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Artbound
Monomania L.A.
Season 6
Episode 4
What happens when collecting becomes more than a hobby? A new series of short documentary films, in partnership with USC Libraries, profiles four "L.A. as Subject" collectors who have obsessively focused on a narrow slice of Southern California history. Featuring Carol Wells, Founder of the Center for the Study of Political Graphics; David Boule, private collector and author of "The Orange and the Dream of California"; Joseph Hawkins, Director of the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries; and Ernest Marquez, private collector and author of "Santa Monica Beach: A Collector's Pictorial History."
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Chronicling the 58-year history of the longest running theatre of color in the U.S.
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Angel City Press has been shaping and influencing public understanding of LA for decades.
56:39
Artists-In-Residence programs provide artists opportunities to create uninterrupted work.
56:40
Following the Watts Uprising, UCLA increased film program enrollment of students of color.
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David Alfaro Siqueiros created Olvera Street’s popular mural with an innovative technique.
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Two Chinese restaurants became the unlikely epicenter of L.A.’s burgeoning punk scene.
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Rubén Ortiz-Torres explores his past and present in an uncertain socio-economic future.
56:28
Giant Robot was a bimonthly magazine that profoundly affected Asian American pop culture.
56:43
WPA projects live on in L.A. Explores what effect a similar program might have today.
56:49
Six Latinx artists in L.A. work to secure their place in American art.
56:59
When Marcel Duchamp came to Pasadena in 1963, he sent ripples down L.A.'s art scene.
56:43
A self-published comic book made by brothers from Oxnard, Ca. makes comic book history.