Angelenos, ready to get your steps in? After sharing our New York summer art guide last week, we’ve prepared another practical guide for viewing summer art exhibitions, this time in Los Angeles. We’ve compiled daily itineraries to help you navigate four art destinations around town—including the Broad, Getty Villa, and LACMA—complete with stops for refreshment before and after, because you will need your strength.
The Broad Museum
Yayoi Kusama’s
Yayoi Kusama first produced her Infinity Mirror Rooms in the 1960s, inviting viewers to step into kaleidoscopic illusions of infinite space. In recent years, variations of the mirrored rooms have been exhibited internationally, gaining new meaning—and Instagram cachet—for contemporary audiences keen on immersive spaces. The room currently installed at the Broad museum in downtown Los Angeles (221 South Grand Avenue), Infinity Mirror Room—The Souls of Millions of Light Years Away, features dazzling lights that place the visitor in a twinkling cosmos. But beware, this is a highly popular exhibition; the maximum time to enjoy it is 45 seconds.
Kusama’s installation is the latest in a long history of Japanese cultural contributions to Los Angeles. A 15-minute stroll southeast from the Broad will lead you to Little Tokyo, a historic district that has been the heart of the city’s Japanese-American community since the 1880s. Today, the neighborhood is a bustling outdoor mall, featuring niche boutiques and fun Japanese-style photo-booths. A local favorite, the restaurant Daikokuya Ramen (327 1st Street) is the ideal spot to recharge from a day of museum-going and window-shopping. Sit at the counter and dine on their signature dish, the Daikoku pork ramen.
If seeing Kusama’s has triggered a desire for panoramic views, head over to 71Above (633 W. 5th Street), a bar and restaurant located—you guessed it—71 floors above the heart of downtown. Soaring almost 1,000 feet, 71Above is the highest restaurant west of the Mississippi. Cocktails are a must at the restaurant’s bistro-style SkyLounge. We suggest a floral concoction called the Flower District, made of gin, apple brandy, and chamomile.
Getty Villa Museum
Outdoor Gardens
Located in the scenic foothills of the Pacific Palisades neighborhood, the Getty Villa (17985 E. Pacific Coast Highway) is often overlooked in favor of its sister campus, the Getty Center. Both buildings are part of the J. Paul Getty Museum, with the Getty Villa inspired by ancient Greece, Rome, and Etruria. The villa’s design was informed by several ancient sites, most notably the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum, renowned for its library of papyrus scrolls until it was destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, like the neighboring town of Pompeii. Don’t miss Statue of a Victorious Youth (ca. 300–100 B.C.E.), a bronze sculpture of a young male athlete lauded for its realism, or the villa’s extensive jewelry and coin collections.
You can follow in the Greek tradition of contemplating nature and take a hike in nearby Topanga State Park. Topanga Lookout is a quick, accessible hike for various ability levels with great views. After the hike, take a short drive up the Pacific Coast Highway to Malibu, which offers both quiet beaches and some of the best seafood around. We recommend grabbing tacos at Malibu Farm (23000 E. Pacific Coast Highway), located right on the pier, where the food is farm-to-table and you can’t beat the coastal setting.
Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)
Public Installations
At LACMA (5905 Wilshire Boulevard), two public sculptures bring new perspectives to elemental stone and sun: Michael Heizer’s famous Levitated Mass and Chris Burden’s Urban Light. Heizer conceived of in 1969 when he saw a similar rock formation in the Sierra Nevada mountains. He spent the next 40 years searching for an identical rock, finally settling on a 340-ton megalithic boulder that is now suspended above a pathway on LACMA grounds. Burden’s Urban Light is a sculpture made of 202 historic street lamps originally installed around the streets of Southern California in the 1920s and ‘30s. Both sculptures are outdoors and freely accessible.
If Urban Light inspires you to learn more about Los Angeles history, head north to the Original Farmer’s Market on the corner of 3rd and Fairfax. Founded in 1934, the covered market, still as charming as when it opened, is a great place to grab a quick bite or souvenir. Nosh a slice of pie at Du-Par’s diner like a real Angeleno, then head up to La Brea, where the store American Rag Cie offers some of the best hand-selected vintage fashion. You can also find antique eyeglasses at the cult-favorite boutique Optical Sphere. For dinner, you can’t do better than Son of a Gun (8370 W. 3rd Street), a hip seafood joint serving oysters, lobster, and their classic shrimp toast.
Urban Art Walks
While Los Angeles isn’t exactly known as a walking city, there are several arts walks that cater to pedestrians. The city’s bustling Downtown Arts District is easily navigable by foot. Hauser & Wirth (901 E. 3rd Street) is a good starting point for exploring the area. The gallery’s large campus also includes a restaurant, Manuela, where you can grab a drink or meal as you take in artworks by Paul McCarthy, Mark Bradford, and Raymond Pettibon. While in downtown, don’t miss a visit to the Good Liver, a minimalist store stocking carefully selected international wares.
On the last Sunday of each month, the Leimert Park neighborhood in South L.A. hosts a monthly public celebration of art, music, cinema, and history. The historic African-American center of arts and culture offers visitors a variety of exhibitions, live music, fashion, food, drumming, spoken word, and local shopping. The Culver City Arts District is home to a range of contemporary galleries including Blum & Poe and Anat Egbi, where the exhibition “Variations on a Theme” examines the artistic practices of a group of intergenerational artists such as Gloria Klein, Jesse Krimes, Suchitra Mattai. Artists won’t want to miss Hiromi Paper, a draftsman’s dream store selling a variety of Japanese-made paper.
Check back for Artnet Summer Itineraries for Chicago and Washington, D.C. coming this month, and visit the New York itinerary here.
Source: Exhibition - news.artnet.com