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Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, featuring modern pavilions designed by architect William Pereira.

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) is an art museum located on Wilshire Boulevard in the Miracle Mile area of Los Angeles. It is close to the La Brea Tar Pits (George C. Page Museum).

LACMA began in 1961, when it separated from the Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art. In 1965, it moved to its current spot on Wilshire Boulevard, in a building designed by William Pereira. Over the years, the museum grew and added new buildings.

Today, LACMA is the largest art museum in the western United States. It has more than 150,000 pieces of art, showing works from ancient times to today. The museum also has special films and concerts.

History

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art began in 1961. Before that, it was part of the Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art, which started in 1913.

Important people helped collect money for the new museum. In 1965, the museum moved to a new building on Wilshire Boulevard. This made it a place just for art. It was the largest new museum built in the United States after the National Gallery of Art.

Wilshire Boulevard and the Art Museum in 1965

In the 1980s, the museum received a lot of money to grow. It added new buildings for modern and contemporary art. It also added a special place for Japanese art and a garden for sculptures.

In 2004, plans were made to change the museum with new buildings. The first part of this plan finished in 2008 with a new entrance and a big space for contemporary art. More plans were made, but some were stopped.

In 2019, a new plan was approved for a big building designed by Peter Zumthor. Work started in 2020, but it faced delays. Finally, in 2026, the new galleries opened to the public. They show many pieces of art from different times and places around the world.

Partnerships

LACMA works with different groups to protect important places and share art. In 2010, LACMA helped save the Watts Towers by giving support and money.

In 2018, LACMA rented a big space in South Los Angeles for future projects. In 2023, LACMA joined a foundation to plan a new art museum in Las Vegas.

In 2021, with special funds, LACMA started sharing some of its art with museums in other parts of California. This lets more people see and enjoy the artworks.

Exhibitions

In 1971, LACMA had a special show called "Art and Technology." That same year, LACMA showed work by artists who were not very well known yet. One of the most popular shows was "Treasures of Tutankhamun," which many people came to see in 1978. Other successful shows included famous paintings by Vincent van Gogh and works by Picasso.

Today, LACMA shows many kinds of art, from very old pieces to modern works. Recent shows about famous movie directors like Tim Burton and Stanley Kubrick were also very popular.

Collections

Further information: List of painters in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art collections

LACMA has more than 120,000 objects. These objects are in many departments, organized by region, type of art, and time period. They are shown in different museum buildings.

Modern and Contemporary Art

Not to be confused with The Broad, another contemporary art museum funded by the Broads, in Downtown Los Angeles.

The Modern Art collection was shown in the Ahmanson Building. The building was renovated in 2008. The modern collection has works from 1900 to the 1970s. Many pieces are from the Janice and Henri Lazarof Collection. In 2025, LACMA received Austrian Expressionist works from art dealer Otto Kallir's family. These works include the first paintings by Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, and Richard Gerstl in the museum's collection.

Modern Art galleries

The Contemporary Art collection is displayed in the Broad Contemporary Art Museum (BCAM). It opened in 2008. The collection has postwar Modern art from the late 1950s to today. Many pieces are from the collection of Eli and Edythe Broad.

The Modern art collection will now be shown in the Geffen Galleries.

American and Latin American art

The Art of the Americas Building had collections of American, Latin American, and pre-Columbian art. It was torn down in 2020. The exhibits were moved to the Geffen Galleries.

LACMA’s Latin American Art galleries reopened in 2008 after renovation. The collection includes pre-Columbian, Spanish Colonial, Modern, and contemporary works.

The pre-Columbian galleries were redesigned by artist Jorge Pardo. The pre-Columbian collection began in the 1980s. It has grown with gifts from collectors like Constance McCormick Fearing and Camilla Chandler Frost.

Gallery of works by Alberto Giacometti

Asian art

The Korean art collection began with a donation of Korean ceramics in 1966. LACMA has one of the most comprehensive collections outside of Korea and Japan. The Pavilion for Japanese Art displays the Shin'enkan collection donated by Joe D. Price. In 1999, LACMA trustee Eric Lidow and his wife, Leza, donated 75 ancient Chinese works. These included bronze objects and Buddhist sculptures.

LACMA also has a collection of relics from India. This includes sculptures of Jain Tirthankaras, Buddha, and Hindu deities. Many paintings from India are also present in the LACMA.

Greek, Roman, and Etruscan art

A large part of the museum's ancient Greek and Roman art collection was donated by publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

Diego Rivera, Flower Day (Día de Flores), 1925

Islamic art

The museum's Islamic galleries have over 1,700 works. These include ceramics, inlaid metalwork, enameled glass, carved stone and wood, and arts of the book. The collection began in 1973 with the Nasli M. Heeramaneck Collection gifted by philanthropist Joan Palevsky.

Decorative arts and design

In 1990, Max Palevsky gave 32 pieces of Arts and Crafts furniture to LACMA. He later added more pieces and donated money for Arts and Crafts works. In 2000, he donated $2 million for these works. LACMA became a major center for studying and displaying 18th- and 19th-century European clothing with a large purchase in 2009.

Permanent art installations

Los Angeles sculptor Robert Graham created the bronze Retrospective Column for the entrance of the Art of the Americas Building. A contemporary sculpture garden opened in 1991. It has large outdoor sculptures by artists like Alice Aycock and Ellsworth Kelly. The garden’s centerpiece is Alexander Calder’s mobile Hello Girls. This was commissioned for the museum’s 1965 opening.

Chola dynasty statue depicting Shiva dancing as Nataraja from LACMA

The Ahmanson Building’s atrium displays Tony Smith’s Smoke. This is a large black painted aluminum artwork. In 2010, the museum acquired it for over $3 million.

Eli and Edythe Broad contributed $10 million to fund the purchase of Richard Serra’s Band sculpture. It is displayed in BCAM when it opened.

Surrounding BCAM and LACMA’s courtyard is a palm tree garden. It was designed by artist Robert Irwin and landscape architect Paul Comstock. In front of the museum’s Wilshire Boulevard entrance stands Chris Burden’s Urban Light. This is an installation of 202 antique street lights from cities around Los Angeles. The lights turn on in the evening and are powered by solar panels.

Photography

The Wallis Annenberg Photography Department began in 1984 with a grant from the Ralph M. Parsons Foundation. It holds over fifteen thousand works from 1839 to today. In 1992, Audrey and Sydney Irmas donated their photography collection. This created the Audrey and Sydney Irmas Collection of Artists' Self-Portraits. In 2008, the Annenberg Foundation gave $23 million for the Marjorie and Leonard Vernon collection of 19th- and 20th-century photographs. This also established an endowment and capital for storage facilities. This led to the department’s renaming as the Wallis Annenberg Department of Photography.

Film

LACMA’s film program began in the late 1960s. In 2009, the museum announced plans to cancel its long-running film series. This was because of declining attendance and funding. This drew criticism from film enthusiasts like director Martin Scorsese. In response, LACMA expanded its movie offerings. It also partnered with Film Independent to launch a new series. In 2011, LACMA and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced plans to open a movie museum. This opened in 2022 as the Academy Museum.

Acquisitions and donors

Individual donors

In 2014, LACMA received a very large donation of art from a businessman named Jerry Perenchio. The donation included 47 pieces by famous artists like Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, and Pablo Picasso. This was one of the biggest gifts ever given to the museum.

Other important donations include a gift that helped build the Resnick Pavilion and a gift to name the museum’s main entrance. These donations helped LACMA grow and improve its buildings.

Art councils

Many groups of art lovers have helped LACMA buy new artworks over the years. These groups pay money each year and organize events to raise funds for the museum’s collections. One group, started in 1952, supports the whole museum, while another, begun in 1961, focuses on modern and contemporary art.

Collectors Committee

Each year, special donors meet at LACMA to decide which new artworks the museum should buy. They listen to suggestions from curators and then vote on which pieces to add to the museum’s collection.

LACMA Art + Film Gala

Since 2011, LACMA has held an annual dinner called the Art + Film Gala. This event brings together famous artists and Hollywood leaders to support the museum. The money helps fund the museum’s work and collections.

Deaccessioning

Like other museums, LACMA sometimes sells artworks it no longer needs. In 2005, the museum sold some pieces at an auction. This money helped fund the museum’s expansion and new displays.

Programs

In 1966, a curator at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art started a program called Art and Technology. Artists like Robert Irwin and James Turrell worked with companies such as the Garrett Corporation. They explored how we see and understand things. This led to an exhibition that traveled to Expo '70 in Osaka, Japan. It also helped create a new art style called Light and Space.

In 2014, the museum opened an Art + Tech Lab. Every year, the lab shows new projects where artists use modern technology in fun and creative ways.

Management

Andrea Rich helped the museum grow by bringing in more visitors and funds. She left because of disagreements about hiring for a new art center. In 2008, LACMA wanted to join with another museum to get more support.

LACMA is run by a group called Museum Associates, which follows rules set by Los Angeles County. In 2011, the museum had resources worth $300 million. It used special bonds to pay for new buildings and improvements. The county gives about $29 million each year to help cover costs. The museum also gets around $40 million from donations and members.

The number of visitors has grown over the years. In 2010, about 914,000 people visited. By 2011, it passed one million for the first time, and in 2015, it reached 1.6 million visitors.

LACMA has had several leaders over the years. In 1996, the museum changed its leadership structure. The museum owns a home for its director and bought another house in 2020.

The museum is guided by a board of trustees who decide its direction. Members of the board help raise money for the museum and support its future.

LACMA United

In October 2025, workers at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art made a group called LACMA United. They asked for better pay and benefits and wanted to talk to the museum leaders about it. One worker, Aurora van Zoelen Cortés, said they were still thinking about what changes they wanted.

Selected paintings

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art has many famous paintings. Some of these include:

Selected objects

Here are some special pieces you can see at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art:

  • Ashurnasirpal II and a Winged Deity, from Northern Iraq, made of gypseous alabaster in the 9th century BC
  • Dog with Human Mask, from Mexico, a slip-painted ceramic sculpture from 200 BC–AD 500
  • Standing Warrior, from Mexico, a slip-painted ceramic sculpture from around 200 BC–AD 300
  • Funerary Sculpture of a Horse, from China, made of molded earthenware sculpture from 25–220
  • Hindu God Vishnu, from Cambodia, made of sandstone around 950
  • Kannon Bosatsu, from Japan, a carved wood piece from the 12th century
  • Jar (Ping) with Dragon and Clouds, from China, made of Cizhou ware from 1279–1368
  • [Maruyama Ōkyo, Cranes], from Japan, a pair of six-panel screens made with ink, color, and gold leaf on paper in 1772
  • Ancestor Figure (moai kavakava), from Easter Island (Rapa Nui), made of wood, bird bone, obsidian, and traces of pigment, around 1830
  • [Michael Heizer, Levitated Mass], from 2012
  • Silver teapot made by colonial silversmith [Jacob Hurd], around 1730

Images

An historic Art Deco building on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles, soon to become a museum of motion pictures.
Ancient Indian sculpture of an elephant carrying riders, dating back to the 3rd-2nd century B.C.
An ancient Indian sandstone sculpture showing four important Jain spiritual teachers from around the year 600.
A historic stone sculpture of Ambika, a Jain goddess, dating from the 6th–7th century. This artwork showcases the rich cultural and religious heritage of ancient India.
Ancient Jain sculpture depicting deities, made from cream-colored sandstone, dating back to around 550-600 CE.
Ancient copper alloy sculpture of Mahavira, a key figure in Jainism, from India around 850-900 AD.
Historical Jain altarpiece featuring religious figures Parshvanatha, Mahavira, and Neminatha, made of gilt copper with silver and gemstone inlays.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Los Angeles County Museum of Art, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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