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Showing posts with label MDLA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MDLA. Show all posts

07 June 2011

LACMA After Dark – No Parents Allowed

Untitled (The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy and Other Stories) © 2011 Tim Burton
As part of its Arts For NexGen, a free youth membership program, LACMA presents After Dark.  Teenagers are invited to come experience the museum for a night of art, food and music sans the parentals. 

Museum security and staff will chaperone the event as teens explore LACMA's latest exhibitions, Tim Burton at the new Resnick Pavillion.  The Tim Burton exhibition features over 700 works by Burton including drawings, storyboards, puppets and costumes, plus hundreds of never before exhibited works. 

Teens can dance to a live DJ under the stars in the company of topiaries inspired by Burton's Edward Scissorhands.  Teens are encouraged to dress "burtonesque," wearing something that reminds them of their favorite Burton movie.

Admission is free, but teens should have some cash for the taco bar featuring $2 meat or veggie tacos. 

This event is for middle and high school teens only; no college teens, no parents.  Teens can be dropped off and picked up at the Urban Light installation on Wilshire Blvd (pic below).  The event is from 8pm - 10pm, but early arrival is welcomed as the regular museum hours are 11am - 8pm on Saturday.

After Dark
Saturday 11 June, 8pm - 10pm. Admission: FREE.
Ages 13-18 only with photo ID (school ID, CA ID or passport)
More info: educate@lacma.orghttp://www.lacma.org/event/after-dark
 
Urban Light. Click to enlarge.
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
5905 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles 90036 [MAP]
(323) 857-6000 • publicinfo@lacma.org
http://lacma.org/








Go Metro!

Lines 20, 212, 217, 312, 720




 content: R. Nelson • post: R. Nelson

05 June 2011

Free Day at CAFAM [Summer 2011]


The Craft and Folk Art Museum (CAFAM) champions cultural understanding by presenting exhibitions and programs that bridge local and global cultures and inspire a sense of inquiry and creativity within all people.  Located on Los Angeles' historic Miracle Mile, it is the city's only institution exclusively dedicated to celebrating craft and folk art.  CAFAM works to recognize emerging artists and make art accessible to all audiences, serving as a forum in which art can be presented and described by the artists and communities who create it.  All exhibitions and public programs are developed in close collaboration with community cultural groups to ensure authentic expression. 

CAFAM's view of FOLK ART: 
"We view the term 'folk art' in a contemporary and dynamic light that is not limited to one frame. We consider all art made in a cultural and social context as part of our domain. Our stance encompasses a wide breadth of art and ideas ranging from Polynesian body tattoos that mark a tribe, whether traditional or urban, to the modern interpretation of ancient cave paintings from India that offer political commentary about a post-9/11 world, to a photojournalist’s observations of the complexity of contemporary Iranian society.

"Folk art offers cultural insights not readily seen in other art forms since it is created with an awareness of, and a connection to tradition and community.  The process of creating folk art is a varied and dynamic one that builds on traditional methods or ideas, but also includes individual creativity and contemporary influences. This artistic merger of social order and individual creativity offers incredible insight into global and local values and beliefs.  Perhaps the most fascinating aspect of folk art is how sublimely it reveals human similarities amongst diverse cultures." 

At CAFAM for July's Free Day

The Wedding Party [Photo: M Lee Fatherlee]
Love And Other Audacities
San Francisco-based artist Ann Weber's elegant, sculptural works grace CAFAM's third floor gallery in Love and Other Audacities.  These massive scultural works echo the silhouettes of pods, gourds and other biomorphic forms.  Despite the sculptures' oversized, undulating contours, what will surprise most people is the humble material she uses—cardboard.

Armed with a stapler, a box cutter and shellac, Weber constructs towering artworks out of cardboard that she often fishes out of dumpsters.  When asked about the physical stature of her work, Weber says, "I'm interested in how big you can make something before it collapses."

Weber to a cue from architecture icon Frank Gehry's cardboard furniture and decided to experiment with the boxes she had in her living room after recently moving.  Merging her ceramics background with an ongoing examination of architectural structures enabled Weber to build beautiful, gravity-defying works that often eschew symmetry.  Love And Other Audacities runs through 11 September 2011.

All Creatures Great And Small
What appears to be gorgeous wallpaper is, in reality, 3,500 brightly colored insects pinned directly to the wall in kaleidoscopic patterns.
"We don't have very many 'Wow!' moments anymore in this age of internet. We've become a bit jaded," says Wisconsin-based installation artist and educator Jennifer Angus, "I am trying to capture in my work the magic we experience as children.  I would like people to discover it once again and for a moment just stand there and say 'Wow!"

Craft And Folk Art Museum
Inspired by the tribal dress of the Karen tribe in Thailand’s Golden Triangle—a region bordered by China, Laos and Myanmar—Angus combined her passion for pattern and textiles with a newfound fascination for the often overlooked (even maligned) insect. Using no endangered species, Angus creates her distinctive patterns without utilizing dyes or destroying natural resources. 

Naturally electric blue, emerald green, pink, purple and red insects coalesce on the walls to create an immersive Victorian-era room that recalls an age of excitement, exploration and scientific discovery. Complementary small-scale Insecta Fantasia, Newark Museum, Newark, NJ, 2008. Courtesy of the Newark Museumdollhouses covered in beeswax are home to anthropomorphized insects that provoke viewers to revisit their own relationship with the eco-system.
 
For Angus, pattern is associated more with meaning than decoration. Her works call to mind themes of death, cultural association and ideas about collection. “ Although insects are common all over the world, insect collectors share the same passion, rigor and attention to display as many art collectors,” says director Suzanne Isken, “You will find that Angus’ work reflects the world’s infinite cache of unexpected beauty and diversity, a view that we at the Craft and Folk Art Museum hope to share with Los Angeles.  All Creatures Great And Small runs through 11 September 2011.



Craft And Folk Art Museum
5814 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles 90036 [MAP]
(323) 937-4230 • http://cafam.org/ 






Admission Hours
General $7 Tuesday–Friday 11am – 5pm
Seniors & students $5 Saturday & Sunday Noon – 6pm
Children under 10 FREE Monday CLOSED
Members FREE
First Wednesday of month FREE      

01 June 2011

Save Elysian Park! Annual Banquet

Grace E. Simons Lodge in Elysian Park.
The Citizens Committee to Save Elysian Park (CCSEP) is hosting its 48th Annual Banquet at 5pm on Sunday 5 June on the lawn at Grace E. Simons Lodge.  There will be a dinner, raffle and live music from eco-rock group I See Hawks in L.A.  The menu includes Mediterranean style finger foods, main course, and desserts.  

Proceeds from the event will protect and beautify the park and reservoir.
 
Elysian Park, the oldest park in Los Angeles, is 112 this year. It remains a park in perpetual peril. Bargain hunting, land-grabbers gaze over the green, rolling open space north of Civic Center and dream of putting this “free” land to some “useful” purpose.  

Before the Citizens Committee to Save Elysian Park was formed, in 1965, the Pasadena Freeway had been permitted to split the park, and big-league baseball was lured to Los Angeles by an officially consolidated, unencumbered site, including parts of Chavez Ravine and Elysian Park. When downtown business presented a plan to take the Avenue of the Palms for the Los Angeles Convention Center, the community organized the Citizens Committee with Grace E. Simons as its first president and successfully stopped that development. This Citizens Committee has done its homework and survived over thirty years of voluntary community action. Elysian Park is still here and growing. 
~ Judith Jameson of CCSEP

To reserve a seat, email designdan@yahoo.com.

CCSEP 48th Annual Banquet
Sunday 5 June, 6:30pm • Admission: $35 adults/$15 children
Dinner 6:30pm, Raffle 7:30pm 

Grace E. Simons Lodge
1025 Elysian Park Drive, Los Angeles 90012 [MAP]

Citizens Committee to Save Elysian Park
1403 Macbeth Street, Echo Park 90026 
(213) 481-0815


– content: Office of Ed P. Reyes & echopark.net.  post: R. Nelson.