How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Kenny Scharf
There is no such thing as a day of rest for artist Kenny Scharf, not even Sunday. βI wake up super early. Itβs still dark outside,β the Los Angeles native says.
Rising before the sun anchors his active day. βI always have to keep moving,β Scharf says. βOtherwise, Iβll get very depressed.β
An avid hiker and swimmer, Scharf, 67, also maintains a disciplined yoga practice and cycles daily from his Culver City home to his Inglewood studio. There almost everything serves as a canvas, including painted trash doubling as decor and the silkscreened couch on which heβs seated.
In Sunday Funday, L.A. people give us a play-by-play of their ideal Sunday around town. Find ideas and inspiration on where to go, what to eat and how to enjoy life on the weekends.
βI donβt like to waste good paint and silkscreen ink. Why wash it? We apply it everywhere until we use it up,β Scharf says.
Scharf, who grew up in the Valley before making his way to New York City, first gained acclaim in the β80s East Village art scene alongside his friends and contemporaries Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring, his former roommate. The trio also befriended Andy Warhol, who predicted Scharfβs fame.
Renowned for his self-coined βpop surrealism,β Scharf often populates his bold, colorful work with grinning cartoon faces, elastic blobs, and sci-fi creatures floating through cosmic landscapes. Anxieties about overconsumption and environmental degradation lie beneath the playfulness.
Like their creator, Scharfβs works are always on the move, either rolling down the street on the cars heβs painted β featured in his recently published book βKarbombz!β β or traveling to forthcoming exhibitions in Wuhan, Tokyo and Paris.
This interview has been lightly edited and condensed for length and clarity.
5:30 a.m.: Wake up and feed the cats.
My cats, Cutie and Socks β oneβs a tabby and the other is a tuxedo cat β wake me up by mewing and walking on me. Theyβre like, βHey, Iβm hungry.β So I get up and crack open the cans. They like that disgusting, smelly canned food. And then they go out into the yard.
I got the cats because I went to New York for a show. I was gone for five days and I live next to a park, so there are a lot of animals. I came back and my entire house was overrun by mice. I was like, βWhat the hell am I gonna do? I need cats.β The mice are gone and now I have these cats. Theyβre so cute and so much fun. They take over my life.
6 a.m.: Detox
I make lemon and hot water. Itβs a good way to start the day and clear out the toxins. Right now, I have a lot of citrus because Ed Ruschaβs studio is across the street from my house, and in the back of the studio he has a citrus farm. I go there, especially during this time of year, and get bags of citrus. Itβs like a farm community in the middle of L.A. I love L.A. because you can surround yourself with trees and gardens and kind of pretend that youβre not living in a giant metropolitan area.
8:30 a.m.: Iyengar yoga
An Iyengar yoga instructor comes to my house. I find Iyengar is great for aging. You use ropes and gravity to hang and do different things, using your body weight so you can relax into the positions. I also have a swing to go upside down on. When people walk into my living room, they go, βWhatβs going on here?β because of the ropes on the wall.
In the summer, Iβll go to the beach in Venice and swim in the ocean. Itβs wonderful when Iβm out in the water. Itβs cathartic and cleansing, and sometimes I see dolphins. Iβll go early in the morning before the crowds come.
11:30 a.m.: Mar Vista Farmersβ Market
Itβs fun to go there with my daughter Zena, whoβs a chef, and my grandkids. We stroll around and get food. All the food stands are delicious. I grew up here in L.A., so Iβm into Mexican food. I donβt really want to eat American food. Iβm not into hamburgers. I want all the stuff with the culture. I like hot and spicy.
I also buy apples and berries, whatever I canβt grow, because I grow my own food at home.
And I buy stuff from an Indian man who sells Chyawanprash, which is kind of a jam. Itβs really concentrated and like an elixir. He also sells Shilajit, which almost looks like tar. You put a little bit under your tongue and it dissolves, and itβs got like every single mineral in it.
2 p.m.: Painting at the studio
Iβm painting seven days a week, but I really love coming here on Sundays because nobodyβs here and the phone doesnβt ring. Sometimes, my granddaughter, Lua, will come. She paints. Upstairs at the studio I have a little painting area with easels for my grandkids, but my grandson, Jet, isnβt that into painting. I do my work, and Luaβs up there keeping herself busy painting, and itβs great.
Kenny Scharf in his paint-splattered studio he bikes to every day.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
5 p.m.: Hike
The easiest one is right behind my house. It goes up to the top of the Baldwin Hills Scenic Overlook where the [Culver City] Stairs go. Itβs one of the best views in all of L.A. You can see from the airport to the ocean, downtown, Mount Baldy. You can see almost all the way to Palm Springs, Mount San Gorgonio. The view is amazing.
We also hike a lot in Kenneth Hahn [State Recreation Area].
My grandkids often like to go on a waterfall hike, so there are a couple in Malibu. There are also a couple over in the San Gabriel [Mountains]. Weβll get into the car and drive an hour and hike.
6:30 p.m.: Dinner at a restaurant
Zena, Lua and Jet live close to me, so we have dinner together at least three or four times a week. Because Zenaβs a chef, we donβt go out to eat that often, but sometimes we go to a restaurant called Madre that I love. Itβs on National [Boulevard]. The food is so good. They often have squash blossoms. They fry them and put a little cheese in them.
I also love Gjelina in Venice. Sometimes I take people from Europe there because it is quintessential California. All the food they make is from the farmers market, so you get a tomato salad with incredible tomatoes.
8 p.m.: Read
I just finished Patti Smithβs latest book, βBread of Angels.β Itβs beautiful. I love her. I saw her perform at Disney Hall recently, and she was selling this book. I actually saw her perform at the Santa Monica Civic [Auditorium] when I was 19. Iβd been wanting to move to New York for a lot of reasons, but when I saw her performance, it was, βIβm moving there.β There was so much energy in her.
9 p.m.: Bedtime
Usually Iβm in bed by 9 and asleep by 10. When I was young, I was very involved in nightlife. I was working in nightclubs, all of my friends were in nightclubs, so I lived that big time. But now Iβm jaded. I donβt want to sound above it all, but I donβt see anything going on that Iβm getting excited about the way it was. And Iβm not a nostalgic person, so I choose not to go out. Iβm happier getting a good nightβs sleep.