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This list of museums in Los Angeles is a list of museums located within the City of Los Angeles, defined for this context as institutions (including nonprofit organizations, government entities, and private businesses) that collect and care for objects of cultural, artistic, scientific, or historical interest and make their collections or related exhibits available for public viewing.
The exhibition traveled to the National Building Museum [20] and to the Art Institute of Chicago. [21] Other GRI exhibitions have included "Overdrive: L.A. Constructs the Future, 1940-1990", co-organized with the museum in 2013, [22] "World War I: War of Images, Images of War" in 2015, [23] and "Cave Temples of Dunhuang: Buddhist Art on China's ...
Hosted by writer and historian Nathan Masters, [1] each episode of Lost LA brings the primary sources of Los Angeles history to the screen in surprising new ways and connects them to the Los Angeles of today. Much of the past is lost to history, but through the region's archives, we can rediscover a forgotten Los Angeles.
MOCA's permanent collection exhibitions show how, when the museum was founded in the late 1970s, it represented something wholly new: the beginning of L.A. art's full-scale institutionalization.
Chicago History Museum is the museum of the Chicago Historical Society (CHS). The CHS was founded in 1856 to study and interpret Chicago's history. The museum has been located in Lincoln Park since the 1930s at 1601 North Clark Street at the intersection of North Avenue in the Old Town Triangle neighborhood, where the museum has been expanded several times.
The exhibition includes more than "100 works from her Adam & Eve, Juarez, Mexico, and Colonization series." [18] "She is one of the first Chicana artists to have a solo exhibition outside the Western United States in 1983 in New York’s City Cayman Gallery. She subsequently went on to have a significant international career.
A gun battle between a man and LAPD officers in North Hollywood left two people dead, including the gunman, authorities said.
The Los Angeles Center for Photographic Studies (LACPS) was an artist-run nonprofit arts organization that presented photography exhibitions, lectures, and workshops in and around Los Angeles, California between 1974 and 2001.