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Sharon Mizota

Sharon Mizota

Sharon Mizota is an art critic and archivist whose writing appears regularly in the Los Angeles Times. In 2011-12 she reviewed all 69 official “Pacific Standard Time” exhibitions in the series “PST: A to Z.” She has also written for Artforum, X-TRA Contemporary Art Quarterly, ARTNews and other publications. She is a recipient of a Creative Capital/Warhol Foundation Arts Writers' Grant and a coauthor of the award-winning book, "Fresh Talk/Daring Gazes: Conversations on Asian American Art." Photo credit: Oliver Wang.

Sharon Mizota
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USC Pacific Art Museum exterior | Courtesy of USC Pacific Art Museum exterior
Many museum collections were built on the imperialist and exploitative practices of collectors. University of Southern California Pacific Asia Museum is taking steps to rectify this problematic situation.
Lisa Adams, “Untitled 4,” 2020. | Courtesy of the artist
“Southland Sessions” reaches out to a few artists to ask what they’re doing to stay creative under quarantine in a world in rapid flux.
April Bey, "COMPLY (Borg Feminism)," 2018. | Courtesy of the artist.
In recent weeks, artists have found their practices upturned, expanded or reenergized because of COVID-19 and calls to address racial injustice.
Installation view, “Chris Engman: Looking,” Luis De Jesus Los Angeles. Photo by Michael Underwood.
In response to the closure of their physical spaces, L.A. art galleries have embraced online exhibitions to an unprecedented degree. This transition has changed the way they present artworks and unexpectedly, how they relate to one another.
Irving Browne, Iconoclasm and Whitewash. New York, 1886. Illustrated by the author. The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens.
The Huntington Library's extra-illustrated books are treasure troves of art, their pages filled with original watercolors, prints, and illustrations from as early as the 18th century.
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Sam Durant elevates the conversation about a museum's role in society to today's digital age, asking social media users to post their opinions online.
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L.A. artist Susan Silton's "Who's in a Name?" looks at rituals of history, celebrity, and death by investigating how we acknowledge and commemorate one another.
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At LACMA, Stephen Prina displays 28 hot pink plywood replicas.
What if dance could be any movement, executed by anybody, anywhere? Trisha Brown blurrs the boundary between dance and the rhythms and movements of everyday life.
Catherine Opie's images are distinguished by her ability to merge references to photographic history with the stuff of contemporary life.
Independent publishing companies in L.A. are growing and blurring the distinction between literature and art.
Ken Gonzales-Day brings a grim forgotten California history to life in the present day and addresses art history and its troubled relationship to the representation of race.
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