Los Angeles
At the turn of the 20th century, cultural provocateur Charles Lummis walked all the way from Ohio to Los Angeles writing episodic dispatches to the L.A. Times. Los Angeles was transitioning from being a native Californio outpost to an occupied Anglo territory. The Land of Sunshine, as Lummis called it in his seminal publication, became home to east coast transplants looking for health, wealth and fame; they arrived en masse to the city of the future, largely ignoring the multi-ethnic population of the area. This intersection of race, class and geography created the cultural narrative of the city for years to come. Dreamers, hustlers, refugees, and poets, all flocked to Los Angeles in search of a cultural “ground zero” to dot the landscape. In the 1920s, Los Angeles’ population was no more than one hundred thousand; by the 1950s, it had surpassed two million.

Like early pobladores and East coast transplants, the post-war years created an accelerated boom in industry, culture and population, propelling Los Angeles and the region on the world stage. Just as Charles and Ray Eames were building case study houses, revolutionizing the design industry, and Venice had become home to beat poets and rebel artists, the influx of African-Americans from the south, and the return of Asian-Americans and Latinos from the war, created a pre civil-rights intellectual atmosphere that continued to narrate the cultural life of Los Angeles. As minority voices became empowered to tell their stories through public art works and and east coast galleries and curators interested in the experiments of Ferus artists, Watts burned and reminded Angelenos that the culture and health of the city had yet to be balanced. In disbelief, local and national leaders began to question the manufactured eden-like promises of Los Angeles.

In the late 1970s and 1980s, the economy tanked, the inner cities ballooned and the crack epidemic took over the streets. Residue of wars in the Pacific and dictatorships in Central-America created a new mass migration to Los Angeles, from Cambodia, Honduras and beyond, continuing the century long narrative of the city. And yet, it is this constant flux, push and pull of cultural binaries and identities, that has given Los Angeles its current status as the preeminent cultural and artistic capital of the world.

In Los Angeles, like no other place in the world, banda covers of punk classics, dancing customized cars and situationist performances coexist with each other without fear of abandonment. Today, Los Angeles has a memory of who it was, and this recollection has given the city the cultural maturity to tell its story as it really is.

Highlights
Bullet Points: How Hip-Hop Handles the Gun
Gun violence is ubiquitous in American life, but hip-hop seems singled out for critique in ways that the rest of popular culture often is not.
Serpentine 2013: L.A. Artists Celebrate the Year of the Snake
2013 is the Chinese Year of the Snake, and a number of local artists are celebrating this much maligned creature in their work.
Big City Forum: Spaces In-Between at WUHO
Spaces In-Between is a community led project intended to advance broader participation in public discourse.
Considering Whiteness As Ideology and Not Biology
Tyler Stallings revisits the 2003 exhibition, "Whiteness, A Wayward Construction," in light of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
The Ethics and Aesthetics of Place
The Ethics and Aesthetics of Place
Public Matters performs extended, life as art "residencies" in and with communities; they disrupt the participant-observer paradigm by becoming participant-stakeholders.
From Tar Pits: James Griffith's Petro-Artistic Paintings
From Tar Pits: James Griffith's Petro-Artistic Paintings
With his bucket of tar from the La Brea Tar pits, James Griffith brings to life emotion-filled portraits of animal life that -- almost magically -- appear out of a minimalist Zen-like backdrop.
MOCAtv: Michael Smith
MOCAtv: Michael Smith
New York artist Michael Smith inserts his two recurring characters -- Mike and Baby Ikki -- into particular scenarios, either real or constructed, in ways that can be seen as responses to broader issues in contemporary society.
Welcome to Alexandra Grant's Interior Forest
Welcome to Alexandra Grant's Interior Forest
"Forêt Intérieure/Interior Forest" is a project by L.A.-based artist Alexandra Grant encompassing a series of public drawing sessions, reading groups, artist collaborations and an installation at 18th Street Arts Center.
Trailer Parked: Heidi Duckler's Mobile Dance Piece 'At the Oasis'
Trailer Parked: Heidi Duckler's Mobile Dance Piece 'At the Oasis'
Can you bring a work to an audience instead of an audience to the work? Using a 1961 Oasis trailer, Heidi Duckler is taking advantage of the sprawling seismic mobile climate of L.A. to connect private and public space through performance.
Connecting the Stars of Trisha Brown's Constellation
Connecting the Stars of Trisha Brown's Constellation
Four Trisha Brown site-specific performances, including "Man Walking" and "Roof Piece," were performed around Los Angeles this past weekend.
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section header: disciplines
icon, Architecture/ Design discipline

Architecture/ Design

California becomes an international export by redefining the concept of city and home.

icon, Community Arts discipline

Community Arts

Through workshops, education and placed based projects, art is the connective tissue of a community.

icon, Cultural Politics discipline

Cultural Politics

Funding bubbles, cultural deserts and the politics of access to the arts in the 21st century.

icon, Film & Media Arts discipline

Film & Media Arts

At the shadow of the entertainment industry, video artists and underground filmmakers take a stand.

icon, Literature discipline

Literature

Noir, sunshine and dystopia create a multi-ethnic narrative that is read, watched and admired around the globe.

icon, Multi-Disciplinary discipline

Multi-Disciplinary

Multi-hyphenate works that combine disciplines, remix dogmas, and reinvent the wheel.

icon, Music discipline

Music

A dialogue between cultures, the music of our state serves up the California dream like no other artform.

icon, Performance discipline

Performance

Staging the drama of California through dance, music and theater.

icon, Visual Arts discipline

Visual Arts

Breaking away from the European and New York vanguard, California reinvents the art world.


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