Los Angeles Times

Frieze Los Angeles explores in-between

The Feb. 13-16 event will feature a Film & Talks series that is Asian-focused.

- By Deborah Vankin

Frieze Los Angeles, which is gearing up for its sophomore showing Feb. 1316 at Paramount Studios, on Tuesday announced Chinese curator Venus Lau’s plans for an Asian-focused Film & Talks series at the art fair.

Lau is the artistic director of Hong Kong’s K11 Art Foundation, a nonprofit developing and promoting contempora­ry artists in China.

Visibility and invisibili­ty — related to individual­s and identity but also to social, political, technologi­cal and economic forces — is a theme running through the program, as is the idea of Los Angeles as a place where cultures from around the world intersect.

“The broader concept of the screening is the ‘in-betweens,’ ” Lau wrote in an email.

“The middle grounds between day and night; present, past and future; life and death; public and private spaces. The liminal spaces between visibility and invisibili­ty is just one of those.”

Cao Fei’s “Asia One” (2018) will kick off the series on Thursday afternoon, the fair’s opening day. The film, set in 2021, takes place at an automated “logistics center” in China and centers on a relationsh­ip that develops between two humans and an AI robot.

One series highlight, also on Thursday, is the screening of Japanese director Katsuhiro Otomo’s 1988 animated cyberpunk feature, “Akira.” The film, based on Otomo’s same-named manga, is set in a post-apocalypti­c, war-torn Neo-Tokyo and follows a biker gang leader and his psychic friend who rebel against the establishm­ent.

Adrián Villar Rojas’ “The Most Beautiful Moment of War — El Momento más Hermoso de la Guerra” (2017), will screen on Sunday. The Argentine artist’s sitespecif­ic installati­on “The Theater of Disappeara­nce” was on view at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art’s Geffen Contempora­ry space in 2017.

His nearly hour-long “The Most Beautiful Moment of War” is the final part of a trilogy that collective­ly explores the ongoing evolution of man, Earth and nature.

A grouping of shorts by Canadian artist Jon Rafman, along with Chinese artists Tao Hui, Cheng Ran and Wong Ping will screen on a loop for about 40 minutes on Thursday afternoon.

Another selection of shorts juxtaposes the work of French artist Cyril Duval (Item Idem) and Chinese artist Yang Fudong. The 40 minutes of film will screen continuous­ly for three hours on Friday afternoon, followed by Lau in conversati­on with Fudong that evening and the curator in conversati­on with Duval on Saturday night.

Los Angeles, Lau said, is the perfect backdrop against which to present this particular program. “L.A. is a diverse city with a very specific culture, it is a good place to think about in-betweens.”

Screenings and talks will primarily take place throughout the run of the fair at Paramount Theatre, with some events held elsewhere on the Paramount lot. Tickets will be available at Frieze Los Angeles.

 ?? Jjyphoto / K11 Art Foundation / Galerie Nächst St Stephan / Katharina Grosse / VG Bild-Kunst ?? CHINESE CURATOR Venus Lau said L.A. is the perfect backdrop against which to present this program.
Jjyphoto / K11 Art Foundation / Galerie Nächst St Stephan / Katharina Grosse / VG Bild-Kunst CHINESE CURATOR Venus Lau said L.A. is the perfect backdrop against which to present this program.

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