Back to Show
Artbound
The Life, Death and Afterlife of '66 Signs of Neon'
"66 Signs of Neon" was an eye opening installation that traveled the country, but it was an unconventional art work. Noah Purifoy and art historians recount the beginnings of the seminal "66 Signs of Neon," its eventual demise and significance today.
Support Provided By
57:20
The fourth installment of this series, "MOCA: The Art of Our Time," features George Herms, Betye Saar, Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Robert Rauschenberg, Mark Rothko, Gabriel Orozco, Senga Nengudi and Matthew Barney.
56:35
"Artbound" profiles five emerging artists whose work explores the intersection of race, class, identity, and aesthetics.
55:19
This "Artbound" special episode, in partnership with MOCAtv, features The Museum of Contemporary Art's current programming.
1:00:14
Using key data from the newest issue of the Otis Report on the Creative Economy, this "Artbound" special explores the vibrant network of creativity in Southern California.
56:22
A new series of short documentary films profiles four L.A. as Subject collectors who have obsessively focused on a narrow slice of Southern California history.
55:32
Artbound explores the paintings of Marc Trujillo, Kim Stringfellow’ s Mojave Project, Dave Lefner’s colored wood block prints of neon signs, and the subculture of Brazilian cholos who emulate lowrider culture from East Los Angeles.
53:30
Travel to Southern California’s desert regions with an episode of "Artbound" that includes work by visual artist Diane Best, the Date Farmers from Coachella, and Hillary Mushkin’s Incendiary Traces.
28:35
Iconoclast writer and poet Charles Bukowski reads from his work to a live audience.