Skip to main content
Back to Show
Artbound

Orange County's Commitment to the Pageant of Masters

Artbound's editorial team has reviewed and rated the most compelling weekly articles. After putting two articles up for a vote, the audience chose this article to be made into a short-format documentary.

In the early 1930s, California sculptor L. Archibald Garner won a competition to create a monument for a new astronomical observatory in Southern California. His proposal was simple: a 40-foot tall obelisk of brilliant white concrete surrounded by six of astronomy's most influential thinkers. And, for nearly 80 years, the monument has marked the entrance to the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles.

On a cool Friday evening early in July, I find myself staring at Garner's sculpture: the figures' stylized robes, their impassive gazes, their astronomical tools. Except none of it is real. I'm in an amphitheater 60 miles south of Griffith Park, in a canyon nearby Laguna Beach. Instead of concrete, Garner's piece is made out of wood and Styrofoam. The sculpted figures are really actors, all painted white; all of whom remain deadly still while the announcer talks about astronomical achievements and quotes Carl Sagan. As a light system projects the cosmos onto a scrim before us, the planets of our solar system float into view. A massive Earth rises just beyond the stage, looking serene and fragile. The music swells. My neighbor gasps, "Oh god, oh god, oh god." And with an explosive crescendo, Act 1 of Pageant of the Masters comes to an end.

Sign up now for inspiring and thought-provoking media delivered straight to your inbox.
Support Provided By
Season
Giant Robot: Asian Pop Culture and Beyond
56:28
Giant Robot was a bimonthly magazine that profoundly affected Asian American pop culture.
A New Deal for Los Angeles
56:43
WPA projects live on in L.A. Explores what effect a similar program might have today.
Arte Cósmico
56:49
Six Latinx artists in L.A. work to secure their place in American art.
Duchamp Comes To Pasadena
56:59
When Marcel Duchamp came to Pasadena in 1963, he sent ripples down L.A.'s art scene.
Love & Rockets
56:43
A self-published comic book made by brothers from Oxnard, Ca. makes comic book history.
Mustache Mondays
53:45
An LGBTQ nightclub event in L.A. called “Mustache Mondays” was an incubator for today’s exciting artists.
A mural painting depicts a collage of American West imagery, from cowboys and Native Americans to men on horseback and nods to Western films.
56:55
The Autry Museum is working to recontextualize a large mural, dating from the 1980s.
Desert X 2021
56:34
Site-specific desert art about land ownership, water scarcity and overlooked histories.
Sweet Land: The Making of a Myth
56:39
“Sweet Land” recasts this nation's story through the eyes of immigrants and the Indigenous
Life Centered: The Helen Jean Taylor Story
55:39
Ceramist Helen Jean Taylor crafted timeless works and helped others find peace in clay.
Con Safos
54:35
A tribute to Rubén Funkahuatl Guevara, a Chicano music pioneer.
The sign outside the Watts Towers Art Center | Still from "The Watts Towers Arts Center" ab s11 episode image
57:08
The Watts Towers Arts Center was born out of the resilience of 1960s Black L.A.
Active loading indicator