Chris Burden’s Metropolis II is an intense kinetic sculpture, modeled…
Perhaps the most dominant art form of the last 100 years, film has an important…
Tuesday Matinees
Enjoy concerts featuring leading international and local ensembles in programs o…
Art & Music,Jazz at LACMA,Latin Sounds
LACMA offers in-person art classes for kids, teens, and adults, offering the cha…
Random International’s Rain Room (2012) is an immersive environment of…
Rain Room
Artist Robert Irwin’s work in the last five decades has investigated perception…
Barbara Kruger’s Untitled (Shafted) features her distinctive use of advertising…
Band (2006) may qualify as Richard Serra’s magnum opus, representing the fullest…
LACMA’s Modern Art collection features primarily European and American art from…
LACMA’s Acquisitions Group and Art Council members share a deep affinity for the…
Art Councils,Acquisition Groups,Art of the Middle East: CONTEMPORARY,Asian Art Council,Costume Council,Decorative Arts and Design Council,LENS: Photography Council,Modern and Contemporary Art Council,Prints and Drawings Council
Welcome to the employment page of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. To see a…
Jobs,Careers,Internships,Volunteer
Join museum educators, artists, curators, and experts for artist talks, virtual…
Create+Collaborate
In Golden Hour, over 70 artists and three photography collectives offer an aesth…
Established in 1967, the Conservation Center at LACMA supports the museum’s comm…
Classical Around Town: Charles White Elementary School
jascencio
Mon, 04/14/2025 – 13:01
These hour-long concerts feature a string quartet of leading BIPOC musicians performing family-friendly music, with a Q&A to follow each concert. These fun, informal, and intimate presentations are geared toward families and those who enjoy and want to learn more about classical music in an informal setting. Join us at venues across Los Angeles County this summer!
Short Title
Classical Around Town: Charles White Elementary School
All education and outreach programs at LACMA are underwritten by the LACMA Education Fund and are supported in part by the Judy and Bernard Briskin Family Foundation, The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Foundation, the William Randolph Hearst Endowment Fund for Arts Education, Alfred E. Mann Charities, The Ralph M. Parsons Foundation, Gloria Ricci Lothrop, the Flora L. Thornton Foundation, U.S. Bank, and The Yabuki Family Foundation.
These hour-long concerts feature a string quartet of leading BIPOC musicians performing family-friendly music, with a Q&A to follow each concert. These fun, informal, and intimate presentations are geared toward families and those who enjoy and want to learn more about classical music in an informal setting. Join us at venues across Los Angeles County this summer!
All education and outreach programs at LACMA are underwritten by the LACMA Education Fund and are supported in part by the Judy and Bernard Briskin Family Foundation, The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Foundation, the William Randolph Hearst Endowment Fund for Arts Education, Alfred E. Mann Charities, The Ralph M. Parsons Foundation, Gloria Ricci Lothrop, the Flora L. Thornton Foundation, U.S. Bank, and The Yabuki Family Foundation.
As you hungrily scour what’s on offer, a growing calendar of events can easily tip into overwhelm. So, we’ve gathered a selection of hidden gems for you to uncover within and beyond the London Frieze festivities this year.
By Sophie Heatley | 20 Sept 2024
Once again, galleries, collectors, artists, art connoisseurs and their dogs are all deep in preparation for the hotly anticipated Frieze fair to recommence. Five days of ooh, aah, and ogling at the crème de la crème of London’s art scene, this year promising a yet more artist-led programme in support of new voices and the fair’s commitment to building global connections across its ever-expanding network. Keep reading to build your art agenda.
Untitled 24 (Collage, Oil on Belgian Linen, 2024, 160 x120 cm). Enquire for details.
Nelson Makamo: IN CONVERSATION
Curated and produced by Rise Art’s CEO, Scott Philips, and previous Head of Curation, Phin Jennings, “Nelson Makamo: In Conversation” is a solo exhibition that invites audiences to explore the powerful, diverse responses evoked by Makamo’s work. Through themes ranging from the Black experience to the joy and innocence of childhood, his paintings and drawings stir something deeply personal and universally resonant. Each piece speaks for itself, drawing viewers into an intimate and unspoken dialogue with the artist—one that, Jennings believes, is both spontaneous and impossible to resist.
8th October – 12th October 2024, 67 Great Titchfield Street, London, W1W 7PT
The latest show by Antonio Tarsis, a Brazilian immigrant artist based in London, reflects both the modest and profound in his work. The old English expression, typically signifying an exaggerated reaction to minor issues, takes on new meaning as Tarsis reclaims it to address deeper, turbulent histories of socio-historical, racial, and xenophobic violence. His work, created from humble materials and tools, critiques the hegemonic dynamics of colonialism and industrial labour—juxtaposing the violent processes of empire with the meticulous care of manual craftsmanship. We’re looking forward to seeing how Tarsis offers a poetic denunciation of exploitation and survival in the face of adversity.
20th September – 19th October 2024, Carlos∕Ishikawa Gallery, Unit 4, 88 Mile End Road, London E1 4UN
Lygia Clark, Diálogo de Óculos (Glasses Dialogue), 1966, Photo: Eduardo Clark. Courtesy Associação Cultural O Mundo de Lygia Clark
“The I and the You” marks the first major UK public gallery exhibition of the influential Brazilian artist Lygia Clark (1920–1988). Focusing on her artistic evolution from the mid-1950s to the early 1970s—a time of significant political and artistic upheaval in Brazil—the exhibition explores Clark’s central role in the Neo-concrete movement. Alongside her contemporaries, she sought to break free from the constraints of geometric abstraction, emphasising experimentation, expression, and audience participation. Featuring paintings, works on paper, her iconic ‘Bichos,’ and participatory pieces, the exhibition highlights Clark’s journey toward blurring the boundaries between art and viewer, exploring art’s philosophical and therapeutic potential.
Excitingly, the show is presented in dialogue with “Sonia Boyce: An Awkward Relation” (Galleries 8 & 9): inspired by Clark’s participatory and experiential practice, which Boyce encountered in the 1990s, this exhibition showcases pivotal and rarely seen works exploring themes of interaction, participation, and improvisation. Featuring Boyce’s explorations of hair as a cultural signifier and her multimedia installation We move in her way (2017), the exhibition delves into the complex relationship between artists, artworks, and audiences, inviting visitors to engage with the art in unscripted, tactile ways. By pairing works from both Boyce and Clark, An Awkward Relation examines their shared interests, while acknowledging the distinct socio-political and artistic contexts that shape their practices.
2nd October – 12th January 2025, Whitechapel Gallery, 77-82 Whitechapel High St, London, E1 7QX
Veiled/Unveiled byMarcia Harvey Isaksson (photo-triptych on aluminium, 2021, each 50 × 70 cm). Photographer Ylva Sundgren
Mimosa House presents “transfeminisms: Care and Kinship”, the fourth chapter of a major touring exhibition addressing the urgent issues faced by women, queer, and trans people globally. Featuring works by Sonia Boyce, Marcia Harvey Isaksson, Lubaina Himid, Gulnur Mukazhanova, SaVĀge K’lub, and Buhlebezwe Siwani, this chapter celebrates community, collective ritual, and ancestral connections.
Exploring resilience, spirituality, and healing through diverse media—including weaving, film, sound, and collective making—”Care and Kinship” highlights strategies of resistance and solidarity. “transfeminisms” traces feminist art’s legacy while embracing inclusive, decolonial, and transcultural perspectives, proposing a transformative vision for a more equitable future.
12th September – 26th October 2024, Mimosa House, 47 Theobalds Rd, London, WC1X 8SP
Not really a hidden gem but a gem that you absolutely want to get your hands on. Sadly, if you didn’t hear about this first, you probably don’t have a ticket. Tickets to Yayoi Kusama’s fourteenth solo exhibition with the gallery sold out almost instantly. Any cancelled spots are placed on resale though, so you may still be in with a chance! Offering a rare opportunity to experience a new Infinity Mirror Room, the exhibition introduces works from the artist’s latest series of paintings and sculptures featuring her iconic visual language installed across Gallery I and Victoria Miro’s waterside garden.
25th September – 2nd November 2024, Victoria Miro London, 16 Wharf Road, London N1 7RW