“Most people whose houses I photographed didn’t use their sliding doors,” Shulman says, crossing the living room toward his own glass sliders. “Because flies and lizards would come in;

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there were strong winds. So I told Soriano I wanted a transition—a screened-in enclosure in front of the living room, kitchen, and bedroom to make an indoor/outdoor room.” Shulman opens the door leading to an exterior dining area. A bird trills loudly. “That’s a wren,” he says, and steps out. “My wife and I had most of our meals out here,” he recalls. “Beautiful.”

We continue past the house to Shulman’s beloved garden—he calls it “the jungle”—a riot of vegetation that overwhelms much of the site, and frames an almost completely green canyon view. “I planted hundreds of trees and shrubs—back there you can see my redwoods,” he says, gesturing at the slope rising at the property’s rear. “Seedlings, as big as my thumb. They’re 85 feet tall now.” He pauses to consider an ominously large paw print in the path. “It’s too big for a dog. A bobcat wouldn’t be that big, either. It’s a mystery,” Shulman decides, pushing the Mercedes past a ficus as big as a baobab.

The mystery I find myself pondering, as we walk beside the terraced hillside, is the one he cited himself: the source of his talent. In 1936, Shulman was an ama-teur photographer—gifted, but without professional ambition—when he was invited by an architect friend to visit Richard Neutra’s Kun House. Shulman, who’d never seen a modern residence, took a handful of snapshots with the Kodak vest-pocket camera his sister had given him, and sent copies to his friend as a thank-you. When Neutra saw the images, he requested a meeting, bought the photos, and asked the 26-year-old if he’d

like more work. Shulman accepted and—virtually on a whim—his career took off.

When I ask Shulman what Neutra saw in his images, he answers with a seemingly unrelated story. “I was born in Brooklyn in 1910,” says this child of Russian-Jewish immigrants. “When I was three, my father went to the town of Central Village in Connecticut, and was shown this farmhouse—primitive, but [on] a big piece of land. After we moved in, he planted corn and potatoes, my mother milked the cows, and we had a farm life.

“And for seven years, I was imbued

with the pleasure of living close to nature. In 1920, when we came here to Los Angeles, I joined the Boy Scouts, and enjoyed the outdoor-living aspect, hiking and camping. My father opened a clothing store in Boyle Heights, and my four brothers and sisters and my mother worked in the store. They were businesspeople.” He flashes a slightly cocky smile. “I was with the Boy Scouts.”

We arrive at a sitting area, with a small pool of water, a fireplace, and a

large sculpture (purchased from one of his daughter’s high school friends) made from Volkswagen body parts. Shulman lowers himself onto a bench and absorbs the abundant natural pleasures. “When I bought this land, my brother said, ‘Why don’t you subdivide? You’ll make money.’” He looks amused. “Two acres at the top of Laurel Canyon, and the studio could be converted into a guest house—it could be sold for millions.”

He resumes his story. “At the end of February 1936, I’d been at UCLA, and then Berkeley, for seven years.

Never graduated, never majored. Just audited classes. I was driving home from Berkeley”—Shulman hesitates dramatically—“and I knew I could do anything. I was even thinking of getting a job in the parks department raking leaves, just so I could be outside. And within two weeks, I met Neutra, by chance. March 5, 1936—that day, I became a photographer. Why not?”

Hearing this remarkable tale, I understand that Shulman has answered my question about his talent with an explanation of his nature. What Neutra perceived in the young amateur was an outdoorsman’s independent spirit and an enthusiasm for life’s possi-bilities, qualities that, as fate would have it, merged precisely with the boundless optimism of the American Century—an optimism, Shulman instinctively recognized, that was embodied in the modern houses that became, as Street-Porter says, “a muse to him.”

“[Shulman] always says proudly that Soriano hated his furniture,” says Wim de Wit, the Getty Research Institute curator who oversees Shulman’s collection. “He says, ‘I don’t care; when I sit in a chair I want to be comfortable.’ He does not think of himself as an artist. ‘I was doing a business,’ he says. But when you look at that overgrown garden, you know—there is some other streak in him.” That streak—the free soul within the unpretentious, practical product of the immigrant experience—produced what Nogai calls “a seldom personality”: a Jewish farm boy who grew up to create internationally recognized American cultural artifacts—

icons that continue to influ-ence our fantasies and self-perceptions.

I ask Shulman if he’s surprised at how well his life has turned out. “I tell students, ‘Don’t take life too seriously—don’t plan nothing nohow,’” he replies. “But I have always observed and respected my destiny. That’s the only way I can describe it. It was meant to be.”

“And it was a destiny that suited you?”At this, everything rises at once—

his eyebrows, his outstretched arms, and his peaceful, satisfied smile. “Well,” says Shulman, “here I am.”

“I was born in Brooklyn in 1910”

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From Project Runway to New York Fashion Week, Designer Joshua Christensen tells

the MODE what the future holds for him.

CHRISTENSENJOSHUA

and tell them, ‘of course I am.’  Not winning the show did not crush my dreams. I’m more motivated and driven than ever before.  Between the Debut show collection and the NY collection I hope to become a successful designer creating collection after collection.

G: You had to utilize a lot of unconventional materials during your time on Project Runway; has that affected your resourcefulness as a designer?J: Yes and no.  I think the best lesson I learned on the show is that fashion can go beyond the conventional.  I’m learning that it’s possible to just let go and really explore the possibilities of design.  It’s important not to waste potential in design whether it’s using a new material or using new shapes or details.

G: How has the direct competition you received through Project Runway affected your work ethic?J: I’ve always worked hard but the show has shown me that I have to work even harder. There are so many talented individuals in the world and even if I can’t be the most naturally talented designer, I can still be the

Graham: When designing a garment, what sources of inspiration do you draw from?Joshua: My greatest source of inspiration is the culture around me, and the general feelings I get from being involved in the movements of the people.  I also pull inspiration from pop culture such as movies, music and other media sources.

G: What are your opinions on current trends?J: I think there are so many people following so many trends that it’s cool for people to find what they’re comfortable with.  I may not like all of the trends but it’s cool that the option is out there.

G: You were able to build a fan base from appearing on Project Runway this season, how do you intend to continue this momentum?J: I’m currently working on a full mens/womens collection with one of the contestants from the show and we are planning on showing in NY fashion week in February. It’s important to just keep going.  The best question fans ask when they meet me is “Are you still designing?” I can’t help but laugh

JCJoshua Christensen is no stranger to fashion design. This Washington native moved to Los Angeles in 2009 after majoring in Humanities/Art History at BYU. Christensen graduated FIDM in December of 2010, and was picked to participate in Season 9 of Project Runway. Back in Los Angeles, Christensen is currently working on two collections: one for FIDM Debut, and one for New York Fashion Week.

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C“Not winning

the show did not crush my dreams.

I’m more motivated and driven than

ever before.”

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G: How do you intend to differentiate yourself from other designers?J: I am unique as a person and as a designer but I get what a man wants to wear.  I will design clothes that work in fashion, business, and life.

G: What do you hope to accomplish with your collection for FIDM Debut?J: I hope to show my individuality and perspective in design.  My Debut Menswear collection is going to show exactly where I want to go in fashion.  This will be yet another step in my conquest for powerful fashion.

G: What’s the next creative step in your career?J: Create a Fashion Empire! I look forward to working harder than ever before. So many amazing opportunities are opening up to me and I have to be prepared to take as many as possible.  We’ll see what happens after Debut and NY but I hope to continue on a personal line of clothes working on my Menswear.  I think a lot of people forget that I am almost exclusively a menswear designer.  My debut collection and NY half will be my menswear.

“Keep going! Never give up on

the dream. This is not an easy

industry but if this is truly your

passion, you will sacrifice

and work until you make it.”

G: How has your personal design aesthetic evolved?J: I think when I first started designing I placed limitations on my work but as I grow in design I find that I’m changing.  My aesthetic is powerful, dark and romantic. I think as I grow this becomes stronger in my work.

G: Besides fashion design, what are some other creative outlets that you’re interested in?J: I write quite a bit actually and have books full of ideas and creative writings.  I still love studying art, and checking out museums and exhibits.  It’s important to be as creative as possible.

G: What words of encouragement would you give to prospective students, or fashion employees in the industry?J: Keep going! Never give up on the dream.  This is not an easy industry but if this is truly your passion, you will sacrifice and work until you make it.  That’s my plan.

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Don’t Blink

GLANCEREAD

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Don’t Blink

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