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Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA Begins Sept. 14th Don’t Be Left Out!

Inaugural Weekend Includes a Launch Party at L.A.’s Grand Park on September 14, and Free Admission to More than 50 Museums on September 17 Sponsored by Bank of America

More than $16 Million in Grants from the Getty Foundation Support the Largest Initiative Ever to Focus on Latin American and Latino Art, Bringing New Art to Diverse Audiences and Creating a Legacy of Groundbreaking Scholarship

Los Angeles, CA – After five years of planning supported by more than $16 million in grants from the Getty Foundation, Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA will begin on Thursday, September 14, 2017 at more than 70 cultural institutions throughout Southern California. The unprecedented collaboration will offer hundreds of exhibitions, programs and events about Latin American and Latino art over four months, at institutions ranging from small community-based cultural organizations to the region’s largest museums. Participating organizations, many working with partners in Latin America, are spread from San Diego to Santa Barbara and from Los Angeles to Palm Springs.

Jim Cuno, President and CEO of the J. Paul Getty Trust, said, “Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA reflects both the rich past and the vital present of Latin American and Latino art. Its exhibitions, programs and events speak to our lives today just as much as they speak for our cultural memories—which is why this inaugural weekend is a great civic festival, in addition to being an artistic feast. After years of working together to realize this initiative, the Getty and its partner institutions are thrilled at last to welcome the world to Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA.”

Events that will mark the opening of Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA include:

  1. A free launch party for the public at downtown L.A.’s Grand Park on September 14, from noon until 10 pm. Performances organized by The Music Center’s Grand Park team will include the Afro-Cuban and Brazilian music and dance troupe OriDJ Cee Brown and Aponte with their fusion of salsa, hip-hop, reggaeton, soul and jazz; and Quantic Live, embodying L.A.’s role as the crossroads of Latino, electronic and Global Dance music. A pop-up activity and social space and the PST: LA/LA Mobile will offer the public an opportunity to learn more about the vast array of exhibitions and programs from museums, performing arts organizations, and other participating organizations across Southern California, and local food trucks and a themed bar will keep the party going.

  2. Free admission on Sunday, September 17 at more than 50 participating museums, with the initiative’s presenting sponsor, Bank of America, inviting everyone to be its guest

  3. And a celebratory concert at the Hollywood Bowl on Sunday, September 17, at 6:00 pm funded by the Getty Foundation. Performers will include the leader of Mexico City’s alt-rock scene, Café Tacvba; Chilean songstress Mon Laferte; and L.A.’s own Grammy®-award-winning La Santa Cecilia.

According to Deborah Marrow, director of the Getty Foundation, “The Getty Foundation is proud to have funded the majority of the exhibitions, publications, and related public programs, as well as the performance art festival and K-12 education programs that are all part of Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA. We have great admiration for the work of our grantees and partners all across Southern California and the international teams they have worked with. Thanks to their work over the past several years, we will all be able to learn so much more about Latino and Latin American art.”

Visual Art Exhibitions Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA emphasizes modern and contemporary visual art, with select exhibitions about the ancient and pre-modern worlds providing context. Tightly focused single-artist exhibitions, such as the Vincent Price Art Museum’s presentation of Los Angeles-based photographer Laura Aguilar and the University Art Galleries at UC Irvine’s Aztlán to Magulandia: The Journey of Chicano Artist Gilbert “Magu” Luján, mingle with broad thematic and historical surveys. Examples of the latter include the Laguna Art Museum’s exhibition about the amalgam of Mexican and U.S. culture in California during the 19th and early 20th centuries; a show at the Palm Springs Art Museum on South American kinetic art of the 1960s; and the Hammer Museum’s wide-ranging Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960-1985.

Other surveys include Golden Kingdoms: Luxury and Legacy in the Ancient Americas at the J. Paul Getty Museum; Memories of Underdevelopment, a collaboration between the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, Museo Jumex in Mexico City and the Museo de Arte de Lima; Axé Bahia: The Power of Art in an Afro-Brazilian Metropolis at the Fowler Museum at UCLA; and Found in Translation: Design in California and Mexico, 1915-1985 at LACMA (Los Angeles County Museum of Art). A complete list of visual art exhibitions, with descriptions and images, is available at www.pacificstandardtime.org.

Getty grants for Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA exhibitions have helped to fund substantial new research, in some cases involving multiple trips by scholars to as many as a dozen countries. As a result, visitors will see a multitude of artworks that are on public view for the first time, or that have benefited from significant conservation work or revelatory scientific analysis. The research is also yielding more than sixty exhibition catalogues, with newly unearthed documentation and comprehensive illustrations.

More than a dozen Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA exhibitions will travel throughout the United States and Latin America, further extending the initiative’s reach. In New York, the Getty Museum’s Golden Kingdoms: Luxury and Legacy in the Ancient Americas will be on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Hammer’s Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1965-1980 will travel to the Brooklyn Museum, in 2018. Other exhibitions will be shown in Mexico City; Lima, Peru; Puebla, Mexico; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Miami, FL; Houston, TX; Albuquerque, NM; Chicago, IL; and Phoenix, AZ.

Performing Arts and Public Programs Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA will also go outside the walls of museums. Partner institutions including the LA PhilThe Music Center and the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism are presenting concerts, performances and events at a variety of indoor and outdoor spaces throughout Los Angeles and the region, including Grand Park, the Hollywood Bowl, The Music Center’s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion and Walt Disney Concert Hall. Grants from the Getty Foundation have also made these performances possible.

In October, the LA Phil will produce a ten-day festival titled CDMX: Music from Mexico City that will open a window onto Mexico City’s vibrant music scene. Concerts will include three orchestral programs led by Gustavo Dudamel and world premiere commissions by established and up-and-coming composers such as Felipe Waller and Diana SyrseThe Music Center will present Cuba: Antes, Ahora / Cuba: Then, Now, a four-day exploration of traditional and contemporary Cuban music and dance, including performances in the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion by Cuban-based Malpaso Dance Company and more. USC Annenberg will present Musical Interventions, a series of public events that will create a multi-part “musical exhibition” in collaboration with various Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA partner institutions, illuminating the musical networks among Los Angeles and various Latin American communities and cultures. Events include a performance of new music by Chicano Batman in LACMA’S exhibition Playing with Fire: Paintings by Carlos Almaraz; a genre-bending roster of Los Angeles Latinx vocalists and musicians reimagining the songs of Peruvian singer Yma Sumac inspired by the Hammer Museum exhibition Radical Women: Latin American Art 1960-1985; and a tribute to the classic Spanish-language variety shows held at downtown movie palaces, at the Palace Theater.

Performance Art REDCAT (Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater) is organizing a performance art festivalPacific Standard Time Festival: Live Art LA/LA, to be presented January 11 through 21, 2018, with the support of a grant from the Getty Foundation. The wide-ranging international festival features performance art, actions, happenings, and events with more than 30 different programs –including many works that confront urgent political and social issues at a crucial time in history. Artists from more than 15 countries will use everything from forklifts and marching bands to motorcycles and construction vehicles to create projects presented in partnership with a dozen different organizations, including museums, cultural centers, artist collectives, and others. Details will be announced at a later date.

Education Programs Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA is complemented by a robust group of education programs. Getty grants to the LA Promise Fund and the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) are enabling the creation of education programs for schools throughout Los Angeles city and county over a nine-month period, from spring 2017 through winter 2018, including professional development for teachers and field trips to Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA exhibitions. Overseen by LA Promise Fund in collaboration with LAUSD’s Arts Education Branch, these programs will include participation in Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA by the district’s most underserved schools.

All education programs are shaped by a committee that includes representatives from the leading museums participating in Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA, LAUSD, the Los Angeles Public Library, and the LA Promise Fund. Support for Pacific Standard Time: Pacific Standard Time is an initiative of the Getty. The presenting sponsor is Bank of America.

“We’re proud to be part of this exciting project, which is going to help people better understand the extraordinary contributions of Latin American and Latino artists to the culture and consciousness of the Southland,” said Janet Lamkin, California State President for Bank of America. “In addition, as we learned from our engagement with the first Pacific Standard Time in 2011, which brought more than $280 million to the region and created nearly 2,500 jobs, a cultural undertaking of this size and scope is going to provide a tremendous boost to the Southern California economy.”

Lead Sponsors Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA Leadership Council, California Community Foundation, Design Miami, The James Irvine Foundation, Los Angeles Tourism & Convention Board, Montage Beverly Hills, The Ralph M. Parsons Foundation, Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc., South Coast Plaza, Terra Foundation for American Art

Additional Support Provided By Accenture, GRoW @ Annenberg, The Herb Alpert Foundation, Mr. and Mrs. James Ukropina, The Rose Hills Foundation, Weingart Foundation

Media Partners Jezebel/Fusion, Los Angeles magazine

Participants in Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA include:

  1. 18th Street Arts Center

  2. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

  3. American Museum of Ceramic Art (AMOCA)

  4. Angels Gate Cultural Center

  5. Annenberg Space for Photography

  6. Armory Center for the Arts

  7. Art, Design & Architecture Museum, UCSB

  8. Autry Museum of the American West

  9. The Broad

  10. California African American Museum

  11. California Historical Society

  12. CSU Channel Islands

  13. CSU Northridge Art Galleries

  14. Chapman University

  15. Chinese American Museum

  16. Community Arts Workshop

  17. Craft & Folk Art Museum

  18. Craft in America

  19. dA Center for the Arts

  20. ESMoA

  21. Fowler Museum at UCLA

  22. The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA

  23. The Getty Center

  24. Hammer Museum

  25. Hollywood Bowl

  26. The Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens

  27. ICA LA (Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles)

  28. Japanese American National Museum

  29. LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes

  30. LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions)

  31. LACMA (Los Angeles County Museum of Art)

  32. Laguna Art Museum

  33. LAND (Los Angeles Nomadic Division)

  34. Long Beach University Art Museum CSU

  35. LAXART

  36. Los Angeles Central Library

  37. Los Angeles Filmforum

  38. Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery

  39. LA Phil

  40. The Luckman Fine Arts Complex at CSU LA

  41. MAK Center for Art and Architecture

  42. Marciano Art Foundation

  43. MOCA (The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles)

  44. MOCA Pacific Design Center

  45. Museum of Latin American Art (MOLAA)

  46. Millard Sheets Art Center

  47. Mingei International Museum

  48. The Mistake Room

  49. Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego

  50. Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara

  51. Museum of Photographic Arts

  52. The Music Center

  53. Muzeo Museum and Cultural Center

  54. Oceanside Museum of Art

  55. ONE Gallery, West Hollywood

  56. Otis College of Art and Design, Ben Maltz Gallery

  57. Palm Springs Art Museum

  58. Palm Springs Art Museum Architecture and Design Center

  59. Pasadena Museum of California Art (PMCA)

  60. Pitzer College Art Galleries

  61. Pomona College Museum of Art

  62. REDCAT/CalArts

  63. Riverside Art Museum

  64. San Diego Museum of Art

  65. Santa Barbara Historical Museum

  66. Santa Barbara Museum of Art

  67. Scripps College, Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery

  68. Segerstrom Center for the Arts

  69. Self Help Graphics & Art

  70. Skirball Cultural Center

  71. Sunnylands Center & Gardens

  72. Torrance Art Museum

  73. University Art Galleries, UC Irvine

  74. University Galleries, University of San Diego

  75. UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center

  76. UCLA Film & Television Archive

  77. USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism

  78. USC Fisher Museum

  79. USC Pacific Asia Museum

  80. UCR ARTSblock

  81. University Art Museum, CSU Long Beach

  82. Vincent Price Art Museum

  83. Westmont Ridley–Tree Museum of Art

Find Us Online: pacificstandardtime.org Instagram and Twitter: @PSTinLA Facebook: @pacificstandardtime

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