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Los Angeles County Museum of Art

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) is an art museum located on Wilshire Boulevard and Miracle Mile near Los Angeles, California. LACMA is located on Museum Row, near the La Brea Tar Pits (George C. Page Museum). LACMA was established in 1961 after the dissolution of its predecessor, the Los Angeles Museum of History, Science, and Art. The museum was founded four years later and moved to its current site on Wilshire Boulevard, designed by William Pereira. The collection and collections of the museum grew during the 1980s and added various buildings through this decade and the following decade. In 2020, four school buildings were destroyed to rebuild the building in the style of Peter Zumthor. His plan drew fierce opposition from the community. It was criticized by architectural critics and museum curators who criticized the cramped gallery space, inadequate design, and high cost. LACMA is the most extensive art collection in the Western United States. It attracts more than a million people every year. It contains over 150,000 pieces of art history from the beginning to the present day. Along with art and film, the museum hosts music and film. EZ Los Angeles Junk Removal

William Pereira House

The museum, built in an architectural style reminiscent of the Lincoln Center and the Los Angeles Music Center, has three buildings, including the Ahmanson Building and the Bing Center, as well as the Lytton Gallery (organized in the Frances and Armand Hammer Building in 1968). The company chose LA architect William Pereira over the directors, who had the approval of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe to design the museum. According to a 1965 Los Angeles Times report, each home cost $11.5 million. Construction began in 1963 and was done by the Del E. Webb Company. Del E. Webb Corporation is based in the United States. Construction was completed in early 1965. The Los Angeles Music Center and LACMA are largely public projects competing for attention and funding in Los Angeles. When the museum first opened, the structures were covered with sparkling pools. However, they were filled to the brim when tar from the nearby La Brea mine began seeping into them.

Exhibitions

In 1971, Maurice Tuchman, the curator of the exhibition, which Tuchman conceived as the “Art and Technology” exhibition, opened at LACMA during the 1970 World’s Fair in Osaka, Japan. The museum hosted the first exhibition of contemporary black artists of the year. He played little Charles Wilbert White, Timothy Washington, and the famous David Hammons. The museum’s most popular exhibits include the “Treasures of Tutankhamun,” which attracted 1.2 million visitors in four months from 1978. His 2005 show “Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs” received 937,613 viewers in its 137 days. An exhibition featuring Vincent van Gogh’s paintings from the artist’s famous Amsterdam museum was the third most popular, while a 1984 exhibition of French Impressionist works was the fourth most popular. The 1994 exhibition “Picasso and the Weeping Women: The Years of Marie-Thérèse Walter and Dora Maar” was a huge crowd and a critical survey attracting more than 153,000 people. Since the appointment of the current director Michael Govan, approximately 80% of the 100 exhibits have been presented in temporary exhibitions about modern and contemporary art. The permanent exhibition presents works from ancient and pre-Columbian Assyrian, Egyptian, and contemporary art. Supporters and critics have welcomed the show’s contemporary focus on entertainment and popular culture. The exhibition dedicated to the work of directors Tim Burton and Stanley Kubrick has attracted enthusiastic and positive reviews.

Address: 5905 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA

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