Level 1: Classroom Workshops
artworxLA students engage in weekly arts workshops throughout the school year. Workshops are led by professional Teaching Artists that respect our students' diverse backgrounds, including queer, BIPOC and other communities underrepresented in creative careers. Each semester culminates in a vibrant Public Presentation where students showcase their artwork at cultural partner venues. The curriculum is relevant to students' lived experiences, culturally responsive, and unbiased, while also enhancing students' well-being, fostering self-expression, building connections, and instilling a genuine sense of purpose.
TRANSFORMATVE ARTS EDUCATION FOR ALL
2024-25 Workshop Themes and cultural partners
Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice
ON VIEW SEP 14, 2024 – JAN 5, 2025
Part of Getty’s region-wide initiative PST ART: Art and Science Collide, the Hammer presents Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice, organized by guest co-curators Glenn Kaino and Mika Yoshitake. The exhibition considers environmental art practices that address the climate crisis and anthropogenic disasters and their inescapable intersection with issues of equity and social justice. Breath(e) features works by more than 20 artists, including works by Mel Chin, Ron Finley, Cannupa Hanska Luger, Garnett Puett, and Lan Tuazon, commissioned specially for this exhibition.
Breath(e) was conceived during the height of the global COVID-19 pandemic and America’s racial reckoning in 2020, and as such explores pressing issues related to the ethics of climate justice, while proposing pragmatic and philosophical approaches to spur discussion and resolution. The exhibition strives to challenge and deconstruct polarized political attitudes surrounding climate justice in America and offers new perspectives around land and indigenous rights of nature.
Ordinary People: Photorealism and the Work of Art since 1968
ON VIEW NOV 23, 2024 – MAY 4, 2025
The first large-scale exhibition to reexamine the postwar art movement of photorealism and trace its lineages in art of the present day, Ordinary People: Photorealism and the Work of Art since 1968 includes more than forty artists (largely though not exclusively North American), spans the 1960s to the present, and features paintings alongside drawings, sculptures, and archival materials. This historical, scholarly, group exhibition recovers the social art history of photorealism and complicates its meaning as a realism.
While photorealism is often regarded as an end–of figuration, of representation, and even of painting at the close of the 1960s–this timely exhibition recasts photorealism as beginning, arguing for its continued presence in contemporary art. It features canonical and under-recognized photorealists of the 1960s and ‘70s (Robert Bechtle, Vija Celmins, Chuck Close, Richard Estes, Audrey Flack, Duane Hanson, Idelle Weber); reconsiders well-known figures within photorealist frameworks (John Ahearn and Rigoberto Torres, Barkley L. Hendricks, Joan Semmel, Amy Sherald, Kehinde Wiley); and identifies younger generations of artists’ receptions of photorealism (Gina Beavers, Cynthia Daignault, Sayre Gomez, Vincent Valdez, Christine Tien Wang).
Ordinary People examines the representational politics of photorealist painting in the context of the recent rise of figurative portraiture, considering its key place in the ongoing remedial project carried out by folks of marginalized identities to repopulate the museum with pictures of people and places historically excluded or disfigured. It further explores photorealism’s significance as painting of everyday life, and pulls apart the intrinsic tension between ordinary images and extraordinary artistic methods by focusing on relationships of labor, value, populism, and taste. As well, it takes seriously the myriad ways artists have deployed photorealism to entice viewers with a non-confrontational aesthetic often only to show images of painful historical events and social experiences that might otherwise be regarded as too difficult to look at, or too easy to ignore. Finally, the exhibition asserts the primacy of photorealism to critically think through the 21st-century attention economy’s glut of image production.
Ordinary People: Photorealism and the Work of Art since 1968 is organized by Anna Katz, Curator, with Paula Kroll, Curatorial Assistant, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.
STUDENT STORIES
“Being able to wake up everyday and look forward to something that involves you being creative is a huge change and makes you be responsible and active”
FEELING INSPIRED? try an art activity on your own!
This poster activity is for people who want to make their voices heard in a time of unprecedented political activism and resistance.
Click on the video above to learn more about this activity and to make your voice heard.
Want a quick way to make a GIF for free online?
Follow Aya's Step-by-step tutorial by clicking above on the video. Aya's walks you through the process while exploring one way you "took care" of yourself this week.