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After he bought an eccentric
geodesic dome in LA's up-and-coming Mt. Washington neighborhood, Fritz
decided to put the space to work by starting a series of salons. The
Sundown Salons, named after Fritz's street, have since become a hub for
emerging artists, musicians, and performers. Besides acting as a
curator/social catalyst and running his architecture practice, Fritz
teaches at Art Center College of Design. When index's Ariana Speyer came
to visit, he extended cheery hospitality despite hobbling on a recently
broken leg.
ARIANA: How did you find a geodesic dome
to live in right in the middle of LA? FRITZ: I went looking
for a junky, old house on which I could impose my vision. I finally found
this place on a realty website in 2001. It's outsider architecture — half
subterranean cave, half geodesic dome. It was built in 1985. It's really
sad because the woman who built it died just a few months after it was
finished. ARIANA: Is your domestic routine different in this
house? FRITZ: Nothing about the house says what happens
where, and I love that. It's not "sleep here," "work there," "eat over
there." It has developed that upstairs in the dome is the daytime
workspace, and downstairs is the nighttime recreation area. ARIANA:
After moving here, you started hosting the Sundown
Salons. FRITZ: Yes. It seemed like a waste for me to just
live in these absurd spaces. The Salons were completely casual at first.
It was like, "You guys should come over and play — it'll be fun." Then
they developed into regular events with all sorts of work being presented.
ARIANA: Los Angeles must foster a less orthodox way of making and
presenting art. FRITZ: It's interesting to see what happens
when you take music out of clubs, art out of galleries, readings out of
bookstores, and combine them all in one space. People here aren't as
preoccupied with how their work might pay off later. ARIANA:
Historically, a salon was a place to which people were invited to share
ideas and conversation. FRITZ: With Sundown, the work that's
being presented forms the conversation. When the Swiss video artist
Pipilotti Rist curated a show here, she called it Instant Installations.
She asked her students from UCLA to participate. They all came with works
to install, but they couldn't just deposit them and leave. They had to
somehow respond to what was happening in the space. One artist, Krysten
Cunningham, tethered a couple of copulating Styrofoam figures, held up by
helium balloons, in the garden. During the event one escaped and got
caught in a neighbor's tree. I think it's still there. ARIANA: What
did your neighbors think? FRITZ: I usually lead a pretty
quiet life but my neighbors have come to understand that sometimes it gets
a little bit insane. During the rehearsals for the Nightmarathon
Hextravaganza Salon, every now and then there were these bloodcurdling
screams. ARIANA: That Salon was organized last Halloween by the LA
band My Barbarian. FRITZ: Yeah, they're friends of friends.
They play a kind of music they call "showcore"— a mix of show tunes and
hard-core punk. For the Nightmarathon, they wrote an epic play that they
performed in the garden from early afternoon until after sunset. It was
all about classic horror stories, gothic literature, and parables.
ARIANA: We usually think of art and performances taking place in
generic spaces. Galleries and museums go to great lengths to create
supposedly neutral settings so that the art can
speak. FRITZ: That is the assumption today, but there is
nothing in our history that compels us to do things that way. I'm always
fascinated by photos of group shows from the '60s. There'll be a Warhol
painting, a Lichtenstein, and then a marble fireplace and messed-up wood
floors. To me, a space like Sundown offers the potential to mix things up
in a way that museums can't. ARIANA: Your last Salon was a
departure, because it wasn't held at your house. FRITZ:
Yeah. Kimberly Meyer of the MAK Center invited me to do a Salon at the
Schindler House, which MAK uses as an exhibition space. The house is an
absolute celebration of Los Angeles. R.M. Schindler came to LA from Vienna
in the '20s. It was a transformative experience for him. He was so excited
that it was warm enough to sleep outside that he designed sleeping baskets
for the roof. ARIANA: Schindler brought a modernist outlook with him
from Europe. FRITZ: Yes. The Schindler House is almost the
cultural soul of Los Angeles. In the '20s and '30s, Schindler and his wife
Pauline would invite musicians and dancers to come to perform. The
Schindlers also had very serious social ideas. They were interested in
cooperative living and psychoanalysis. The house was a place where all of
these concepts were debated and discussed. ARIANA: So the Schindler
House is a model for what you're doing today. FRITZ:
Politically, socially, architecturally, the house represented a challenge
to prevailing beliefs. You get the sense that those people came together
because they believed they could change their world for the better. I
don't know if artists and designers have that same sense of possibility
now. I'm not sure they feel as if they can change things. I detect this
quiet acceptance of the status quo, even in the most supposedly
avant-garde circles. We're stuck in this horrible period where shapes and
colors and forms are created without much thought about whether or not
people's lives will be affected by any of it. ARIANA: Who
participated in the Schindler House Salon? FRITZ: I invited
Anna Sew Hoy, an up-and-coming artist who just moved here from New York,
and Giles Miller, a jazz-influenced musician, along with Amy Yao, who just
started a fashion line, and Jason Taylor, a hip-hop musician. They are two
couples that are friends with each other. They came up with the idea for a
band, D'Argento, named after the Italian director Dario
Argento. ARIANA: What was their music like? FRITZ: It
was a fusion of Goblin, the group that scored most of Argento's movies,
and hip-hop. We decided to put them in the very back of the garden, in the
bamboo grove. They performed in black light, and they were dressed in
white jumpsuits. So as you walked through the garden, you saw these
glowing figures playing this gorgeous, haunting music. ARIANA:
Sounds beautiful. FRITZ: It was supposed to be a one-time
thing, but now they're becoming a real band. They'll be performing this
week. ARIANA: When did you first start thinking about
architecture? FRITZ: I knew I wanted to be an architect when
I was in second grade. [laughs] On family road trips, I'd bring a huge
stack of Architectural Record magazines and read them in the backseat. But
since then, my interests have expanded way beyond architecture.
ARIANA: You also teach in the environmental design department at
Art Center in Pasadena. Is that where you combine your
interests? FRITZ: In order to fix the inhuman urban disaster
areas that we live in, we have to start designing with a broader mindset.
Unfortunately, right now you have car designers designing cars, urban
designers designing streets and public areas, and architects designing
discrete shells of buildings. None of these people talk to each other, and
you end up with a mess. In our program at Art Center, we are trying to
teach designers to think about the implications of their work from urban
scale down to micro scale. ARIANA: You can't just ignore the rest of
the puzzle. FRITZ: When I studied at the Architecture
Institute in Venice, we were trained to design a skyscraper or an airplane
or a dress or a pen. Unfortunately, American architectural training is
very narrow. We should be thinking, ÒWhat does it mean for me to sit here
at this moment, in this place, in this environment, in relationship to the
immediate community, in relationship to the city, in relationship to
transportation?Ó ARIANA: You want to encompass the entire built
environment. FRITZ:A smart brain has more connectors. A dumb
brain has fewer connectors. We are operating with very dumb brains in our
society today. Part of it has to do with the capitalist system, in which
the only function of an architect is to design buildings. ARIANA:
But isn't that kind of specialization natural in a modern
economy? FRITZ: Not if you look at the most brilliant
moments in history. The Renaissance was so spectacular because there were
people who were creating sculpture, paintings, buildings, and science
simultaneously. Every discipline was feeding and absorbing other
disciplines. Hopefully our graduates are thinking about issues beyond just
getting a job and making money, like what are the real by-products of the
work that they're doing? ARIANA: Is it also about the impact on the
environment? FRITZ: The Gardenlab program that I started at
Art Center supports ecology-based initiatives. I got a small grant two
years ago to make what I thought would be just a little garden. For the
first project, the students designed a community garden on campus, with
thirty plots. Students, faculty, and staff can take plots and do whatever
they want, just experiment. My current students have selected an area on
campus where they would like to have outdoor student activities like band
performances and film screenings and also integrate some memorial trees
for faculty, students, or staff who have died. It will be a place for
lively activity juxtaposed with our own personal history. ARIANA:
You're also working on a project called LA River House. It's another
public-private space that will ripen over time. FRITZ:
Yeah. I'm doing that with Steve Appleton, an artist who does large-scale,
site-specific urban projects. He has this piece of land directly on the
Los Angeles River north of downtown, in this desolate industrial zone.
ARIANA: It sounds like a movie setting. FRITZ:The
river runs through the entire city, so a lot of people are thinking about
how to reclaim it as an urban amenity, as opposed to what it's become
during this century, which is a massive storm drain. The house will sit
right across from what's going to be a state park. Appleton plans to open
the house for art events. ARIANA: What will the house be
like? FRITZ: It's going to be a prefab steel structure, with
a massive sculpture studio on one side and a residence on the other. We're
designing the house to be responsive to the river environment, taking
advantage of the way the air moves, catching the rainwater and using it to
irrigate the gardens, and employing solar power. ARIANA: How will
you use the air movement? FRITZ: The house is situated on a
part of the river called the Glendale Narrows. The wind currents come down
from the mountains and through the LA basin or vice versa. The roof will
be able to catch the air to ventilate the sculpture studio. ARIANA:
In many ways this project explores the same ideas that you're talking
about at Art Center and at the Sundown Salons. FRITZ: Yeah.
I like to think that every project I do is a manifesto. If we do a good
job on this house, it should be a model for how people could reclaim areas
of Los Angeles that have degenerated and turn them into humane, civilized
spaces — spaces that connect you not just to other people but also to the
natural environment. That's what people came to LA for in the first
place. ARIANA: I feel like artists have done that all around the
world, reclaiming abandoned industrial neighborhoods and adapting them.
FRITZ: But this goes beyond finding the cheapest, most
comfortable space in the city and turning it into an artists' community.
The rehabilitation of the river is an opportunity to look at public space
in Los Angeles — and to think about the experience of all the people in
the city. Already, there are people taking walks and bike riding along the
river.
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