Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Fordham University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Reading the Watts Towers, Teaching Los Angeles: Storytelling and Public Art
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- introduction. Sabato Rodia’s Towers in Watts and the Search for Common Ground 1
-
part 1. Situating Sabato Rodia and the Watts Towers: Art Movements, Cultural Contexts, and Migrations
- Local Art, Global Issues: Tales of Survival and Demise Among Contemporary Art Environments 29
- Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere: Structure and Performance in Rodia’s Watts Towers 69
- Sam Rodia’s Watts Towers in Six Sections in Succession 79
- Without Precedent: The Watts Towers 91
- An Era of Grand Ambitions: Sam Rodia and California Modernism 103
- A California Detour on the Road to Italy: The Hubcap Ranch, the Napa Valley, and Italian American Identity 109
- The Gigli of Nola During Rodia’s Times 125
- The Literary and Immigrant Contexts of Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers 145
- Sabato Rodia’s Towers in Watts: Art, Migration, and Italian Imaginaries 155
- “Why a Man Makes the Shoes?”: Italian American Art and Philosophy in Sabato Rodia’s Watts Towers 183
- Parallel Expressions: Artistic Contributions of Italian Immigrants in the Río de la Plata Basin of South America at the Time of Simon Rodia 205
-
part 2. The Watts Towers Contested: Conservation, Guardianship, and Cultural Heritage
- Fifty Years of Guardianship: The Committee for Simon Rodia’s Towers in Watts (CSRTW) 225
- A Custody Case: Ownership of Rodia’s Towers 245
- Nuestro Pueblo: The Spatial and Cultural Politics of Los Angeles’s Watts Towers 251
- Reading the Watts Towers, Teaching Los Angeles: Storytelling and Public Art 275
- Spires and Towers Between Tangible, Intangible, and Contested Transnational Cultural Heritage 289
- part 3. The Watts Towers and Community Development 307
- Artists in Conversation 309
- Building Community Through Self- Awareness and Self- Expression 327
- Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers: Sociopolitical Realities, Economic Underdevelopment, and Renaissance: Yesterday and Today 337
- afterword. Personal Refl ections on the Watts Towers Common Ground Initiative 343
- A.1. Interview of S. Rodia, with Bill Hale and Ray Wisniewsky 351
- A.2. Interview with Simon Rodia, by William Hale and Ray Wisniewsky “at the Towers Site, Standing Outside Rodia’s House,” 1953 359
- A.3. Conversation with Sam Rodia, by Mae Babitz and Jeanne Morgan 363
- A.4. Interviews with S. Rodia, by Ed Farrell, Jody Farrell, Bud Goldstone, and Seymour Rosen 369
- A.5. Report on Visits to Simon Rodia, Made to CSRTW, from Jody Farrell (November, 1961), Re: A.4. Interview with Rodia, by Bud Goldstone, Seymour Rosen, Ed Farrell, and Jody Farrell 375
- A.6. Letter to the CSRTW, by Claudio Segre [Segrè], January 26, 1962, Re: Visit in Martinez, California, January 25, 1962 378
- A.7. “New Yorker Reporter [Calvin Trillin] Visits Rodia” 384
- A.8. Conversations with Rodia, Report by Jeanne Morgan, September 10, 1964 392
- A.9. Last Conversation with Sam Rodia, Report by Jeanne Morgan, December 23, 1964 396
- A.10. Interviews with S. Rodia, by Norma Ashley- David (with Jonathan David) 398
- A.11. Interview (Excerpts) with Rodia’s Neighbors (“Pete Scanlon’s in- laws”), by Bud Goldstone, Long Beach, California, 1963 412
- A.12. Interview with S. Rodia, by Nicholas King, Martinez, California, September, 1960 415
- Notes 425
- Contributors 459
- Index 465
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- introduction. Sabato Rodia’s Towers in Watts and the Search for Common Ground 1
-
part 1. Situating Sabato Rodia and the Watts Towers: Art Movements, Cultural Contexts, and Migrations
- Local Art, Global Issues: Tales of Survival and Demise Among Contemporary Art Environments 29
- Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere: Structure and Performance in Rodia’s Watts Towers 69
- Sam Rodia’s Watts Towers in Six Sections in Succession 79
- Without Precedent: The Watts Towers 91
- An Era of Grand Ambitions: Sam Rodia and California Modernism 103
- A California Detour on the Road to Italy: The Hubcap Ranch, the Napa Valley, and Italian American Identity 109
- The Gigli of Nola During Rodia’s Times 125
- The Literary and Immigrant Contexts of Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers 145
- Sabato Rodia’s Towers in Watts: Art, Migration, and Italian Imaginaries 155
- “Why a Man Makes the Shoes?”: Italian American Art and Philosophy in Sabato Rodia’s Watts Towers 183
- Parallel Expressions: Artistic Contributions of Italian Immigrants in the Río de la Plata Basin of South America at the Time of Simon Rodia 205
-
part 2. The Watts Towers Contested: Conservation, Guardianship, and Cultural Heritage
- Fifty Years of Guardianship: The Committee for Simon Rodia’s Towers in Watts (CSRTW) 225
- A Custody Case: Ownership of Rodia’s Towers 245
- Nuestro Pueblo: The Spatial and Cultural Politics of Los Angeles’s Watts Towers 251
- Reading the Watts Towers, Teaching Los Angeles: Storytelling and Public Art 275
- Spires and Towers Between Tangible, Intangible, and Contested Transnational Cultural Heritage 289
- part 3. The Watts Towers and Community Development 307
- Artists in Conversation 309
- Building Community Through Self- Awareness and Self- Expression 327
- Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers: Sociopolitical Realities, Economic Underdevelopment, and Renaissance: Yesterday and Today 337
- afterword. Personal Refl ections on the Watts Towers Common Ground Initiative 343
- A.1. Interview of S. Rodia, with Bill Hale and Ray Wisniewsky 351
- A.2. Interview with Simon Rodia, by William Hale and Ray Wisniewsky “at the Towers Site, Standing Outside Rodia’s House,” 1953 359
- A.3. Conversation with Sam Rodia, by Mae Babitz and Jeanne Morgan 363
- A.4. Interviews with S. Rodia, by Ed Farrell, Jody Farrell, Bud Goldstone, and Seymour Rosen 369
- A.5. Report on Visits to Simon Rodia, Made to CSRTW, from Jody Farrell (November, 1961), Re: A.4. Interview with Rodia, by Bud Goldstone, Seymour Rosen, Ed Farrell, and Jody Farrell 375
- A.6. Letter to the CSRTW, by Claudio Segre [Segrè], January 26, 1962, Re: Visit in Martinez, California, January 25, 1962 378
- A.7. “New Yorker Reporter [Calvin Trillin] Visits Rodia” 384
- A.8. Conversations with Rodia, Report by Jeanne Morgan, September 10, 1964 392
- A.9. Last Conversation with Sam Rodia, Report by Jeanne Morgan, December 23, 1964 396
- A.10. Interviews with S. Rodia, by Norma Ashley- David (with Jonathan David) 398
- A.11. Interview (Excerpts) with Rodia’s Neighbors (“Pete Scanlon’s in- laws”), by Bud Goldstone, Long Beach, California, 1963 412
- A.12. Interview with S. Rodia, by Nicholas King, Martinez, California, September, 1960 415
- Notes 425
- Contributors 459
- Index 465