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Artbound

Artbound Season 9 (Trailer)

Watch a preview of "Artbound," our Emmy® award-winning arts and culture series that examines the lives, works and creative processes of arts and culture innovators making an impact in Southern California and beyond. A new season premieres March 6, 9 p.m. ET/PT on KCET and Link TV (DirecTV 375 and DISH Network 9410). Episodes will also be streaming online following its broadcast on kcet.org/artbound and linktv.org/artbound, as well as on Amazon, YouTube, Roku and Apple TV.

The latest season of "Artbound" continues to unearth the stories of the region with the following episodes: 

“That Far Corner: Frank Lloyd Wright in Los Angeles” (March 6) investigates the celebrated architect's time in Southern California during the 1910s and early 1920s. Writer/director Christopher Hawthorne, architecture critic for the Los Angeles Times, explores the five pre Columbian-inspired houses the legendary architect built in Los Angeles in that period. The documentary also delves into the critic's provocative theory that these designs were a means of artistic catharsis for Wright, who was recovering from a violent, tragic episode in his life.

“Desert X” (March 13) surveys the vast, strange and often contradictory desert landscape during the inaugural Desert X, an exhibition of public art installations situated at sites across the California Desert. Installations featured include Will Boone's "Monument," an underground bunker located off Ramon Road in Rancho Mirage, Sherin Guirguis’s "One I Call" at Whitewater Preserve, Claudia Comte’s "Curves and Zig Zags" and Phillip K. Smith III's "The Circle of Land and Sky" in Palm Desert. The biennial returns to the desert 2019.

“Electric Earth: The Art of Doug Aitken” (March 20) profiles prominent artist Doug Aitken who for more than 20 years has shifted the perception and location of images and narratives. The artist's works were recently exhibited at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA.

“Variedades: Olvera Street” (March 27) will look at Los Angeles’ Olvera Street. The episode is part-history lesson and part-immersion in the birthplace of Los Angeles. Emmy® award-winning journalist, author and musician Rubén Martínez, explores the sometimes-violent, 200-year struggle for the political and symbolic control of the city as told in “Variedades” form – an interdisciplinary performance style that brings together music, spoken word, theater, comedy and the visual arts, loosely based on the Mexican vaudeville shows of early 20th century Los Angeles.

“La Raza” (April 3) tells the story of a group of young activists during the late 1960s and 1970s, who used used creative tools like writing and photography as a means for community organizing, providing a platform for the Chicano Movement in the form of the bilingual newspaper/magazine La Raza. An exhibition of La Raza is currently on display at the Autry Museum of the American West.

“No Trespassing: A Survey of Environmental Art” (April 10) illuminates how artists have been inspired by the the natural beauty of California — from 19th-century plein air painting of pastoral valleys and coasts to early 20th-century photography of the wilderness (embodied famously in the work of Ansel Adams). Today, as artists continue to engage with California’s environment, they echo and critique earlier art practices that represent nature in “The Golden State” in a particular way. Featuring artists Richard Misrach and Hillary Mushkin. 

“Artist and Mother” (April 17) profiles four California artists who make motherhood a part of their art: Kenyatta A.C. Hinkle, Andrea Chung, Rebecca Campbell and Tanya Aguiñiga. There's a persisting assumption in contemporary art circles that you can't be a good artist and good mother both. But these artists are working to shatter this cliche, juggling demands of career and family and finding inspiring ways to explore the maternal in their art.

“The Art of Basketweaving” (April 24) explores how Native peoples across the country are revitalizing basketry traditions, thanks in large part to the work of the California Indian Basketweavers Association (CIBA). Their skill and wisdom highlight the artistic quality and value of these baskets, which are on par with other fine art.

Want to keep up to date on the latest arts and culture happenings around Southern California? Sign up for the "Artbound" newsletter.

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Season
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East West Players: A Home on Stage
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Chronicling the 58-year history of the longest running theatre of color in the U.S.
Angel City Press: L.A. through the Pages
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Angel City Press has been shaping and influencing public understanding of LA for decades.
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Artists-In-Residence
56:39
Artists-In-Residence programs provide artists opportunities to create uninterrupted work.
L.A. Rebellion: A Cinematic Movement
56:40
Following the Watts Uprising, UCLA increased film program enrollment of students of color.
América Tropical: The Martyr Mural of Siqueiros
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David Alfaro Siqueiros created Olvera Street’s popular mural with an innovative technique.
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Chinatown Punk Wars
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Two Chinese restaurants became the unlikely epicenter of L.A.’s burgeoning punk scene.
A Rubén Ortiz-Torres Story
56:17
Rubén Ortiz-Torres explores his past and present in an uncertain socio-economic future.
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Giant Robot: Asian Pop Culture and Beyond
56:28
Giant Robot was a bimonthly magazine that profoundly affected Asian American pop culture.
A New Deal for Los Angeles
56:43
WPA projects live on in L.A. Explores what effect a similar program might have today.
Arte Cósmico
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Six Latinx artists in L.A. work to secure their place in American art.
Duchamp Comes To Pasadena
56:59
When Marcel Duchamp came to Pasadena in 1963, he sent ripples down L.A.'s art scene.
Love & Rockets
56:43
A self-published comic book made by brothers from Oxnard, Ca. makes comic book history.
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