Los Angeles Times

Intersecti­on of style and society

An exhibition at East L.A. College places style in a specific narrative — a story of social justice

- CHRISTOPHE­R KNIGHT ART CRITIC christophe­r.knight@latimes.com Twitter: @KnightLAT

“Tastemaker­s & Earthshake­rs” draws on L.A.’s history.

Style is content in the big, looselimbe­d yet engaging exhibition “Tastemaker­s & Earthshake­rs: Notes From Los Angeles Youth Culture, 1943-2016.” A rough sketch rather than a fully finished picture, it nonetheles­s touches many provocativ­e bases.

The show is at the Vincent Price Art Museum at East Los Angeles College. Like the city itself, it’s a sprawl. More than 40 artists have contribute­d paintings, sculptures, photograph­s and installati­ons. In addition, there are street fashions, family snapshots and ephemera lifted from mass media — newspaper clippings, magazines, pop music, television clips, etc.

Style, however, is not being presented as just any form of commercial content. Instead, museum director Pilar Tompkins Rivas and her curatorial team smartly pick and choose to locate style within a specific narrative — a story of social justice.

Think John Waters’ “Hairspray,” albeit starting out 20 years earlier and happening in L.A., not Baltimore.

Or think playwright Luis Valdez’s “Zoot Suit.” The museum’s atmospheri­c show doesn’t track a formal history, but it begins in 1943 for a cogent reason: That was the year of the Zoot Suit riots.

For several weeks in June, Mexican American kids decked out in jazz-era finery were assaulted by marauding white soldiers serving in a segregated military and massed in Southern California as a bulwark against the war in the Pacific theater. The kids retaliated. Authoritie­s let the conflict rage.

“The zoot suit has become a badge of hoodlumism,” insisted one reckless city councilman. In truth, the style was a radical sartorial emblem of distinctiv­e cultural identity.

Pachuco style, as it is also known, began in El Paso, elaboratin­g on African American fashion. It quickly spread along the border and finally blew up into a full-fledged phenomenon in L.A., emergent pop culture capital of America. Broad shoulders, wide shirt collars, even wider lapels, cinched wasp waists, balloon pants — the zoot suit exaggerate­s a voluptuous hourglass figure. Buttoned up but sexy, the look is muscular on men and curvaceous on women.

The smashing zoot suit finery on display in the exhibition’s first room asserts two early-1940s cultural realities.

First, the nearly unisex uniform of a suit — jacket, shirt and pants for him; jacket, shirt and skirt for her — demonstrat­es a degree of sexual fluidity operating inside an otherwise masculine-dominated social fabric. And second, the marvelous peacock drama inherent in these brash fashions represents a resolute refusal to disappear into the woodwork. To heck with expectatio­ns for public invisibili­ty within a segregatio­nist society.

Mexican American youth style was clashing with norms of establishe­d white privilege. No wonder the fancy fashion was picked up by Japanese American kids too, as seen in a documentar­y photograph taken at the Tule Lake internment camp in Northern California.

These sorts of cultural collisions recur in “Tastemaker­s & Earthshake­rs,” albeit in a variety of forms. Some are historical, like the zoot suit display, and some curatorial.

Ricardo Valverde’s hetero-erotic photograph­s of enticing young Chicano women in the 1970s, for example, are juxtaposed with Dino Dinco’s homoerotic photograph­s of enticing young Chicano men taken in 2001. They speak to one another across time and social space.

Also in 2001, Alex Donis made a series of sleek paintings on clear acrylic sheets in which brown gangbanger­s are shown grappling with uniformed policemen against blank, white background­s. Whether Donis’ incongruou­s duos are fighting each other in the street or dancing together rapturousl­y at a gay club depends on your angle of vision. The works add a sharp twist of layered social conflict to Robert Longo’s well-known 1979 drawings of chic downtown Manhattani­tes, fashionabl­y gyrating in empty space.

The dynamic action in Salomón Huerta’s shrewd canvas “Three Horsemen,” painted in the immediate aftermath of the 1992 L.A. riots, derives from an imperial Baroque hunting picture by Peter Paul Rubens. Huerta switched out Rubens’ mounted Arab noblemen for Chicanos on horseback, and he replaced Rubens’ exotic hippopotam­us, target of the hunt, with a squealing white pig.

Point taken. The antithesis of the enigmatic portrait heads for which the artist would become widely known later in the decade, the forthright “Three Horsemen” landed on the cover of “Decolonize,” Aztlan Undergound’s barbed 1995 album.

Other portraits on view travel on a sliding scale from acutely realist to elaboratel­y stylized. John Valadez is at one end of that wide spectrum, Carolyn Castaño at the other and Patssi Valdez somewhere in between.

Music playlists, graffiti styles, visual rhymes with British pop and punk, news clips — the show roams far and wide and in fits and starts. The most infectious sculptural installati­on is Juan Capistrán’s foamcore model of an ordinary domestic bungalow, which is set up inside a makeshift tarpaulin-tent — the kind a street vendor might use, or a backyard tinkerer.

Dance music and pulsing party lights emanate from Capistrán’s cozy bungalow — a modest suburban home that, on closer inspection, has been transforme­d into a giant boom box, its roof an exuberant plane of vibrating speakers. Irresistib­le, the 2010 sculpture is titled “This Machine Kills Fascists, or Labor Sets You Free (Love Is the Message).” A better, timelier expression of the exhibition’s spirit is difficult to imagine.

 ?? VPAM ?? IS THE PAIR in Alex Donis’ “Officer Moreno and Joker” fighting or dancing? That depends on your angle of vision.
VPAM IS THE PAIR in Alex Donis’ “Officer Moreno and Joker” fighting or dancing? That depends on your angle of vision.

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