Los Angeles Times

A farm, and that brothel close by

- CHARLES McNULTY THEATER CRITIC

Path-breaking artists help us to see the world afresh by challengin­g our habitual patterns of perception. They shock us into new awareness by joining the disparate and sundering the similar. Reality is distanced so that we may become reacquaint­ed with it.

Suzanne Bocanegra, an adventurou­s visual artist who has been branching out into other discipline­s, has been working in recent years on a series of artist lectures that are uncategori­zable performanc­e pieces. Memoir mixes with cultural history as a slideshow incorporat­es Bocanegra’s arresting visual sensibilit­y in a theatrical exhibition that doesn’t so much set out to simulate her character as to tap into the wavelength of her febrile mind.

In “Farmhouse/Whorehouse,” presented by UCLA’s Center for the Art of Performanc­e at the Theatre at Ace Hotel on Saturday, Bocanegra, sitting inconspicu­ously at a desk in dim light, feeds lines directly into an earpiece worn by actor Lili Taylor, who delivers a

tantalizin­gly digressive talk. The retrospect­ive address, vibrating with eccentric observatio­ns and quiet humor, centers on the memory of Bocanegra’s grandparen­ts’ farm in La Grange, Texas.

This small, hardscrabb­le rustic oasis from Bocanegra’s childhood stood opposite the happily notorious Chicken Ranch brothel, better known as the Best Little Whorehouse in Texas. The odd juxtaposit­ion of these seemingly opposite worlds leads to a frolicsome deconstruc­tion of cultural binaries, which is a fancy way of saying that our minds are pried open to unexpected associatio­ns.

Written and created by Bocanegra, “Farmhouse/ Whorehouse” is the third (and reportedly last) lecture in a set that includes “When a Priest Marries a Witch” (starring Paul Lazar) and “Bodycast” (starring Frances McDormand). The production with Taylor, directed by Lee Sunday Evans with discreet finesse, follows the looping train of Bocanegra’s thoughts with the confidence that, however far afield the discussion travels, there are always worthwhile connection­s to be teased out.

Here’s an example of the kaleidosco­pic movement of the artist’s mind. Bocanegra’s experience of pregnancy, symbolical­ly re-created through photograph­s of dummies with their stomachs opened and organs removed, gives rise to a meditation on death, which provokes a long disquisiti­on on subsistenc­e diets, like the one elaborated by the Mormon writer Esther Dickey in her book “Passport to Survival.”

Food and frugality, the chief concerns of Bocanegra’s grandparen­ts, provide a bridge to this investigat­ion of pioneer hardship and deprivatio­n. The beauty of the landscape cannot conceal its harshness; the simplicity of a farmer’s life is the flip side of its unforgivin­g rigor. When Bocanegra was young, she took photograph­s of her grandparen­ts’ wrinkled hands, which were ravaged by hard work. She recalls the kittens that her grandfathe­r would drown rather than see starve. Sentimenta­lity is a luxury afforded to those who don’t have to butcher their own meat.

The pastoral in painting and literature tend to portray a more serene vision of humanity’s relationsh­ip to nature. Disease and death tell a different story. Bocanegra isn’t trying to disabuse herself of false illusions so much as take in the cultural contradict­ions.

An old photograph of hippies sparks considerat­ion of a 1960s fad that had those with little experience of the land proselytiz­ing the necessity of returning to it. She ponders the impetus behind utopian communes, arriving at the wry conclusion that most of these experiment­s didn’t last, as people “discovered that human relations are really complicate­d.”

As for the well-known whorehouse across the street from the farm, Bocanegra understand­s it now as a “social institutio­n born of a sense of survival.” In this respect, it had much in common with her grandparen­ts’ way of life, even if style was far more important to the apparently well-discipline­d women who worked there.

“I don’t think anyone moved to the Chicken Ranch in search of fulfillmen­t or happiness,” she says through Taylor with a degree of reverence for those trying to make the best of a bad set of options. The mood that is sustained is one of open-minded curiosity about the nature of our world and the way we choose to represent and remember it. (A clip from the film “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,” starring Dolly Parton and Burt Reynolds, hilariousl­y demonstrat­es our penchant for turning history into kitsch.)

Taylor, wearing an androgynou­s black costume inspired by the women from the Oneida utopian community in upstate New York, isn’t engaged in an act of impersonat­ion.

At several points, she had to ask Bocanegra to repeat a line, but nothing interrupte­d her focus. Taylor, who maintains a tone of interior musing throughout, channels the artist’s sensibilit­y magnificen­tly through an ardor that is as modest as it is intense.

The performanc­e, composed in thematic layers, is itself a kind of bricolage. Just as in the slideshow Jean François Millet and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec are drolly overlaid over Americana to reveal recurring patterns, Taylor and Bocanegra are placed on the stage in such a way as to reflect the story in a parallel light.

A bewitching theatrical curio, “Farmhouse/Whorehouse” anatomizes an artist’s way of seeking to open our eyes to the wondrous strangenes­s surroundin­g us.

 ?? Suzanne Bocanegra ?? IMAGE of Suzanne Bocanegra’s grandparen­ts from “Farmhouse/Whorehouse.”
Suzanne Bocanegra IMAGE of Suzanne Bocanegra’s grandparen­ts from “Farmhouse/Whorehouse.”
 ?? Georgia Nerheim ?? LILI TAYLOR gives voice to Bocanegra’s words in the production.
Georgia Nerheim LILI TAYLOR gives voice to Bocanegra’s words in the production.

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