Napa Valley Children’s Chorus seeks new members; di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art to host two new exhibits; German sculptor showcased at Caldwell Snyder, and more in Art Notes.
"Coded: Art Enters the Computer Age, 1952–1982" shows that the intersection between computers and art in those early days produced rather slight results.
WHAT IF WE BEGAN the story of digital art not with a screen but with a canvas? In the first room of the exhibition “Coded: Art Enters the Computer Age, 1952–1982” at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, visitors are confronted by I.B.M. Disc Pack, a large grisaille painting of six thin, industrial-looking disks stacked on a spindle. As the title indicates, this 1965 work by Lowell Nesbitt which evidences Pop art’s fascination with commodity fetishism while anticipating the sometimes frigid Photorealism of the 1970s offers a close-up view of the spinning magnetic hard disks IBM invented in the