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Artbound
A New Deal for Los Angeles
Season 13
Episode 4
When FDR created the New Deal, also known as the Works Progress Administration (WPA), as a way to provide paying jobs to millions of unemployed Americans recovering from The Great Depression. Over 140 projects were completed by the WPA in Los Angeles. This episode highlights many of these works still standing and asks the question what would a WPA look like if it still existed today.
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Season
56:43
Chronicling the 58-year history of the longest running theatre of color in the U.S.
55:51
Angel City Press has been shaping and influencing public understanding of LA for decades.
56:39
Artists-In-Residence programs provide artists opportunities to create uninterrupted work.
56:40
Following the Watts Uprising, UCLA increased film program enrollment of students of color.
56:43
David Alfaro Siqueiros created Olvera Street’s popular mural with an innovative technique.
56:43
Two Chinese restaurants became the unlikely epicenter of L.A.’s burgeoning punk scene.
56:17
Rubén Ortiz-Torres explores his past and present in an uncertain socio-economic future.
56:28
Giant Robot was a bimonthly magazine that profoundly affected Asian American pop culture.
56:49
Six Latinx artists in L.A. work to secure their place in American art.
56:59
When Marcel Duchamp came to Pasadena in 1963, he sent ripples down L.A.'s art scene.
56:43
A self-published comic book made by brothers from Oxnard, Ca. makes comic book history.
53:45
An LGBTQ nightclub event in L.A. called “Mustache Mondays” was an incubator for today’s exciting artists.