| The Huntington has acquired a rare Civil War-era painting by American master Winslow Homer. "The Sutler's Tent" was made in 1863 when Homer was traveling with the Union Army as an illustrator for Harper's Weekly. The title refers to a type of transitory store that sold goods to soldiers when they were out in the field, and the canvas shows a soldier eating bread and cheese while another soldier rests beside him. |
| The acquisition is the Huntington's first oil painting by Homer. The museum's other holdings include his watercolor, "Indians Making Canoes (Montagnais Indians)" (1895), and several prints, including "The Life Line" (1887). The pieces show the artist's journey from commercial illustrator to celebrated painter. |
| "The Sutler's Tent" will be unveiled to the public on Dec. 7 in the Huntington's Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art. It was acquired through a partnership with the Ahmanson Foundation — which seeks to help boost the notable holdings of the museum — and marks the fifth major acquisition made through the program. |
| The gift is intended to honor the country's upcoming semiquincentennial, and will anchor an ongoing reinstallation of the galleries as the Huntington seeks to expand the multicultural narrative of American art. It will also be integral to the Huntington's "This Land Is …" initiative, which works to examine the country's history through its metaphorical and literal landscapes as it approaches the 250th anniversary of its founding. |
| "The Sutler's Tent" will be placed in conversation with works about the Civil War and Reconstruction, including Eastman Johnson's "Sugaring Off" (1865), Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's "Why Born Enslaved? "(1868, cast 1872), and a signed copy of the Emancipation Proclamation. |
| "The Ahmanson Foundation's partnership with The Huntington has allowed us to bring works of profound artistic and historical resonance into our collections and into public view," said Huntington President Karen R. Lawrence, in a statement. "Winslow Homer's 'The Sutler's Tent' — a meditation on the experience of war — embodies our mission to connect art, history, and literature in ways that deepen understanding of the American story." |
| The Huntington Library is known for its vast scholarly trove of Civil War ephemera. Its United States Military Telegraph archive includes ciphered communications between Abraham Lincoln and the Army command, and soldiers' letters and diaries. It also holds the James E. Taylor Collection of scrapbooks documenting the war through photographs and newspaper clippings, and two of the most significant known Lincoln archives. |
| The art museum's director, Christina Nielsen, said in a statement that the acquisition of "The Sutler's Tent," "deepens our representation of the Civil War era and expands the dialogue between our art and library collections. As we look toward the 250th anniversary of the United States, the painting invites reflection on a pivotal chapter in our nation's history — one that continues to shape the American experience." |
| I'm arts and culture writer Jessica Gelt, looking forward to taking a deep dive into all that can be learned about our present from our past. Here's your arts and culture news for the week. |
Dispatch: Pulitzer Prize-winning Times art critic Christopher Knight to retire |
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| Times art critic Christopher Knight. (Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times) |
| After 45 years, 36 of them at The Times, art critic Christopher Knight is retiring from daily journalism. His final day at The Times is Nov. 28. In 2020, Knight won the Pulitzer Prize for criticism, and was also honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award for Art Journalism from the Dorothea and Leo Rabkin Foundation. |
| It's impossible to overstate the loss Knight's departure represents for the paper and Los Angeles, or what a tireless, generous, inspiring colleague he is. He possesses a quiet, encyclopedic knowledge of art, and in column after column he connected the dots of culture, history, folklore, civics and psychology in razor-sharp assessments of what a piece of art really means, or how a particular exhibition is poised to change the narrative around a longstanding or misguided idea. In short, he is everything a truly excellent critic should be. |
| He is also endlessly supportive of arts writers like me who look up to him — will always look up to him. |
| Thank you, Christopher, for all your words. |
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On our radar |
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| Janai Brugger as Mimi and Oreste Cosimo as Rodolfo in L.A. Opera's 2025 production of "La Bohème." (Cory Weaver) |
| La Bohème Giacomo Puccini's 1896 opera remains one of the most popular works in the Italian canon. Its doomed romanticism among struggling artists in 1830s Paris has a particular appeal to young people and became the inspiration for Jonathan Larson's musical "Rent." Lina González-Granados conducts the L.A. Opera orchestra. Brenna Corner directs this revival of the late Herbert Ross' enduring production. Saturday through Dec. 14. Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave., downtown L.A. laopera.org |
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| Roberto González-Monjas conducts the L.A. Phil this weekend at Walt Disney Concert Hall. (L.A. Phil) |
| Elgar's Enigma Roberto González-Monjas conducts the Los Angeles Philharmonic in a program featuring Erich Wolfgang Korngold's "Themes and Variations, Op. 42," Edwin Elgar's "Enigma Variations, Op. 36," and cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason's performance of the world premiere of an Edmund Finnis concerto. 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday; 2 p.m. Sunday. Walt Disney Concert Hall, 111 S. Grand Ave., downtown L.A. laphil.com |
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| Robert Therrien, "No title (plaster snowman)," 1982-98, plaster (Douglas M. Parker Studio) |
| Robert Therrien: This Is a Story A quintessential artist's artist, internationally admired Los Angeles sculptor Robert Therrien (1947-2019) made eccentric objects in two and three dimensions that seem strangely familiar when they are wholly abstract, and strangely abstract when they are instantly recognizable as representations of known things — a tall pillar of giant dinner plates, for example, or a simple little snowman. Often the materials are unusual, like zinc over bronze, buffed plaster or tempera on silver, adding to the sense of mysterious specificity. With more than 120 works spanning five decades, this should be the most compelling museum solo show of the season. — Christopher Knight Saturday through April 5, 2026. The Broad, 221 S. Grand Ave., downtown L.A. thebroad.org |
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The week ahead: A curated calendar |
| FRIDAY Fall of Freedom In a unified act of creative resistance, hundreds of galleries, museums, libraries, comedy clubs, theaters, concert halls and individuals across the nation will host exhibitions, performances and public events, asserting the power of free expression to mount a response to escalating authoritarian threats and censorship in the U.S. Friday and Saturday. There are dozens of local events in Southern California, please check the website for details. falloffreedom.com |
| ¡Cómo el Grinch robó la Navidad! The Old Globe Theatre will present two performances of the world premiere of a new version of the Dr. Seuss classic with your favorite songs in Spanish. And for the 28th year, the Old Globe will also be doing its traditional holiday musical of "Dr. Seuss's How the Grinch Stole Christmas!" Nov. 21-28. 7 p.m. Friday; 10 a.m. Saturday. Old Globe Theatre, 1363 Old Globe Way, San Diego. theoldglobe.org |
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| From "The Dying World" by Lauren Tsai. (Josh White) |
| The Dying World Lauren Tsai's solo exhibition, an installation utilizing drawing, painting, sculpture, puppets and projected stop motion imagery, explores the liminal space between worlds: subject and object, fiction and maker. Final two nights. 6-10 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Hollywood Forever, the Cathedral Mausoleum Courtyard, 6000 Santa Monica Blvd. hollywoodforever.com |
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| Amy Engelhardt in "Impact," a solo one-act at the Fountain. (Peter Serocki/peterserockivisuals.com) |
| Impact Composer/lyricist/performer Amy Engelhardt's one-act solo show (with musical accompaniment) probes the 1988 terrorist attack on Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday; 2 p.m. Sunday. The Fountain Theatre, 5060 Fountain Ave., Los Angeles. fountaintheatre.com |
| SATURDAY Animal Instinct Chinese American artist Kristen Liu-Wong's solo exhibition of vibrant paintings with slightly macabre narratives highlights her varied influences from American folk art, the cartoons she watched as a kid, Japanese erotic art and an appreciation for architecture. Opening reception, 7-11 p.m. Saturday; noon-6 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday, through Jan. 3, 2026. Corey Helford Gallery, 571 S. Anderson St., Los Angeles. coreyhelfordgallery.com |
| A Brahmsian Affair The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra presents a program featuring two sextets by Brahms, plus the world premiere of Julia Moss' "(Please Don't) Look Away." 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Zipper Hall, 200 S. Grand Ave., downtown L.A.; 4 p.m. Sunday. The Wallis, 9390 N. Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills. laco.org |
| Corita Day Corita Art Center celebrates L.A.'s favorite artist/nun with an afternoon of art activities for all ages, live screen printing by Self Help Graphics, holiday shopping, food, music by KCRW, and a performance by Bob Baker Marionette Theater at 2 p.m. Visitors can also reserve spots from 11 a.m.-6 p.m. to see the exhibitions "Corita Kent: The Sorcery of Images" and "Irregularity: Corita and Immaculate Heart College's Rule Breaking Designs." 1-4 p.m. Marciano Art Foundation, 4357 Wilshire Blvd., L.A. marcianoartfoundation.org |
| Grief Bacon and Other Holiday Treats Melanie Mayron and Sandra Tsing Loh deliver "old and new humor for trying times." Part of the Odyssey's "Thresholds of Invention" series. 8 p.m. Saturday. Odyssey Theatre, 2055 S. Sepulveda Blvd. odysseytheatre.com |
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| Tom Wesselman, "Bedroom Face," 1977, color aquatint (Palm Springs Art Museum) |
| Mapping the Female Body: Tom Wesselmann and Mickalene Thomas An unexpected juxtaposition of two very different painters from the end of one century and the beginning of the next is set to consider dissimilar representations of the contemporary female nude. In the 1960s, the famous "Great American Nude" series by Tom Wesselmann (1931-2004) applied commercial advertising techniques to painterly traditions in Western art familiar since the Renaissance. Fifty years later, Mickalene Thomas applies commercial craft techniques to vibrant paintings of queer Black women — a subject previously absent from Western art history. Questions of gender, sexuality and their depictions are the exhibition's focus. — Christopher Knight Through April 6, 2026. Palm Springs Art Museum, 101 Museum Drive. psmuseum.org |
| Venice Winter Fest Chill out SoCal-style with artisan markets, hot cocoa, live music, festive bites and interactive winter-themed activities for all ages. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 12257 Venice Blvd. thevenicefest.com |
| SUNDAY Habsburg Harmonies: Haydn, Ligeti, and Brahms Violinist Martin Beaver, flutist Demarre McGill, cellist Clive Greensmith and pianist Fabio Bidini team up for an evening rooted in Austro-Hungarian musical tradition. 4 p.m. Thayer Hall, 200 S. Grand Ave., downtown L.A. colburnschool.edu |
| TUESDAY Dungeons & Dragons: The Twenty-Sided Tavern Three adventurers need your help on an epic quest to save the world in this interactive fantasy inspired by the immensely popular role-playing game. Through Jan. 4, 2026. The Montálban, 1615 Vine St., Hollywood. broadwayinhollywood.com |
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Culture news and the SoCal scene |
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| The Palm Springs Art Museum, founded in 1938, has a small board of 22 trustees. (Lance Gerber / Palm Springs Art Museum) |
| Speaking of Christopher Knight's tremendous skills as a critic, did I mention he's also a phenomenal reporter? In one of his final columns, Knight chronicles the many financial travails of the Palm Springs Art Museum based on internal documents obtained by The Times. "Recent developments have opened a Pandora's box," Knight writes of an accounting firm's annual audit of the museum's 2024 books. The audit revealed that there is a "reasonable possibility that [the museum's] internal financial statements are significantly out of whack," Knight wrote before detailing the fallout leading to a trustees revolt. |
| Knight also delighted us with a list of "22 essential works of art at the Huntington and the surprising stories behind them." No one can highlight what should be considered essential viewing at a museum quite like Knight, who takes readers on a virtual tour of the storied San Marino museum and its exquisite holdings, including Sir Joshua Reynolds' "Portrait of Samuel Johnson ('Blinking Sam')," which Knight writes was not favored by its famous subject. |
| Times theater critic Charles McNulty once again checks in on Broadway, this time with a review of Robert Icke's "Oedipus," a modern retelling of Sophocles' "Oedipus the King." McNulty notes that the play "must be the buzziest, if not the chicest, Broadway offering of the fall season." |
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| Cher Alvarez, who reprises her role at the Ahmanson, in "Paranormal Activity" at Chicago Shakespeare Theater. (Kyle Flubacker) |
| Closer to home, McNulty reserved high praise for the spooky "Paranormal Activity," now playing at the Ahmanson Theatre. "I caught myself wondering during the first act, 'Is this the best staged production of the year?'," McNulty writes of the show, which is based on the horror film franchise of the same name and just completed a run at Chicago Shakespeare Theater. Director Felix Barrett, playwright Levi Holloway and Tony Award-winning illusion designer Chris Fisher are "masters of misdirection," McNulty concludes. |
| McNulty also wrote a news dispatch that Jessica Stone, "a Tony-nominated director ('Kimberly Akimbo,' 'Water for Elephants'), has been named the new artistic director of La Jolla Playhouse, succeeding Christopher Ashley at the helm of one of the nation's preeminent regional theaters." |
| I had a great Zoom call with Shaina Taub about the inspiration behind her musical, "Suffs." Taub is only the second woman, after Micki Grant, to star in a Broadway musical for which she also wrote the book, music and lyrics. The show is about the women's suffrage movement leading up to the ratification of the 19th Amendment. It opened earlier this week at the Hollywood Pantages Theatre as part of the show's inaugural national tour. |
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| Daniel T. Gaitor-Lomack in his studio. (Daniel Tyree Gaitor-Lomack / Night Gallery, Los Angeles. Photo by Tomasa Calvo.) |
| Interdisciplinary Los Angeles–based artist Daniel T. Gaitor-Lomack is staging a solo exhibition, "You Can Hate Me Now," at Night Gallery. This marks the artist's second solo show at the space. Much of the new work was informed by Gaitor-Lomack's life in his MacArthur Park neighborhood. A rep for the gallery wrote in an email that Gaitor-Lomack describes the exhibition "as a kind of ceremony, a gathering of ideas and emotions that have been unfolding across his work over the past three years. Guided by intuition and lived experience, he continues to use found and everyday materials to reflect on the innumerable systems of the world around. The exhibition's title, long held in his mind, frames the presentation as a meditation on anticipation, transformation, and resilience." The show will be at Night Gallery through Feb. 14. |
| The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, has made what it is calling the first-ever restitution of artwork to the descendants of an enslaved artist. The artist, David Drake, was born around 1800 in Edgefield, S.C. He is known for signing his vessels and inscribing them with poetic verses, including one that read, "I wonder where is all my relations." Fifteen of Drake's descendants recently traveled to Boston from various states for a ceremony during which MFA returned one of Drake's stoneware jars to them, and purchased a second back. An L.A.-based attorney named George Fatheree represents Drake's family and help shepherd the transaction. "This is a day we hoped and prayed for," said Pauline Baker, the third great-granddaughter of Drake, in a news release. "To see it realized is almost overwhelming. On behalf of our family, we express our deepest gratitude to the Museum of Fine Arts for its courage and integrity. Most importantly, this ceremony restores not just his work, but his humanity." |
| A Gustav Klimt painting, "Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer," recently sold for $236.4 million, including fees, making it the most expensive modern work to be sold at auction. The 71-by-51-inch painting, created between 1914 and 1916, portrays the 20-year-old daughter of the Viennese art collectors who commissioned the work. The portrait was sold during a Sotheby's auction in New York and was part of the private collection of cosmetics heir Leonard Lauder, who died in June. According to the Washington Post, a 19-minute bidding battle catapulted the painting "far beyond its $150 million estimate, with two bidders competing over the phone via their auction representatives." |
| — Jessica Gelt |
And last but not least |
| The unfettered, stand-up kindness of Keanu Reeves has become the stuff of legend thanks to legions of fans who faithfully recount the actor's good deeds on social media. Most recently, Reeves penned a handwritten letter of gratitude to the FBI after it recovered a stolen Rolex watch used in "John Wick." |