interiority
Plural feels a little awkward here, so pardon the slight detour from the usual route. We invoke the we a lot around these parts, and we wouldn’t want you to get the wrong idea about what we are doing or where we are coming from. The first-person singular should clear a few things up.
Sometimes, I get a little sloppy with it; on my daily drives around L.A., I’ll see something going down and clumsily fall into a linguistic trap: “People in L.A. love a …” or “L.A. loves a …” — fill in the blank. People in L.A. love a bad U-turn across a double yellow. People in L.A. love a treacherous red light run at an unprotected left. A valet-only parking lot. A flea. A collab. A farmer’s market knife sharpening station. A tall hedge. A heat lamp at night, regardless of the temperature. Obviously, I don’t mean to suggest that this is what everyone in L.A. feels or how they should feel. In actuality, the lazy construction of my banal observations obfuscates the energies that I’m trying to document.
Once the generalizations roll off the tongue and into the ether, they form a thick fog that clouds the official record. When that happens, the actions lose their aura, the POV gets lost, the brightness of specific experience dulls. The fictions shine through and become doctrine.
A place, in this case Los Angeles, becomes obscured by those who be acting like they know. You’ve seen the stupid transplant maps that get shared in your Slack channels and reshared on social platforms. I won’t dignify the memes, other than to say it doesn’t take much to ID a transplant. When they make their “bold” declarations, they out themselves as soon as they mention the so: “That’s so L.A.” “I’m so Cali.” For too long, the so-so’s have had too much control over the official narrative.
There’s a different tradition of storytelling practiced in L.A. — one that is less about you and I and more about we. The “we” tradition is more aspirational, more inclusive. By definition, it moves in more ways than one. The we tradition includes the “I” and the rest of the group. It is, as they say, a multi-POV situation.
What would the story of Los Angeles look like if the “we” tradition were the norm? This question is top of mind for those who task themselves with documenting what’s really going on in our city on the daily. There are many archivists in L.A. trying to show how we move, and what the interior of the city really looks like. They work to document, to catalog, to add context from the inside. Like the fiction writer, they help us access the inner thoughts that reveal the character of our hometown. They see the gaps and fill them in. They task themselves with bringing L.A. more into view.
And so, we present “Interiority.” This is us saying a fuller archive — the “we” POV — is what matters. The archivists we worked with have some stories to tell that will deepen the city’s collective memory. Stories that will open up space for more narratives to break through. That’s not all our archivists are doing, however. Some of them have made their contributions with the future in mind. No spoilers, foos — looks at rafa esparza and co. — but rest assured the “we” is the spiritual core.
You see the low low on the cover. Now is the time to learn what we are riding for.
Ian F. Blair
Editor in Chief
Image logo by Reina Takhashi For The Times
The oral history of Hollywood High 16
Skateboarding legends pay tribute to the iconic stairway of iconic stairways — a historic landmark where the evolution of the sport has come into view Read the story 🛹Once upon a time a lowrider cyborg from the future touched down at Art Basel Miami
In a time not too long ago, artist rafa esparza created ‘Corpo RanfLA: Terra Cruiser’ — a performance that became of the international art fair Read the story 🦾Ride out and see why Sundays in L.A. are about getting closer to the sky
Dirt bike life is where freedom meets fellowship. ‘We all brothers and sisters on the bikes’ Read the story 🏍This photo of a busy intersection in Downtown L.A. is a meditation on infinity
Robin Coste Lewis’ latest epic is an excavation of what she calls ‘deep time’ — millennia of Black art-making, community-building and innovation Read the story 🎞Get your copy
Issue 16: interiority
Order nowWhen was the last time you saw this Japanese market on wheels driving around L.A.?
Artist Alan Nakagawa remembers the grocery truck of yesteryear that fed the city's immigrant communities — and the stories it inspired Read the story 🏮Let the record show: For Ozzie Juarez the hustle is creativity in L.A.
The founder of Tlaloc Studios sees working alongside others as integral to his process as an artist Read the story 🎨We’re. Going. On. A. Mission. To. Metro.
Rick Garzon rewinds the tape on the legendary Riverside club and the many road trips from L.A. that it inspired Read the story 💿Some stories from Fairfax’s golden age you’ve heard — and some you’ll want to hear again
From Jerry Lorenzo's legendary parties to Taco’s DIY New Era caps, Khalil Kinsey reflects on the inventive L.A. spirit that continues to define the culture Read the story 🧢Just another day serving looks
The L.A. Dance Project commemorates ‘Dance Reflections’ with a little help from Sister Kokoro Read the story 💃🏾The agony and ecstasy (and hidden beauty) of L.A. parking garages
Los Angeles is terrible at housing people. It’s better at warehousing cars. The concrete nautiluses where we temporarily abandon our Kias and Porsches and mopeds produce, reproduce and shelter dualities Read the story 🛻Is there a proper way to mix eras of vintage clothes?
Style is about channeling something from somewhere. The L.A. duo Sister Kokoro knows how to pull together the right threads Read the story 👘Remember that time Amor Prohibido and Género Neutral took over the Getty Center?
In this photo essay, Bryan Escareño investigates, with photographer Julian Burgueño, the capacity for clothing to hold court in the castle of high art Read the story 🖼33 items that can take care of all the people on your list, no matter the situation
Fashion and luxury pieces worth the hype. Gift-worthy experiences. The best of beauty and self-care. Coveted can help you find the right items to help you show love this holiday season Read the story 👜10 pop-ups, drops, events to kick off the holiday season as the style gods planned it
From the latest fashion happenings — Loewe, Apt. 4B, Celine, Nike — in L.A. to the best art around town, the Drip Index can help you properly fill out your calendar to close out the year Read the story 🧴Issue 15
Diaspora
Restaurants, fashion, art: Image explores L.A. food cultureExplore the issue
Issue 14
Elevation
Why is L.A. so tempted by and obsessed with beauty?Explore the issue
Issue 13
Image Makers
A new class of the city’s luminaries — designers, models, artists — show where clothing and style are going: to the rootExplore the issue
Issue 12
Commitment
Spirituality, faith, belief — Inside L.A. Woo Woo cultureExplore the issue
Issue 11
Renovation
What if we could redesign L.A. from the ground up?Explore the issue
Issue 10
Clarity
L.A. loves an epiphany. Enjoy this moment of “Clarity”Explore the issue
Issue 9
Function
Ain’t no party like an L.A. partyExplore the issue
Issue 8
Deserted
A journey to the end of the worldExplore the issue
Issue 7
Survival
In this installment, we imagine a sustainable future for the cityExplore the issue
Issue 6
Energy
Celebrate L.A. sports culture, with styleExplore the issue
Issue 5
Reverence
An exploration of how L.A. does beauty.Explore the issue
Issue 4
Image Makers
A celebration of the L.A. luminaries of style pushing fashion culture and streetwear forwardExplore the issue
Issue 3
Parents are cool!
A toast to the myriad ways in which L.A. parents practice the craft of care.Explore the issue
Issue 2
L.A. — We See You!
How to properly remove the blinders? A starting point is sustained looking.Explore the issue
Issue 1
Remembrance
True style, after all, is time travel.Explore the issue