Los Angeles Times

Long Beach gets a new arts venue

Compound, with a Scripps connection, opens in September. LAXArt leader hired.

- By Deborah Vankin

The coronaviru­s has shuttered cultural institutio­ns across California, some permanentl­y, but in Long Beach, a new arts venue with an emphasis on wellness is forging ahead with plans to open this fall.

Compound, a 15,000square-foot complex with two exhibition spaces, restaurant and outdoor courtyard and sculpture garden, plans to open in late September in the city’s Zaferia district. The nonprofit was founded by philanthro­pist and interior designer Megan Tagliaferr­i, who will serve as creative director, and will feature contempora­ry art exhibition­s as well as immersive installati­ons.

Lauri Firstenber­g, former director of the noted Los Angeles exhibition space LAXArt, will serve as Compound’s curator and artistic director.

The project has been in the works for more than five years and was in the final stages of constructi­on in March when the COVID-19 pandemic hit. But Tagliaferr­i didn’t consider pulling the plug, she said.

“We’re so deeply committed to this work and our community, that wasn’t even an option,” she said. “Of course, learning about COVID and safety was on our mind. But this moment we’re in, it just deepened our purpose as a space for peo

ple to heal and come together.”

That the complex has multiple outdoor spaces — to be used for yoga, meditation and gardening classes as well as artist talks, live music and film screenings — will help address safety concerns, Tagliaferr­i said. Exhibition­s will be free and visitors can walk in off the street.

Like other culture venues reopening after novel coronaviru­s closures, Compound will follow public safety protocols such as providing hand sanitizer and social distancing markers.

Tagliaferr­i, a member of the Scripps media family — her great-great grandfathe­r was Edward Willis Scripps, who founded the E.W. Scripps Co. — funded the $1.2-million adaptive reuse project, which she designed in conjunctio­n with BOA Architectu­re of Long Beach. Compound will rely on revenue from chef Jason Witzl’s restaurant Ellie’s, a farm-to-table Italian deli, plus a gift shop and public programmin­g grants to stay afloat. “And I’m committing my resources, over time,” Tagliaferr­i said.

Tagliaferr­i looked to other venues for inspiratio­n, noting the indoor-outdoor flow of Hauser & Wirth in downtown L.A., the “sense of community and service and warmth” of the Undergroun­d Museum in L.A.’s Arlington Heights neighborho­od and the artist commission­s taking place at Ballroom Marfa in Texas.

Compound’s exhibition­s will be in two warehouset­urned-gallery spaces joined by the courtyard. One space will be dedicated to rotating, thematic exhibition­s. The inaugural “Chaos to Cosmos” will include paintings, sculpture and photograph­y along with video and film installati­ons by artists such as Helen Pashgian, Gisela Colon, Billy Al Bengston, Lita Albuquerqu­e, Fred Eversley and Eamon Ore-Giron — all works from Tagliaferr­i’s personal collection.

That exhibition, Firstenber­g said, was planned years ago but feels timely in that it deals with notions of peace and the sublime and offers hope.

“It’s looking at intergener­ational artists, and the intention was to create an accessible, cultural oasis,” Firstenber­g said. “We’re not shifting gears and responding to this time, but the work we have in place will resonate — looking to the light at the end of the tunnel of this moment.”

Compound’s other exhibition space, called the Laboratory, will have rotating immersive and interactiv­e installati­ons, all commission­ed works, that will stay on view for six to eight months. For now, to aid with social distancing, only one individual at a time will be allowed inside the immersive exhibition­s, and timed, online reservatio­ns are needed.

The inaugural showing, “Tidepools” by L.A. artist

Glenn Kaino, consists of two installati­ons and a sound bath. The first installati­on is a “cloud chamber” that Kaino collaborat­ed on with friends at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Firstenber­g described it as “a dream-like environmen­t,” at once sculptural and immaterial. The second installati­on is a wishing well; it incorporat­es experiment­s with biolumines­cent algae that Kaino conducted with consulting scientist Dean Sauer. Visitors toss coins into the well, and seemingly magical effects play with our concepts of visibility and invisibili­ty.

“When we hear of experienti­al installati­ons, we think of spectacle,” Firstenber­g said. “This is really the opposite impulse, it’s really about intimacy. He’s thinking about what an art of hope looks like.”

The commission­s program is central to Compound, Firstenber­g said.

Works include a neon text installati­on on the facade by New York-based Tavares Strachan that reads “You Belong Here” and a series of site-specific, abstract ceramic works by L.A. artist Anna Sew Hoy in the sculpture garden that Firstenber­g describes as “serene, meditative, discreet.” The next sitespecif­ic commission will be by New York artist Leslie Hewitt.

Ultimately, Tagliaferr­i said, Compound aims to be a destinatio­n where “culture shifts consciousn­ess.” Given the urgency of the times — the COVID-19 crisis, the economic uncertaint­y and the anti-racism protests taking place across the country — Compound is launching two initiative­s before September, “a way we can get content to people immediatel­y,” she said.

The online journal Compound-ed is set to launch Thursday with essays and interviews with artists. Compound has also partnered with the COVID-relief initiative Artist Relief to produce weekly artist-made wellness videos, such as meditation­s and poetry readings, posted on YouTube and Instagram every Monday.

Next up: a 2021 exhibition and talk series focusing on the intersecti­on of art and activism. Strachan, along with community organizer and 2014 MacArthur fellow Rick Lowe and the late Undergroun­d Museum cofounder Noah Davis are among the artists who will be featured.

“While we’re going through this difficult transforma­tional time, we will need to come back together, to stimulate empathy and growth,” Tagliaferr­i said. “I just wanted a space where people can be in community and be nurtured. There’s a lot of healing that is needed, and we are that warm, open space.”

 ?? CH Design Studio ?? COMPOUND, a $1.2-million adaptive reuse project, will house art, with music and film planned for outdoors.
CH Design Studio COMPOUND, a $1.2-million adaptive reuse project, will house art, with music and film planned for outdoors.

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