July 15, 2004
How I Spent My Summer Vacation (So Far)
Spent a good while
visiting family in Southern California in June and July, which was a lot of
fun.
I had a chance
to visit the gallery my brother runs in Los Angeles Chinatown. Its
called Oulous Repair Shop, and I really
like what hes done so far. The web page for the gallery doesnt actually
list the address, which is 945 Chung King Road.
Speaking of which,
hes trying to put together material for a show sometime this fall on fringe
technological designs. Hes been writing a few scientists to see if they
receive and keep letters or inquiries from fringe inventors or technologists,
both to try and get names of people to contact and to see if he can gather together
any sketches or visual material that were included in such inquiries. If youve
got any ideas or sources of possible material, contact him at xing@oulous.com
.
I also spent a bit of time at my mothers store, Mixt, which is in the Rivera Village shopping district in Redondo Beach, 1722 South Catalina. Its a great placeshes got a nice mix of little doo-dads and very interesting high-end craftwork.
Los Angeles as
a whole still puzzles me. I like it (and California as a whole) a lot better
than I did when I was a surly teenager. In fact, some of Southern Californias
best features are tailor-made for the middle-aged: good food, good booze, great
weather, easy living. Its a tough place to live if you dont have
moneythe housing market there now staggers me, after two decades on the
East Coast.
One of the interesting
things about LA to me now is that it seems to me that the ceaseless reworking
of its built landscape has slowed somewhat. I remember a period from about 1980
to 1995 or so when I would visit and find that the retail and residential landscape
had shifted once again within a very short time frame. Wed go to places
where there had never been houses and lo! Giant developments sprawling as far
as the eye could see, people moving in who were facing daily commutes of two
hours in each direction. Youd go back to a mall or neighborhood with stores
you liked and they were all gone. There are areas which are still very much
in flux, but a lot of things seem to me since 1995 or so to have been much more
static across the core of the LA Basin. Maybe Im wrongits
hard to know when you only visit twice a year or so. My brothers often have
pointed out that there's much more visible, physical history to California's
built landscape than most people, including locals, think.
It also seems to
me that high-end food retail nationwide has caught up somewhat with Californiaits
much easier now around us to find very good produce and meats, and quintessentially
California businesses like Trader Joes are now national (though I think
Trader Joes is going to be very hard-pressed to maintain anything close
to its traditional quality/price ratio at its present rate of expansion).
But even with overdevelopment, pollution, crowding, traffic and the like, Im pretty hard-pressed to think of anywhere on the East Coast that has the attractive mix of weather and landscape that a number of California cities do, including Los Angeles. I just can't work up enthusiasm for East Coast beaches or East Coast mountains in comparison. My Dad, who was born in California, always used to say whenever the Rose Bowl was on, showing people playing football on a sunny day to the rest of a miserably cold nation, Well, here comes another 50,000 assholes.