What Part of Los Angeles Has an Art Scene

Navigating fine art spaces in whatsoever big city tin be a claiming, just this is especially the case when it comes to a sprawling region like Los Angeles. I reached out to Abe Ahn and Matt Stromberg, 2 writers who have been contributing to Hyperallergic regularly from Los Angeles for many years now, to put together a guide to some of their favorite galleries, museums, and nonprofits. We chop-chop realized information technology would exist impossible to exist comprehensive, then we tried to focus on spaces that originated in LA and have accomplished truly outstanding piece of work. I'm certain this list volition continue to grow equally new spaces open up and current ones evolve, but in the meantime, we promise this guide to 49 venues will come in handy whether you already alive in LA or are here on a visit.

The guide is divided by full general neighborhoods and regions — depending on how aggressive you are, you lot might fifty-fifty be able to visit more than than one infinite in each "cluster" on a given twenty-four hours!

Elisa Wouk Almino

Westside

Installation view, Brooks + Scarpa, DENSE-Urban center: Housing for Quality of Life and Social Capital at 18th Street Arts Centre's Airport Gallery (photo by Geoff Palomino, courtesy of 18th Street Arts Center)

18th Street Arts Center

Where: 1639 18th Street, Santa Monica, CA (18th Street Campus); 3026 Aerodrome Avenue, Santa Monica, California (Airport Campus)
Hours: 11am–5pm, Mon through Friday, 18th Street Campus (gratis admission); 1-five pm, Monday , 11am–5pm, Tuesday  through Saturday, Airport Campus (free admission); c losed Sabbatum and Sunday except during public events

18th Street Arts Center has stayed true to its creative person- and customs-centered mission since its early years as a space for feminist artists, performance art, and activism. Today, information technology offers events and exhibitions in conjunction with residencies for Los Angeles–based and international artists. The center's opening of a 2nd campus at Santa Monica Airport is the latest expansion of its cultural footprint and creative person services.

Raymond Thompson, Jr. (epitome courtesy the Annenberg Center for Photography)

Annenberg Space for Photography

Where: 2000 Avenue of the Stars, Century City, Los Angeles
Hours: 11am–6pm, Wednesday through Sun (gratuitous admission)

Although high-rise office buildings and the Westfield shopping mall might be the chief destinations for most visitors to Century City, the Annenberg Space for Photography is worth the trek for anyone interested in the photographic medium. Defended to photographic artworks and photojournalism, the Annenberg Infinite for Photography exhibits both motion picture and digital images, the latter via a cutting-edge 4K digital gallery.

Blum & Poe

Where: 2727 South. La Cienega Blvd., Culver Urban center, California
Hours: 10am–6pm, Tuesday through Saturday (free admission)

Tim Blum and Jeff Poe opened their get-go infinite in Santa Monica in 1994, with an installation by British artist Anya Gallaccio, for which she smeared chocolate over the gallery walls. 20-v years later, Blum & Poe is 1 of LA'south most prominent homegrown galleries, with a 22,000-square-foot ballast space in Culver Metropolis, non to mention outposts in New York and Tokyo. Their list of artists includes emerging and established artists from LA and beyond including Jim Shaw, Marker Grotjahn, Julian Schnabel, Henry Taylor, and Pia Camil. Alongside ambitious solo shows, their exhibition program features well-researched historical surveys.

"L + A.South.T.R.A.L.O.R.A.C.L.E.Southward: 999777555333111000222444666888," installation view at Five Car Garage (image courtesy the gallery)

V Car Garage

Where: E mail info@emmagrayhq.com for accost, Santa Monica, California
Hours: 12–4pm, Saturday, and by engagement (free admission)

Although information technology is really located in a garage behind a business firm in Santa Monica, V Car Garage is less punk DIY infinite, and more white-walled contemporary fine art gallery. It does still maintain a welcoming, affectless air, thanks to founder Emma Grayness'due south open up enthusiasm for the artists in her tight programme. They include Alison Blickle, Max Maslansky, and the metaphysical mystic known as L. Gray also founded the "Energetic Residency," a meditation and art studio above the garage for performances, sound baths, and workshops.

The Fowler Museum at UCLA

Where: 308 Charles Due east. Young Drive North, Westwood, Los Angeles
Hours: 12pm–8pm, Wednesday; 12pm–5pm, Th through Sun (free admission)

The Fowler may not be equally well known as the Hammer, some other UCLA-affiliated museum, but its collections and programs are simply equally formidable. Exhibitions feature artworks every bit well as ethnographic and archaeological objects from Africa, Asia, the Ethnic Americas, and the Pacific, presented as part of both colonial histories and today's living, vibrant cultures.

The Getty Center (The J. Paul Getty Museum)

Where: 1200 Getty Center Drive, Bel-Air, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–5:30pm, Sunday and Tuesday through Friday; 10am–9pm, Saturday (free admission)

The Getty Middle is Los Angeles's encyclopedic museum on the loma, featuring site-specific performances on its 24-acre campus and collections ranging from Renaissance drawings to Impressionist paintings to video fine art. Also on site is the Getty Research Constitute'southward vast holdings of rare books, prints, and photographs, which often broadcast through the museum's exhibitions.

Lari Pittman: Declaration of Independence, installation view, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, September
29, 2018–January v, 2020 (photograph past Jeff McLane)

Hammer Museum

Where: 10899 Wilshire Boulevard, Westwood, Los Angeles
Hours: 11am–8pm, Tuesday through Fri; 11am–5pm, Saturday through Sun (free admission)

The Hammer Museum was founded in 1990, built around the Old Master and Impressionist collection of oilman and philanthropist Armand Hammer. Under the leadership of Ann Philbin, who became managing director in 1999, the museum has emerged every bit one of the city'south nearly exciting institutions, with challenging and progressive exhibition and event programs. Fabricated in LA, the museum'due south biennial showcase of local talent, is a who'due south-who of emerging and under-recognized Angeleno artists. In keeping with its commitment to the power of art to "build a more just world," the museum is, and ever will be, free.

L.A. Louver

Where: 45 North. Venice Blvd, Venice, California
Hours: 10am–6pm, Tuesday through Sabbatum ( gratis admission )

L.A. Louver's origins date back over xl years, to a fourth dimension when the urban center's gallery scene was express to a small handful of spaces on the Westside. Since its founding in 1976, this Venice establishment has proven its longevity with an intergenerational roster of artists including Ed and Nancy Kienholz, Alison Saar, and Gajin Fujita.

Roberts Projects

Where: 5801 Washington Blvd., Culver City, California
Hours: 11am–6pm, Tuesday through Saturday (free admission)

Roberts & Tilton was founded 20 years agone by partners Bennett Roberts, Julie Roberts, and Jack Tilton in the 6150 Wilshire gallery building near LACMA, and have since moved into a onetime coffee-roasting manufacturing plant in Culver City. After the decease of Jack Tilton in 2017, they inverse their name to Roberts Projects. Their roster of artists includes Kehinde Wiley, Daniel Joseph Martinez, Jeffrey Gibson, and Betye Saar.

Skirball Cultural Center

Where: 2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd., Brentwood, Los Angeles
Hours: 12–5pm, Tuesday through Friday; 10am–5pm, Saturday through Sunday ( $12 – full general admission; $ix – seniors (65 and up), full-fourth dimension students with ID, and children over 12; $7 – children 2–12; free to all on Thursdays )

Nestled into the Brentwood hills merely a short drive upward the 405 from the Getty Eye, the Skirball Cultural Heart is dedicated to the celebration of Jewish civilisation, fine art, and history. Guided past the Jewish custom of welcoming the stranger, programming is aimed at sharing experiences and creating connections between dissimilar communities.

Installation view, The Medea Coup: Radical Women Artists Behind the Iron Curtain (photo by Dany Naierman, courtesy the Wende Museum)

The Wende Museum

Where: 10808 Culver Boulevard, Culver City, California
Hours: 10am–9pm, Friday; 10am–5pm, Saturday and Dominicus (gratis admission)

Most 3 decades since Francis Fukuyama declared the cease of history with the fall of the Soviet Union, interest in socialism is resurgent in the United states of america. For those curious about past efforts to establish socialist states, the Wende Museum is defended to the Cold State of war–era art, cultures, and histories of former Soviet Bloc nations.

Central Los Angeles

Commonwealth and Council

Where: 3006 W. 7th Street, Ste. 220, Koreatown, Los Angeles
Hours: 12–6pm, Midweek through Saturday (complimentary admission)

Commonwealth and Council was founded by the affable Immature Chung in 2010 with the goal of "championing practices past women, queer, POC, and our ally artists." Over the past decade, the gallery has showcased work by some of the near promising artists nether this umbrella, including Beatriz Cortez, Rafa Esparza, Young Joon Kwak, Jennifer Moon, and EJ Colina. Housed on the second floor of a quaint residential edifice, it was joined a few years ago by young upstart Visitor Welcome Centre down the hall.

Craft Contemporary

Where: 5814 Wilshire Blvd., Mid-Wilshire, Los Angeles
Hours: 11am–5pm, Tuesday through Fri; 11am–6pm, Sabbatum through Sunday; 6:30–9:30pm, first Thursday of every month ( $9 – general access; $vii – students, teachers, seniors 65+; donation-based access every Lord's day )

As its name implies, Arts and crafts Gimmicky is one of the only institutions in the state defended to contemporary artists working in arts and crafts . Their definition of craft is an inclusive one, covering everything from ceramics, glass, and woods, to textiles, book design, and even shoe blueprint. The museum began as the Egg & the Eye, a restaurant and commercial fine art gallery founded in 1965 by Edythe Wyle (grandmother of actor Noah Wyle) that showed folk fine art from around the earth. When the gallery became a nonprofit museum in 1973, it changed its name to the Arts and crafts & Folk Art Museum. Another proper name change to Craft Contemporary followed in 2019, to highlight its delivery to art being made today as opposed to historical exhibitions. A rich series of hands-on workshops complements the exhibition program.

Installation view, Piece of work in Progress: a solo show by Ashley Lukashevsky (prototype by Rikki Wright, courtesy Inferior High)

Junior Loftier

Where: 5656 Hollywood Boulevard, Hollywood, Los Angeles
Hours: 12pm–6pm, Saturday and Sun; event times vary, see programming agenda

Inferior High is a gallery, shop, and all-ages event infinite that as well produces a quarterly magazine and weekly podcast — all of it driven by and defended to young artists, creatives, and activists. Exhibitions and events carve out a space for young women, people of color, and queer youth to showcase their talents and imagine a different kind of art world.

(photo by Ruben Diaz, courtesy the artist, Barbara Stauffacher Solomon, and LAXART)

LAXART

Where: 7000 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Los Angeles
Hours: 11am–6pm, Tuesday through Sabbatum (gratuitous access)

Nonprofit LAXART was founded in Culver C ity in 2005 by Lauri Firstenberg " equally a platform for emerging and under-recognized talent ." A decade later on they relocated to a former recording studio in Hollywood, and soon thereafter Firstenberg stepped down as Executive Director. Her successor Hamzah Walker, formerly of Chicago's Renaissance Society, and Deputy Manager Catherine Taft, has connected the arrangement'due south mission with a serial of challenging exhibitions and events.

Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE)

Where: 6522 Hollywood Boulevard, Hollywood, Los Angeles
Hours: 12pm–6pm, Wednesday through Sun (free admission)

No history of Los Angeles's alternative fine art spaces would be complete without mention of LACE. Over four decades, a scrappy artist-run organisation managed to achieve both longevity and influence by fostering emerging artists and art forms during times when there was picayune to no institutional support. Today, LACE continues to spotlight new artistic and curatorial voices.

Architect Peter Zumthor'south current concept for the LACMA redesign (courtesy Edifice LACMA)

Los Angeles Canton Museum of Art (LACMA)

Where: 5905 Wilshire Blvd., Phenomenon Mile, Los Angeles
Hours: 11am–5pm, Monday, Tuesday, & Thursday; 11am–8pm, Friday; 11am–7pm, Sat Through Dominicus (LA County Residents with ID/those residing exterior LA Canton: $xx/$25 – General admission; $xvi/$21 – seniors 65+ & students eighteen+; free/$10 – teens thirteen-17; complimentary after 3pm, Monday through Friday)

LACMA is the largest museum in the Western US, with a massive encyclopedic collection including more than than 142,000 works from around the world. Much of the museum will be airtight over the adjacent few years every bit outdated buildings are demolished to brand room for Swiss architect Peter Zumthor's controversial amoeba-similar redesign which will span Wilshire Boulevard, slated to open in 2024. The BCAM and Resnick Pavilion will remain open, notwithstanding. Likewise open to the public are Michael Heizer'due south "Levitated Mass" and Chris Burden'south "Urban Light," which has come to define LA as much every bit the Hollywood sign or Bradbury Edifice. During the construction, LACMA will be loaning works to other museums in the area, and off-site exhibitions will take place at the Charles White Elementary School.

Installation view, works past Tiger Tateishi and Takuro Tamayama (image courtesy Nonaka-Colina)

Nonaka-Colina

Where: 720 North Highland Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles
Hours: 12pm–8pm, Tuesday through Saturday (free admission)

You might expect to observe a dry out cleaner or laundromat under the "Best Cleaners" sign tucked abroad in a strip mall on Highland and Melrose, and non a gallery focused on modern and contemporary Japanese art that'southward rarely, if e'er, shown in Los Angeles. Nonaka-Colina exhibits a wide range of work from beyond the Pacific, from photography to conceptual art to ceramics.

Trenton Doyle Hancock: An Ingenue's Hues and How to Use Cutty Black Shoes, installation view, Shulamit Nazarian, Los Angeles, 2019 (prototype courtesy the artist and Shulamit Nazarian, Los Angeles)

Shulamit Nazarian

Where: 616 North. LaBrea Ave., Hancock Park, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–6pm, Tuesday through Saturday (Free admission)

Architect-turned-gallerist Shulamit Nazarian hosted exhibitions in her domicile before opening her eponymous gallery in Venice in 2012. An Iranian Jew whose family left their domicile country in 1978 — moving commencement to Israel, and so Los Angeles — Nazarian was committed to showing the work of Iranian, Jewish, and Israeli artists together, reflecting her groundwork. In 2017, the gallery relocated to a four,000-square-foot space on LaBrea Artery just due south of Melrose. The gallery's program has broadened as well, including artists similar Fay Ray and Trenton Doyle Hancock, alongside Jerusalem-born sculptor Reuven Israel and Iranian-American painter Amir Fallah.

Theaster Gates: Line Drawing for Shirt and Cloak installation view at Regen Projects (photograph by Matt Sromberg)

Regen Projects

Where: 6750 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–6pm, Tuesday through Saturday (free admission)

Regen Projects is one of a handful of galleries that have been instrumental in defining the LA art scene over the past few decades. Founded in 1989 by Shaun Caley Regen and her belatedly husband Stuart Regen, they have a knack for identifying and nurturing talent early on on. They gave a and so 24-year-old Matthew Barney his debut solo show in 1991, and were the first gallery to stand for iconic LA photographer Catherine Opie. Their programme now includes such influential artists equally Glenn Ligon, Raymond Pettibon, Theaster Gates, Andrea Zittel, and Marilyn Minter.

The Undercover Museum

Where: 3508 West Washington Boulevard, Arlington Heights, Los Angeles
Hours: 12pm–7pm, Wednesday through Sunday (free access)

Founded by the tardily painter Noah Davis, the Hole-and-corner Museum is as much a community centre as it is an exhibition space where visitors can peruse the book shop, join free guided meditations, or meet artists and cultural organizers in conversation in the lawn garden. There's always something going on at the Undercover Museum, whether it's a night séance with Andy Warhol's spirit or an afternoon lecture about prison abolitionism by Angela Davis.

Various Small Fires

Where: 6750 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–6pm, Tuesday through Sabbatum

Named later a 1964 artists book by Ed Ruscha, Diverse Small Fires exhibits a dynamic roster of artists including Anna Sew together Hoy, Liz Magic Laser, Diedrick Brackens, and the Harrisons. Founded in 2012 by Esther Kim Varet, the gallery sits at the end of a long corridor leading from the sidewalk, and also doubles as a space for audio art. In 2019, VSF opened upward a branch in Seoul, South korea, where they have mounted shows of LA artists including Ruscha, Baton Al Bengston, Joshua Nathanson, and Math Bass.

Downtown and Eastside

The Autry Museum of the American West (photo by Danielle Klebanow, epitome courtesy the Autry)

Autry Museum of the American Westward

Where: 234 Museum Drive, Griffith Park, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–4pm, Tuesday through Friday; 10am–5pm, Saturday and Dominicus ($14 adults, $10 students and seniors, $6 children ages 3–12, children under 3 free)

Established in 1988 by Singing Cowboy actor Cistron Autry, the Autry takes on an expansive, also as inclusive, view of the American West by focusing its exhibitions and programs on the histories and artworks of Ethnic peoples.

The Box

Where: 805 Traction Ave, Downtown, Los Angeles
Hours:
12–6pm, Wednesday through Saturday (free admission)

Downtown gallery the Box splits its focus between historical exhibitions exploring artists or bodies of work that have been overlooked, and shows dedicated to emerging contemporary artists. To this terminate, they've mounted shows on the piece of work of seminal feminist artists Barbara T. Smith and Judith Bernstein, choreographer Simone Forti, LA-based Naotaka Hiro, lovable weirdo Nathaniel Mellors, and art and advancement collective, the Los Angeles Poverty Department.

The Broad

Where: 221 South. Grand Ave, Downtown, Los Angeles
Hours:
11am–5pm, Tuesday & Wednesday; 11am–8pm, Thursday & Friday; 10am–8pm, Saturday; 10am–6pm, Sunday (costless access, some exhibitions and events have additional charges)

The Broad was founded to showcase the collection of philanthropists Eli and Edythe Broad, who have had an outsized influence on the LA art scene, donating money and artwork to several local institutions earlier starting their own museum in 2015. Behind the perforated façade of the Diller, Scofidio + Renfro-designed building lies their two,000-work drove, spanning the last fifty years.

"The Revolting Lumpen! A Classical Opera Reboot" at Human Resources (photograph by Matt Stromberg)

Human Resources

Where: 410 Cottage Home Street, Chinatown, Los Angeles
Hours:
12–6pm, Wed through Sunday (free admission unless otherwise specified)

Nonprofit, volunteer-run Chinatown fine art infinite Homo Resources was founded in 2010 with the goal of supporting " performative and underexposed modes of expression ." They organize an ambitious program of visual art exhibitions, musical and dance performances, film screenings, and talks, sometimes all at the same time. Recent notable events include a performance from experimental composer Yann Novak, "Ecology of the Edge," a group testify addressing climate catastrophe, and "The Revolting Lumpen!," a phantasmagorical opera reboot past collaborative duo Brook + Col that draws on Dada costumes and B-movie horror films.

Institute of Contemporary, Los Angeles (ICA LA)

Where: 1717 East 7th Street, Downtown, Los Angeles
Hours: 11am–7pm, Wednesday through Fri; 11am–6pm, Saturday and Sunday (complimentary access)

Since relocating from Santa Monica to Downtown LA in 2017, the ICA LA has carried out its mission as a non-collecting museum by offering strong educational programs and putting on oftentimes incisive, sometimes challenging shows by artists who are both established and early on in their careers.

Los Angeles Contemporary Annal (LACA)

Where: 709 N Hill Street , Suite 104-8 , Chinatown, Los Angeles
Hours: 12–6pm, Fri through Sabbatum (gratuitous admission)

Los Angeles Contemporary Archive was founded in 2014 with the goal of collecting and cataloguing publications, ephemera, and materials produced by Los Angeles artists that would otherwise exist left out of institutional collections. In keeping with their focus on the contemporary, their annal begins with the year of their founding. In addition to making their drove available to curators, artists, students, and writers, they besides host exhibitions, talks, and performances in their Chinatown space.

Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery (LAMAG)

Where: 4800 Hollywood Boulevard, East Hollywood, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–4pm, Thursday through Lord's day (costless admission)

Situated in Barnsdall Art Park and side by side to the Frank Lloyd Wright–designed Hollyhock House, LAMAG focuses on works past emerging and underrepresented artists based in Los Angeles. Likewise side by side door is the Barnsdall Art Center which provides depression-cost studio art classes for adults throughout the year.

LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes

Where: 501 North Principal Street, Downtown, Los Angeles
Hours: 12pm–5pm, Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday; 10am–5pm, Friday through Dominicus (free access)

Located in the oldest department of Los Angeles, well-nigh the city'south historic Olvera Street, LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes is a museum and cultural center dedicated to the local and regional histories of Mexicans, Mexican Americans, and Latinx people.

Installation view, Cherisse Greyness: Howdy Baby, Terroir (image courtesy Murmurs)

Murmurs

Where: 1411 Newton Street, Downtown, Los Angeles
Hours: 11am–6pm, Tuesday through Friday; open Saturday during exhibitions and special events (free admission to gallery, cost of events vary)

Murmurs is a curatorial project space in the Warehouse District that functions as a gallery, shop, café, and venue for all kinds of events focused on emerging artists, designers, and creatives. The space adapts to whatever purpose its programming calls for, including fashion shows, self-care workshops, social club nights, and performances.

Installation view of With Pleasure: Blueprint and Decoration in American Art 1972–1985, Oct 27, 2019–May 11, 2020
at MOCA Grand Avenue (image courtesy the Museum of Contemporary Fine art, photo past Jeff Mclane)

Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA)

Where: 205 S. M Ave. (MOCA M) / 152 Due north. Central Ave. (MOCA Geffen), Downtown, Los Angeles
Hours (both locations): 11am–6pm, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday; 11am–8pm, Th; 11am–5pm, Saturday and Sun (free admission)

Founded in 1979, the Museum of Contemporary Art is often referred to as the "Artists Museum" for the stiff part artists have played in its founding and development. Subsequently the ups and downs of the past decade — which saw near financial ruin to the departure of both its head curator and director over the past two years — the museum appointed Klaus Biesenbach to the directorship in 2018. He is off to an auspicious start, deciding to recognize the MOCA employees' contempo unionization efforts, and doing away with admission costs, making the museum attainable to all.

Gregor Schuster, "In the Last Resort" (image courtesy NAVEL)

Umbilicus

Where: 1611 Due south Promise Street, Downtown, Los Angeles
Hours: By appointment only, see programming calendar for open hours (cost of events vary)

Omphalos is an open-concluded projection space that fosters collective action and community-building, providing resources and infrastructure for fine art-making, publishing, research, and exchange. For artists and fine art workers looking for co-conspirators on a projection, the Navel's ASSEMBLIES programme might offer possibilities and connections.

Kristy Luck: If I can imagine this light, then I tin work all 24-hour interval, installation view at Odd Ark (photo by Ruben Diaz)

Odd Ark

Where: 7101 N. Figueroa St., Unit East, Eagle Stone, Los Angeles
Hours: 1–5pm, Friday; 12–5pm, Sat & Sunday (complimentary access)

The brainchild of creative person and musician Dani Tull, Odd Ark sits off a busy stretch of Figueroa Street next to a Brazilian jiu-jitsu school. The modest 1-room space has showcased the piece of work of predominantly LA-based contemporary artists including Brian Randolph, Alika Cooper, and Michael Decker. They have also hosted several Creative person Bandy Meets — part commercial endeavor, part community gathering — where dozens of artists and collectives offer affordable works of fine art, with 100% of sales going to the participants.

Installation view of solo exhibition by Franklin Williams, The Inimitable Professor Emeritus, 2019 (image courtesy the artist and Parker Gallery)

Parker Gallery

Where: 2441 Glendower Ave., Los Feliz, Los Angeles
Hours: 12–6pm, Th through Saturday (gratis admission)

Eschewing the pristine, white cube, Sam Parker chose a stately 1924 Tudor house in the Los Feliz hills to locate his gallery. Parker'southward program is counterbalanced between under-appreciated artists from the '60s and '70s, primarily from the Bay Area, like Franklin Williams and Maija Peeples-Bright, with a younger generation including Hannah Greely and Lukas Geronimas.

(image courtesy Cocky Assistance Graphics)

Self Help Graphics & Art

Where: 1300 Due east 1st Street, Boyle Heights, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–5pm, Tuesday through Friday; 10am–5pm, Monday by date only (gratuitous access)

Self Help Graphics & Fine art emerged from political unrest in the 1970s, becoming a mainstay of the Chicano Fine art Movement in Los Angeles and preparation successive generations of artist-activists. To this day, the Boyle Heights–based community arts center supports artists, students, and community members in traditional and experimental forms of printmaking.

Vielmetter Los Angeles

Where: 1700 S. Santa Atomic number 26 Ave., #101, Downtown, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–6pm, Tuesday through Sat (free admission)

Over the past 20 years, Suzanne Vielmetter has established herself as a discerning gallerist who has given artists including Edgar Arceneaux, Rodney McMillian, and Wangechi Mutu their first solo shows. Her plan includes both mid-career and emerging artists, from LA and beyond, such as Liz Glynn, Mickalene Thomas, and Mary Kelly. In 2019, later on well-nigh a decade in Culver City, she relocated to a 24,000-square-foot infinite in a one-time tire factory downtown. By the twelvemonth'south cease, iii other galleries had followed suit, reinforcing her reputation as a prescient trendsetter.

Installation view, Ahree Lee, Pattern : Code (photograph by Gilda Davidian, image courtesy Women'southward Middle for Artistic Work)

Women'south Center for Creative Work (WCCW)

Where: 2425 Glover Place, Elysian Valley, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–6pm, Monday through Friday (complimentary access to the centre, cost of events vary)

WCCW provides workspace, resource, and educational opportunities for all kinds of creative practices, particularly those led by or centering women, people of color, and nonbinary people. Artist residencies, skill-sharing workshops, and other supportive services assist ballast this space for creative experimentation and community building. WCCW will be relocating presently, then stay tuned for their new address.

South Los Angeles

Installation view, Stephen Towns: Rumination and a Reckoning (photograph past Joshua White, courtesy Art + Practice)

Art + Do

Where: 3401 West 43rd Place, Leimert Park, Los Angeles
Hours: 12pm–6pm, Mon through Sat (gratis access)

Leimert Park has a long history of storied institutions and Black-owned businesses that contribute to its reputation equally ane of the city's centers for African American arts and culture. Co-founded by creative person Marker Bradford, Art + Practice serves as both an exhibition space for contemporary art and a social services provider for foster youth.

California African American Museum (CAAM)

Where: 600 Land Drive, Exposition Park, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–5pm, Tuesday through Sabbatum; 11am–5pm, Sunday (complimentary admission)

With strong curation and a permanent collection of African and African diasporic art that's the largest of its kind on the w declension, CAAM places Black Americans at the forefront of local, regional and national histories as well every bit mod and contemporary art.

Primary printer Rodrigo Montoya (image courtesy Mixografia)

Mixografia

Where: 1419 Eastward Adams Boulevard, Central-Alameda, Los Angeles
Hours: 10am–5pm, Tuesday through Fri; 11am–6pm, Saturday; or by appointment (complimentary admission)

A multi-generational printmaking studio founded by the Remba family in 1984, Mixografia traces its history back to Mexico Urban center, where its precursor, the Taller de Gráfica Mexicana, innovated a technique to produce iii-dimensional, high-relief prints in collaboration with creative person Rufino Tamayo. With a half-century of expertise, Mixografia became highly sought-after by American artists experimenting with printmaking, including the likes of Helen Frankenthaler and Ed Ruscha.

Pasadena

Installation view, Calafia: Manifesting the Terresterial Paradise (paradigm courtesy Armory Center for the Arts, photo by Ian Byers-Gamber)

Armory Center for the Arts

Where: 145 N. Raymond Ave., Pasadena, California
Hours: 12–5pm, Wednesday through Monday (Costless admission)

The mission of Pasadena's Arsenal Heart for the Arts is balanced between mounting exhibitions of contemporary art and a commitment to customs arts education through a robust program of classes and workshops. Previous shows include the latest edition of the Mexicali Biennial, a show exploring queer Latinx platform Club SCUM, and a survey of the late painter and filmmaker Sara Kathryn Arledge.

Norton Simon Museum

Where: 411 W. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena, California
Hours: 12–5pm, Sunday & Mon, Wednesday & Thursday; 11am–8pm, Friday & Saturday ($15 – general access; $12 – seniors 62+; free children eighteen and under, students with ID, agile armed services with ID; costless admission first Friday of every calendar month, 5–8pm)

With its roots going back nearly a century, the Norton Simon Museum is a gem of a museum with a drove of 12,000 objects ranging from ancient Indian sculpture, paintings by Rembrandt and Raphael, to masterworks of Impressionism and High german Expressionism. The galleries are complemented by a bucolic sculpture garden inspired past Monet's gardens at Giverny, featuring traditional Asian sculpture and modern works by Henry Moore, Robert Morris, and Barbara Hepworth.

San Gabriel Valley

Installation view, I Wish to Communicate with You lot: Corita Kent & Matt Keegan (photo courtesy POTTS)

The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens

Where: 1151 Oxford Rd, San Marino, California
Hours: 10am–5pm, open every day except Tuesday (tickets $13–29); you can reserve a gratis ticket on the outset Th of the calendar month

Nestled in the gorgeous gardens of the Huntington are various galleries with robust programming. Exhibitions range from gimmicky art shows to historical, archival projects. You'll likely also stumble into some installations and sculptures in the gardens.

POTTS

Where: 2130 Valley Boulevard, Alhambra, California
Hours: 1pm–6pm, Sat and Lord's day, or by engagement (gratuitous access)

The Potts family unit ran a plumbing supply store for 76 years earlier brothers Tom, Joe, and Rick Potts — artists who co-founded the experimental racket commonage Los Angeles Free Music Society in 1973 — closed the business in 2015 and rented out their family-owned Alhambra storefront to a group of friends to run an alternative art space featuring exhibitions, readings, screenings, and talks.

Vincent Price Fine art Museum

Where: 1301 Avenida Cesar Chavez, Monterey Park, California (East Los Angeles College)
Hours: 12pm–4pm, Tuesday through Saturday, except 12pm–7pm, Thursday (costless admission)

Bolstered by resources from LACMA and its own individual collection of pre-Colombian and contemporary artworks, the Vincent Toll Art Museum provides culturally responsive exhibitions and programming for the communities of East Los Angeles and the San Gabriel Valley.

Van Nuys

Performance past artist Cola Boyy (photo by Kevin Novales, courtesy Naturál)

Naturál

Where: 15168 Raymer Street, Van Nuys, California
Hours: Events and hours appear on Instagram

Naturál is a gallery and performance space that connects artists throughout the San Fernando Valley (SFV), providing an outlet for contemporary art and music in a region more known for its far-flung bedroom communities than its active arts scenes. In addition to art exhibitions and alive performances, the space has organized and hosted the SFV Fine art Bookfair, with plans to hold artist residencies and a series of film screenings.

Inglewood

Installation view, Barrio Logos: Displacement and Vanishing Iconography (paradigm courtesy of Residency)

Residency Art Gallery

Where: 310 East Queen Street, Inglewood, California
Hours: 12pm–6pm, Friday and Sabbatum, or by appointment (free admission)

Communities of artists accept lived and worked in Inglewood long before its current evolution and real manor boom. Founded by Inglewood native Rick Garzon, Residency shows work by artists from and in conversation with communities of color.

Long Beach

The Museum of Latin American Art (MOLAA), Long Beach, California (photograph courtesy the museum)

Museum of Latin American Fine art (MOLAA)

Where: 628 Alamitos Ave, Long Embankment, California
Hours: 11am–5pm, Midweek & Friday through Sunday; 11am–9pm, Thursday ($10 – full general admission; $7 – seniors 65+, students with ID; costless for children under 12; free admission every Sunday and fourth Thursday of every month, v–9pm)

Founded in 1996, the Museum of Latin American Art bills itself as the simply US museum dedicated to modernistic and contemporary Latin American and Latino Art. Until recently, they were focused exclusively on Latin American artists from outside the Us, a surprising omission given that the Latinos make up over 50% of the population of Los Angeles County. In 2018, they held their offset exhibition of a Latina artist with a solo show of recent piece of work by Judithe Hernández.

bradenanders37.blogspot.com

Source: https://hyperallergic.com/537435/a-map-and-guide-to-art-spaces-across-los-angeles/

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