Museum of Contemporary Art & Geffen Contemporary

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Museum of Contemporary Art & Geffen Contemporary review

The city's premier showcase for post-war art, MoCA started life in a humongous bus barn on the edge of Little Tokyo. It's now the Geffen Contemporary, its spacious, raw interior designed by Frank Gehry in the 1980s; it's considered by some to be one of his gutsiest spaces. When MoCA's main building, designed by Japan's Arata Isozaki, was completed a block from the Civic Center, the museum was able simultaneously to mount ambitious survey exhibitions and to showcase items from its fine permanent collection, which includes pieces by Rauschenberg, Rothko, Twombly, Mondrian and Pollock.

Up to half a dozen shows can be viewed at any single time between the two galleries. MoCA stages the more mainstream exhibits (although such terms are relative; 'mainstream' here means the likes of Louise Bourgeois), leaving the Geffen Contemporary to concentrate on more esoteric artists. A programme of talks and performance events round out the scene.

Museum of Contemporary Art & Geffen Contemporary details

Address
152 N Central Avenue,
at 1st Street

Transport Metro Union Station/bus 30, 31, 40, 42/ US 101, exit Alameda Street south.

Telephone 1-213 626 6222

Museum of Contemporary Art & Geffen Contemporary website

Open 11am-5pm Mon, Fri; 11am-8pm Thur; 11am-6pm Sat, Sun.

Admission Combined ticket $10; $5 discounts; free under-12s. Free to all 5-8pm Thur.

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