Showing posts with label LACMA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LACMA. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Joshua Guillaume

Film director Joshua Guillaume at Bourgeois Pig

JOSHUA GUILLAUME

At Bourgeois Pig
5931 Franklin Ave., Los Angeles (Franklin Village)


“Art has always been around me; it’s something I’ve literally been doing since I was a kid. My mom has photos of me at age 2 creating entire scenes on one of those magnetic drawing boards,” says filmmaker and director Joshua Guillaume. “It’s what eventually led me into directing.” 

As evidenced by his choice of venue for our interview, Bourgeois Pig, the New York transplant continues to feel most at ease in arts-friendly atmospheres. The bohemian coffeehouse boasts your standard menu of hot and cold beverages, baked goods, salads and sandwiches but offers a completely unique environment of glass chandeliers, a pool table and a room that resembles the woods at night: black walls, tree branches full of brown and green leaves and a bright orb of light hung in a corner acting as the moon. 

“Bourgeois Pig reminds me of one of the coffee shops back in Rochester,” says Josh after ordering a cup of coffee at the counter. “Upstairs it had art covering the walls, and you could hang your art wherever you could find a place to put it. Downstairs it had a really thrown-together vibe like this place. I like places like that, that seem like happy accidents.”

While he may enjoy the unexpected from time to time, it’s no accident that the talented young filmmaker landed in Los Angeles a year ago. Growing up in Upstate New York, his interests blossomed from Magna Doodle drawings to encompass all kinds of art.

Josh in Bourgeois Pig's "moon room"
“My dad would blast rock music when we rode in the car. I was 11 when I heard ‘Frankenstein’ by the Edgar Winter Group, and the synthesizer was such a unique sound that I had never heard before. I looked at my mom and said, ‘I want to learn synthesizer.’ She said, ’You should learn piano.’ I begrudgingly said, ‘OK, I’ll try it out and ended up playing the piano for over a decade,” Josh tells. “At that age my family also got a new desktop computer. My older brother and I would make crazy drawings with Windows Paint and figured out how to make animations with them. We would set them to music and have competitions of who had the better animation to get mom most interested. For several months we would fight over the computer to make animations.”

Although Josh was beginning to explore other art forms, drawing and painting were still at the forefront. 

“A lot of my early influences were European artists like French artist Jean-Léon Gérôme, his work that was during the period when the French were painting in Morocco or around Arabia and showed prayers, different Arabic architecture and large beautiful scenes with a lot of color. I’ve also always loved Degas since some of his work came through where I grew up when I was 10 or 11. That was the first time I saw a great painter’s work in person. It was so exciting. There is a freedom in his drawing that I’ve always loved, which is interesting because he’s somebody that the French Academy would tend to hate because he’s got so much freedom. He has that post-impressionistic flair to his work that the Academy absolutely hated. It’s interesting that my influences are so polar, but it’s great to pick from both and enjoy them for what they are,” he reflects.

Josh continued painting through high school and even hoped to study at an atelier academy in New York City or Philadelphia modeled after the French Academy, but he eventually hit a wall with fine art and realized all of his artistic endeavors were leading him down an entirely different road as a visual storyteller.

“I was halfway through my second year of college, trying to figure out what I wanted to be and had what I can only describe as an epiphany. I realized that anytime I wanted to do a painting, I was always planning to do a series of paintings. There was always a narrative, a sequence of three, 12 or even 20 pieces that I wanted to paint. I would make notes on what I wanted each painting to do, but I would never get around to actually painting them all. With music, it was never just about rocking out, I was always interested in composing songs that had a longer narrative. One day I was sitting in class and realized that all of this is basically what a director does: You have a vision, and you direct to get there. I grew up loving movies, being obsessed with Star Wars, but it was then that I realized, ‘Wow, it’s film. Directing is exactly what I want to do,’” he remembers. “Over the next month, I went full bore reading and looking around at every college possible. I eventually ended up at Syracuse University, but since I hadn’t begun there as a freshman, I couldn’t graduate from the film program. I focused on literature, theater, fine art history – all of which continue to inspire my films – and took just enough film classes to learn what I needed. I was able to recruit graduate students to come DP and work on scripts for me, and I would co-produce their thesis films.”

Once Josh realized his true calling, there wasn’t a hurdle his passion couldn’t overcome.

“I found out this one professor had crewed an Israeli film the previous year that was shot in Syracuse, so I walked up to him after class – he was a really private guy who didn’t like to talk about himself – and said, ‘So you crewed a film last year, what’s coming up?’ He was like, ‘How did you find that out?’ ‘Internet, man. Where can I intern? What feature films are coming up?’ He sent me to see a guy working in the cage upstairs. I went up to the cage and met this long-haired South Korean named Q and exchanged information with him. I found out he had experience working in the film industry in South Korea and literally told him, ‘You’re my mentor now. I don’t care if I screw up, you better yell at me, tell me when I’m wrong. Slap me around; I’m just here to learn.”

He has definitely maintained the same drive and determination in Los Angeles. 

Transviolet’s video for “Girls Your Age” is an example of Josh’s most recent work, and he just wrapped a new music video for singer-songwriter Conner Stark. Music continues to inspire Josh, and he loves discovering new artists.

“Every time I go to the Echo for a Monday-night residency, I come out with a new favorite band. The first time I went, Holychild played, then the Moth & the Flame,” he gushes. “That’s the one place where I tell friends to go if they’re looking for new music. It’s free, and you’ll find bands who have just been signed or about to be signed that put on fantastic shows.”

While Los Angeles may not have MoMA or the Met, Josh has slowly started to explore the city’s art museums.

“I went to LACMA a few weeks ago to see the Steve McQueen ‘Kanye West: All Day’ video. I really enjoyed it because it seemed like a continuation of McQueen’s earlier video artwork,” he says. “LACMA as a whole has a very nice collection, and the campus is incredible. I haven’t seen a museum campus like it before. The architecture is very interesting. ”

McQueen (Hunger, Shame, 12 Years a Slave) is a contemporary director that Josh admires greatly.

“I love what he has been doing as a director – his framing, the content. He has a voice and a confidence in his politics and what he’s showing that not many directors have,” says Josh, whose taste tends to favor dramas. “Some of the oddity and satire that come from the Coen brothers is always fun, though. There’s a side of me that just loves comedy. ‘Regular Show’ is amazing, and I love ‘Adventure Time,’ how it builds up as if there’s a moral but at the end of the episode there’s really no moral. It’s not so on the nose where it’s like, ‘This is right, or this is wrong.’ It just brings up different questions, which I think is an important part of art.”

Josh admits to being a total East Coaster at heart, but Los Angeles is slowly growing on him.

“The coolest thing I’ve found in Los Angeles that has a little bit of history is near where I live by the Hollywood Bowl: the walk streets like Alta Loma Terrace in the Hollywood Heights hidden in the hills. The sidewalks cut through the hills, and on one that the Bowl backs up against, there are stairs that go from the parking lot at the bottom of the hill all the way to the top. There are houses along the steps and an elevator for the houses that was built in the 1920s or ‘30s [located at 2178 High Tower Drive]. At the top is also where Kurt Cobain lived with Courtney Love, and a great view of Hollywood,” he informs. “So far my favorite thing about Los Angeles, though, is the access to the outdoors and nature because it’s something that you can’t get in cities like New York – being able to go out the desert and ride dirt bikes and ATVs or drive out to Malibu. I would love to live in Santa Monica or Malibu. I love the burn off in the morning. It reminds me of a nice morning fog where I grew up.”

“There are just so many talented people out here, and then there’s the luck factor,” Josh concludes. “But hard work definitely helps give you luck, so I’m hoping I’m lucky.”

For more information, visit joshuaguillaume.com.


Thursday, March 27, 2014

Events for March 27-April 2, 2014

Get with THE PROGRAM


THURSDAY, MARCH 27
Timur and the Dime Museum (Jill Steinberg)


THEATER


Collapse @ REDCAT (Downtown)
It's impossible to classify the music of Timur and the Dime Museum in just one word. Led by the soaring vocals of classically trained tenor Timur Bekbosunov, the fivesome meld their haunting melodies with the stagecraft of post-punk cabaret in this operatic song cycle composed as a requiem mass. Their Collapse performance is set to video projections by artist Jesse Gilbert, with costumes designed by Victor Wilde of the Bohemian Society. Don't miss this world-premiere event on either Thursday, Friday or Saturday night.

TELEVISION


"Portlandia" @ LACMA (Miracle Mile)
Even though I've never lived in Portland, Ore., whenever I watch an episode of "Portlandia," I see myself or someone I know in at least one of the sketches. The show's creators, writers and stars – Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein – are just so spot-on with their commentary on society at large. The show is in the midst of its fourth season, and the duo will be on hand for a screening of two of the new episodes and a discussion at LACMA this evening.


FRIDAY, MARCH 28


FILM


In Theaters This Week
My pick of the week is the portrait of Cesar Chavez, directed by Diego Luna and starring Michael Peña, Rosario Dawson, America Ferrera and John Malkovich; Darren Aronofsky's version of the biblical story of Noah stars Russell Crowe, Jennifer Connelly, Anthony Hopkins and Emma Watson; Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sam Worthington, Terrence Howard, Josh Holloway and Joe Maganiello in Sabotage. Also in theaters: Big Men; Finding Vivian Maier; It Felt Like Love; Locker 13; The Raid 2

MUSIC


Torches @ The Roxy (West Hollywood)
I've been enamored with the sounds of this L.A. duo (vocalist/guitarist Azad Cheikosman and drummer Eric Fabbro) since their If the People Stare EP was released last May, and they just released a new single, "Staring," from their upcoming album that was produced/engineered by Dave Newton (Henry Clay People, the Soft Pack) and mastered by Jeff Lipton (Arcade Fire, Wilco). The two are known for throwing a few Arcade Fire covers into the mix during their live sets, and if you haven't had the chance to catch them yet, this show with Moving Units is a great opportunity.


SATURDAY, MARCH 29
Tough Mudder (Weston Walker)


FITNESS


Tough Mudder @ Glen Helen Raceway (San Bernardino)
Maybe you need something more intense to release all of the week's stress and frustration. If so, then  this Tough Mudder event, happening today and tomorrow, is for you. The hardcore 10- to 12-mile obstacle course of challenges is designed to test your all-around strength, stamina, mental toughness and teamwork. At the end, you are guaranteed to be covered in mud, with sore muscles and a few bruises, but you'll also have some major bragging rights.

DANCE


A Taste of Dance: Movie Moves @ The Music Center Plaza (Downtown)
I am such a sucker for dance movies. I mean, who doesn't love it when the cast breaks out into their best moves in the middle of a scene? For just $1 per lesson, you can learn the steps to some of the greatest dance films of all time. Routines include Flashdance, Pulp Fiction, Dirty Dancing, (500) Days of Summer, Singing' in the Rain, Saturday Night Fever and Slumdog Millionaire.

FOOD


Ramen Yokocho @ Santa Anita Park (Arcadia)
Last year's festival was so packed that they've moved to a much larger venue for this Saturday and Sunday. Never fear though, all of the ramen purveyors that you love are still going to be on hand offering a taste of their famous noodle soup for $8 a bowl. L.A. participants include Daikokuya, Men Oh and Hayatemaru, while Las Vegas' Monta, San Diego's Shalala and Japan's Mattou Seimen are also part of the 14-strong lineup. Saturday the track celebrates Japan Family Fun Day, so there are plenty of cultural exhibitions and the Tokyo City Cup to be enjoyed along with the ramen fest.


SUNDAY, MARCH 30
Cody Chesnutt (Bohbot)


MUSIC


Cody Chesnutt @ Troubadour (West Hollywood)
One of my favorite songs from the Roots, "The Seed (2.0)," is actually a remake of a track that was originally on the Atlanta-based neo-soul troubadour's debut album, 2002's The Headphone Masterpiece. Cody Chesnutt took a period away from music but thankfully returned with his sophomore effort, Landing on a Hundred, in 2012. His vocals are still silky smooth, and his message is as powerful as ever. Hear the newer material and some of the older ditties when his B Sides and Remixes Tour swings into the Troubadour this evening.


TUESDAY, APRIL 1


FILM

Leave The World Behind @ ArcLight Cinemas (Hollywood)
The EDM supergroup, consisting of DJs/producers Axwell, Steve Angello and Sebastian Ingrosso, announced their One Last Tour trek and proceeded to sell over a million tickets worldwide in just one week. This documentary, executively produced by Jonas Åkerlund, follows Swedish House Mafia in their final moments as a trio, from making the decision to disband to the last note of the tour. The film screens today and April 3 at the ArcLight and April 4 at Westwood Crest Theatre.


WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2


BOOKS


Nelson George @ Book Soup (West Hollywood)

I vividly remember singing and dancing along to episodes of "Soul Train" when I was barely in kindergarten. Author and filmmaker Nelson George just released a new book documenting the groundbreaking television variety show called The Hippest Trip in America: Soul Train and the Evolution of Culture & Style. The show's producer and host Don Cornelius shares memories from its time, along with the likes of Aretha Franklin, Rosie Perez and Jodie Watley. Join George in conversation with "Soul Train" dancer Marco De Santiago at Book Soup tonight.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Beta Wolf

Sergio Ruelas, Rocko McIvor and Grant Arnow of Beta Wolf in front of Urban Light at LACMA

BETA WOLF

At Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)

5905 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles (Miracle Mile)


"Everyone says you're a beauty queen, cigarette butts and your magazines and bad dreams, but you make me believe. You complicate me, when you show me how you feel. But you give me something real. Los Angeles, if you only knew, nobody loves you the way that I do. Los Angeles, others can do their best, but no one moves like you do. Los Angeles."

With lyrics like these from "Los Angeles," their ode to the City of Angels that appears on their latest EP, Just Before Morning, I couldn't ask for a more appropriate band to profile for Jigsaw than Beta Wolf. Although only one of them is a native Angeleno, all five of the band members have grown to love the metropolis for different reasons.

"I grew up in Las Vegas, but there's so much to love about Los Angeles. It's not nearly as hot as Vegas, and the love of my life is out here," says bassist Rocko McIvor with a grin. "The thing I really dig about L.A. is that there are so many different styles, cultures. There's so much culture, it's amazing."

"Well, I was born here, and I love it for many different reasons: This is where I went to school, where all my friends live, where I have the most memories, and it's home," admits guitarist Sergio Ruelas. "It's cool to have grown up here, especially being a musician. You don't really meet a lot of people that are actually from here, being in that world, so it's cool to have that unique thing. And, yes, the weather is always nice. You can always count on that."

"With Los Angeles, it isn't easy to live here, so I think that what ends up happening is the people that stay, they truly have a reason they want to be here," adds vocalist Grant Arnow. "It would be easier to move somewhere that was less expensive, with less traffic. But for me, living in Los Angeles, every day is a unique experience. Either I'll go someplace and see somebody I know or something new will happen or I'll go eat somewhere new. It keeps you on your toes in a good way."

Besides the song "Los Angeles," Beta Wolf have released a series of videos called Living in Los Angeles to further demonstrate the love they have for their home base. They go to one of their favorite spots around town, such as the Watts Towers or San Pedro's Sunken City, to perform a track from Just Before Morning and share stories about Los Angeles.

"We're going to do some more videos soon. We actually have one that's on Melrose, which is where I like to hang out. We'll be releasing it for the song 'Undertow,'" shares Grant. "Then we're going to do one for Devon [Pangle, guitarist], but he hasn't figured out the location yet. Devon definitely has a taste that's unto his own, so whatever it will be, it will be cool. Chester [Lang, drummer] likes to go out on Sunset Strip most of the time, like to the Viper Room or Libertine since he lives right off the boulevard."

The location that they take me to is definitely one that is unique only to our city: Chris Burden's Urban Light installation at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Burden restored 202 antique street lamps that he collected from places like the Rose Bowl Flea Market to create what he calls "a building with a roof of light." The cast-iron posts once again shine as part of the large-scale assemblage sculpture, and they have also brought light to Beta Wolf.

"For me, not growing up in L.A. and coming to L.A., I was kind of aimless at first. I was just looking for stuff that I could really get behind, not stuff that everybody else told me was cool – because people do that in L.A. a lot, they say 'You should go here, it's cool,' and then it sucks," laughs Grant. "When I came here for the first time, I loved it. It's such a unique spot. The light installation, especially when you drive by it at night, it has that instant of, 'what the hell is that?' LACMA's so big that you can explore it at your own pace. Anybody that I know can come to the museum and find something different that they like about it."

"I've heard about the cool shows and interesting programs that they have here with different kinds of music (symphonies, hip hop and jazz), that I would like to go to," says Rocko.

In the two years since they formed Beta Wolf, the quintet has been able to explore the city together, from Downtown to the coast. As we take a seat on the patio of Ray's and Stark Bar, located just behind Urban Light, the guys tell me about some of their other sweet spots in Los Angeles.

"I used to live off of Sixth and Main in Downtown, and there's a cool bar called Spring St. Bar. There are lots of rad cats who hang out there," tells Rocko.

"Have you ever been to the Edison? It's the coolest place in Downtown. I love it," says Sergio. "For food, I like eating at Poquito Más. I actually had it last night."

"Everything he eats is some kind of bread and cheese," exclaims Rocko, as Sergio bites into some flatbread with provolone cheese and sausage.

Grant's weakness is street tacos: "My favorite is Tacos 'El Gallito.' They've got these yellow trucks, and I know all the spots where they are now so I can modify my course home and go by there. They're always good."

"I actually like driving on the freeways when there's not a lot of traffic," says Rocko. "If I can get on the 101 or the 405 and just drive 70-80, it's like a forced meditation. I get a lot of peace out of that."

"I really like driving PCH. When I can have the ocean on one side and the other side is just a cliff, I can drive and just not think about anything or think about all sorts of stuff," agrees Grant. "It just sets my mind at ease because, ultimately, the ocean helps me remember that as bad as my problems might feel, I'm just one small piece of a major puzzle. It helps put everything in perspective, just because of how big the ocean is and how small you are. I realize that the course of my life is a lot larger than the one issue I'm experiencing at that moment."

Beta Wolf have had some pretty amazing moments thus far. After parting ways with their former band, Takota, Grant and Sergio formed Beta Wolf with Sergio's fellow Musicians Institute (MI) alumni, Devon and Chester. After Rocko joined, the group entered an MI competition and garnered the attention of a Japanese record label, travelled to Japan for Summer Sonic and released an album, Dark Days, which reached No. 51 on the international charts. They put out Just Before Morning, their U.S. debut EP, in July before embarking on tour in support of multi-platinum rock band Daughtry.

"The whole experience was like going to college. Over the course of the whole thing we learned what works and what doesn't work from playing in front of huge audiences. And the guys in Daughtry's band took us under their wing and gave us little pears of wisdom," says Grant. "One night I was having a rough time with my voice, and Chris pulled me aside and gave me some remedies that he uses. I tried them, and they worked. I would have never known about them if it wasn't for him."

"They totally became our big brothers. They were always supportive and encouraging," concurs Sergio.

Reminiscing about the Daughtry tour leads into a discussion about the first L.A. concerts that the Beta Wolf guys attended.

"The first concert I went to in Los Angeles was Weezer at the old Tower Records on Sunset Boulevard," remembers Sergio. "I was in high school, and it was crazy because I slept in the parking lot the night before to make sure I got into the show. It was amazing."

"The first concert I remember coming to in L.A., I had to lie to my parents to come up here from where we lived in Orange County and see it," confides Grant. "I went with a friend to a place called the Hollywood Athletic Club to see Rocket from the Crypt. It felt dangerous, just because I was in Hollywood. The band was all dressed up, and the crowd was going insane. People were jumping off balconies onto each other. I was like, 'Holy shit, this is awesome!'"

Rocko experienced a similar feeling when he played his first show at age 13.

"I got my first bass when I was 13 years old, and actually booked my first show a month after I got my bass. I didn't know how to play it, I didn't write any songs, I didn't have anyone in a band. Then the day came, I got two friends together and we wrote five songs right then. We played terribly, we forgot all of them and didn't play a single note right for a good 20 minutes," he recalls with a laugh. "My older brother grew up playing music, he was in a Los Angeles-based band and I looked up to him as my role model, so I always wanted to do music. Once I started to learn how to play music, he introduced me to rock 'n' roll and heavy metal, that's what I fell in love with. It was probably that first show at age 13 when I knew that music was it for me. "

Like Rocko, Sergio grew up with a strong musical influence in his family, his father.

"My parents are from Mexico, and they migrated over here when my mom was pregnant with me and my dad was 20. My dad was a professional singer in Mexico, so when they came here he started doing shows at bars for a living. Once I was born, my mom asked him to stop, so he stopped. My earliest memories are of me going under their bed, finding a guitar and bringing it out to him because I wanted to see him play and sing. When I was 5, he enrolled us in a piano class together. After that, I played piano until I was about 12 and then picked up guitar," Sergio says. "We were visiting my dad's brothers in Mexico, and my dad started playing 'La Bamba.' He played that riff, and I was like, 'That's the coolest thing I've ever seen!' So I went up to him after and asked him how to play it, and he just handed me the guitar. I sat there for an hour trying to figure out what he did, just by what he had done with his hands. That was when I wanted to start playing guitar. My dad eventually got me a guitar, and I played it every day."

Grant also realized that music would be his lifelong passion at a young age.

"My parents would sing Peter, Paul and Mary to me when I was very young, and they always talked about the fact that I would sing it back with them. But then I stopped singing for a long time, I actually started playing music on the trumpet," he says. "Then we went to the Orange County Fair, and there was a boys chorus singing in a little pavilion. The conductor was talking about how they had been to the Soviet Union and Boston that year, and I've always liked traveling. So at the end of the performance, the conductor said, 'If there are any boys out there who are interested in singing, traveling and meeting amazing people, come and talk to me to sign up.' That's all I needed to hear. Without even asking permission from my parents, I took off to sign up. From that point forward, all I ever did was sing. I went to high school, did musical theater and when I was 16 I was in my first rock band. I got a scholarship to sing classically in college, and the minute I got to school the first thing I did was try to set up a band. It's all I've ever really wanted to do, ever."

Just Before Morning is currently available. For more information, visit betawolfmusic.com.