
Lost L.A. comes to life in reissued book about the city before freeways
'The L.A. bug just bit me. I wanted to look for the world of James M. Cain and Raymond Chandler, and I did,' he says. 'I drove my Packard around, looking for signs of the old, decrepit, dissolute Los Angeles, and I found it in spades. I had lots of adventures.'
From the old suits he wears to the big Highland Park house where he lives with his family, Marsak has a deep affection for vintage things. (He does have an iPhone, though, and his wife did talk him into a microwave — but the design had to be retro.) Marsak's affection for the past extends to Arnold Hylen, a solitary, mild-mannered Swedish émigré, whose book of mid-20th century photos and an essay about old Los Angeles, 'Los Angeles Before the Freeways 1850-1950: Images of an Era,' was recently reissued by Angel City Press in a new edition curated and expanded by Marsak.
Not merely a facsimile, the new edition has been augmented with additional text, notes, fresh layouts and more Hylen photos of an old city on the verge of being swallowed up by the new — a process of cultural erasure that crops up in many criticisms of Los Angeles as a superficial place with no deep sense of itself. Marsak disagrees — sort of.
'It's deserved, and it's undeserved,' he says. 'I've been all over, and it's unfair to pick on Los Angeles alone. But I think the city's been an easy target just because we've had so many high-profile losses of distinctive architecture here. That stands out in people's minds. Hylen was certainly aware of those losses and they worried him. If they hadn't, I don't think he would've felt an obsessive drive to chronicle the old city.'
Hylen lived a quiet bachelor life, Marsak says, and never imagined his photos would one day be among those by William Reagh, Leonard Nadel, Theodore Seymour Hall and Virgil Mirano. He was born in 1908 and arrived in Vermont from Sweden when he was still a baby, relocating to Southern California with his family in 1917. As a teen he studied art at the Chouinard Art Institute in L.A.'s Westlake neighborhood and found work in World War II as a photographer and designer of sales materials and trade show exhibits for Fluor Corp., an oil and gas engineering and construction firm.
As he photographed refineries, his eyes opened to the surrounding city. As Marsak describes in the book's introduction, he'd 'spend the day walking the streets, camera in hand, which fed his interest in the fast-disappearing downtown area, Bunker Hill in particular.'
'I think he knew the value absolutely of what he was doing for himself and other like-minded spirits,' Marsak says, 'but I don't think he knew what to do with the photos.'
Thankfully, Glen Dawson did. An iconic figure in L.A.'s literary landscape, Dawson used his small press to publish two books of Hylen's photos. Marsak learned about them (thanks to an enthusiastic barfly he encountered in an L.A. dive) and found both in the used bookstores once existing on 6th Street: 'Bunker Hill: A Los Angeles Landmark' (1976) and 'Los Angeles Before the Freeways,' the latter published not long before Hylen's 1987 death. Marsak spent many years persuading the photographer's relatives to sell him the rights to republish Hylen's work — selling his beloved Packard to fund that purchase.
Marsak's dedication has paid off: 'Los Angeles Before the Freeways' is an engrossing collection of black-and-white images of a city in which old adobe structures sit between Italianate office buildings or peek out from behind old signs, elegant homes teeter on the edge of steep hillsides, and routes long used by locals would soon be demolished to make room for freeways. These images are accompanied by Hylen's book-length essay, which runs like a documentarian's voice-over throughout the collection.
Two notable changes for this edition: More photos and the decision to use Hylen's uncropped photos, which provide a richer sense of locale and more photos. There were 116 photos in the original book; Marsak went through Hylen's negatives and found more photos, resulting in 143 images in the new edition.
Marsak supplies an introductory essay and an invaluable guide to the many architectural styles belonging to L.A.'s past. His footnotes and captions also enhance our understanding of the photos: In some cases, he uses them to correct some false claims that Hylen makes in his essay (for instance, that a long stone trough on Olvera Street was a Gabrielino relic when in fact it was actually created by a local rancher).
There are no special effects or gimmicks to Hylen's photos, no staging or posed imagery — he lets these forgotten edifices speak for themselves. They range from the magnificent, Romanesque detailing of the Stimson Block (the city's first large steel-frame skyscraper on Figueroa Street) to the multi-gabled, Queen Anne charm of the Melrose, a home built on Bunker Hill by a retired oilman.
Occasionally, though, Hylen's lens does give us something a bit more impressionistic and emblematic of his thesis about L.A.'s vanishing history. Take, for example, a photo of the Paris Inn on East Market Street. The little French-style inn, which opened in 1930, stands in sharp relief in the foreground while City Hall hovers like a faint ghost in the background, suggesting that a more modern version of L.A. is on the verge of materializing out of thin air.
For Marsak, who spends his time researching old L.A., giving lectures, serving as an Angels Flight operator and working with local preservationist groups, Hylen's work fills an important gap in L.A.'s past. He hopes readers, especially Angelenos, will come away with a deeper appreciation for their city.
'There's a saying that when something's gone, it's gone for good, and 98% of the stuff in this book is gone,' he said. 'Anyone who looks at this book probably already has a preservationist impulse, but if they don't, if I can light the preservation fire under at least one of them, all the hard work will have been worth it. I really hope seeing this work will make Angelenos think more about their own neighborhoods. I think Hylen would appreciate that.'
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Miami Herald
5 hours ago
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My family witnessed fascism in Italy. It reminds me of what's happening today
For those with relatives living in other countries, you know when the phone rings in the early morning, it can usually mean only one thing: Bad news. In March, my cousin called me in the early morning hours from Italy to share sad news; my favorite aunt had passed away in her sleep. My Italian mother, Antonietta Bellicanta Fontana, survived the occupation of her family home by German soldiers during World War II. She lived in a small northern Italian village (about an hour from Venice) called Cavaso del Tomba. I not only grieved the loss of my aunt, I also grieved knowing that another important voice had been forever silenced, because my aunt's passing brought back stories my mother had shared with me about German occupation of her home during the war. The German Army had occupied my mother's village for some time. Then, on September 24, 1944, around noon, German soldiers drove a truck with several partisan prisoners on board into the village. They were coming from a nearby village where they had already hung two of the partisans. They stopped in the main town square, which was across from the tavern where my mother and her family lived. My mother's family was having lunch when two German soldiers and two Black Brigades (Italian militia fascists) entered with machine guns pointed at them. They told my grandfather to bring a ladder that would be used for hanging. They gathered the whole town to witness the executions. My mother was 11, my uncle was 13 and my three aunts were ages 8, 6 and 4. The purpose of the hanging was to show the town's population what end came to those who rebelled against the fascist regime. A German soldier placed the ladder on a light pole and tied the rope. Then, a partisan named Ermenegildo Metti climbed onto the side of the truck. He kept his gaze fixed on the people, but he looked serene and resigned. The soldiers put the noose around his neck and then pulled the truck forward. His body dangled there as the truck was moved to another light pole. The next partisan to be hung was a small boy dressed in a sailor's uniform. There was also a priest on the truck; before he died, with the noose around his neck, he said, 'Goodbye brothers, long live Italy!' Then, the truck moved forward again. Today, my mother, my uncle and now one aunt have passed. Another aunt has dementia. Only the youngest of the family is still alive today to bear witness to the final result of fascism. Fascism is described as a far-right form of government where most of the country's power is held by one ruler or a small group under one party. Sadly, this is now on the rise — and fascism has become a polarizing force in our own nation today. We must look inside ourselves and stand up for those whose voices are being silenced. History has taught us that many societies believed that others would take action against fascism. Unfortunately, no one did. Notably, there are dire consequences and dangers to bystander silence. A bystander is defined by the National Children's Bureau as 'a person who slows down to look at a traffic accident, but doesn't stop to offer assistance, the person who watches an argument on the street, and a crowd that gathers to watch a playground fight. They are the audience that engages in the spectacle, and watches as a drama unfolds.' We cannot be bystanders. We must act as defenders — the people who fight to stand up for what is right. Our democracy is now at serious risk. And we now have a government that appears to believe it can do anything it wants without consequence. We have a president that's been immunized by our Supreme Court of any criminal responsibility, who is immune from civil suit while in office and who believes he can ignore the courts at will. This is the exact definition of tyranny: an 'unlimited authority or use of power, or a government which exercises such power without any control or limits.' Today, in Cavaso del Tomba, memorial markers commemorate each of the execution sites where those brave partisans lost their lives. My family and I solemnly walked that road last summer to honor those who paid the ultimate sacrifice for freedom. It is a memory that I will never forget. April marked the 80th Anniversary of Italy's liberation from fascism. Those voices from the past should always speak loudly. Together, we must stand in solidarity, become united and pray that 2025 does not become the year that history repeats itself in America. Trish Fontana was born and raised in Sacramento. She is retired after spending nearly four decades in the California State Capitol, where she worked for two California lieutenant governors, two governors, two first ladies and two state senators.