| FREE ADMISSION |
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Docent Tours and Family Activities
| MUSEUM HOURS | |
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| Wednesday–Sunday Thursday |
11 am–5 pm 11 am–8 pm |
| WHAT'S NEW | |
Nollywood Film Festival: Saturday, June 9, begins at 11 am, free Search the Collection |
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| ALSO ON VIEW | |
Serra's 235-ton sculpture Sequence Sculpture from the Fisher Collection Edward Weston on Light, Line, and Form Adventures in the Human Virosphere |
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Central Nigeria Unmasked: Arts of the Benue River Valley
Through October 14
Discover the Benue River Valley, source of some of the most abstract, dramatic, and inventive sculpture in Africa. See objects used in a range of ritual contexts, with genres as varied and complex as the vast region itself—figurative wood sculptures, masks, figurative ceramic vessels, and elaborate bronze and iron regalia—in a groundbreaking exhibition that demonstrates how the history of central Nigeria can be “unmasked” through the dynamic interrelationships of its peoples and their arts. Press release, programs, tours, catalogue
Light Works: Dan Flavin and Robert Irwin
Through July 8
This installation features two large pieces. One by Dan Flavin uses mass-produced fluorescent light. The second work, an untitled disc by Robert Irwin, typifies the interest in light and space that occupied a number of artists in Los Angeles in the 1960s. Learn more
Memory and Markets: Pueblo Painting in the Early 20th Century
Through May 27
In the early 20th century, a new movement of Native American painting emerged in the Pueblo communities of the Southwestern United States. Recording past and current scenes of their daily life on paper, Pueblo artists used as their inspiration the centuries-old tradition of Pueblo painting, found in pottery, murals, and archaeological remains. Learn more
