Grand Prix of Long Beach
Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Brian McCall
Photograph: Courtesy Unsplash/Brian McCall

April 2026 events calendar for Los Angeles

Plan your month with our April 2026 events calendar of the best activities, including free things to do, festivals and our favorite concerts

Gillian Glover
Advertising

It’s Coachella time, but Angelenos have plenty of other reasons to sing April’s praises, too: Beach weather is basically here, and we’re on the lookout for wildflowers, too. From major museum exhibitions to lots of concerts, free events and festivals, there are plenty of fun things to do packed into our April events calendar.

As always, we’ll continue to add more events to this page as they’re announced, so check back here often.

RECOMMENDED: Full events calendar for 2026

The best events in L.A. this April

  • Things to do
  • TV, radio and podcast recordings
  • Hollywood
  • Recommended

Geek out with fellow TV nerds at PaleyFest, the annual weeklong festival of exclusive episodes, clips and panel discussions with the cast and creators of the hottest TV shows. The Paley Center for Media-hosted festival is headed back to the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood from April 4 through 12. This year’s lineup includes cast and creator panels for The PittPluribus, Emily in ParisScrubsYour Friends & Neighbors, a 50th anniversary celebration of Charlie’s Angels and a pair of beloved L.A.-set shows, Nobody Wants This and Shrinking. Each event includes a screening—usually either a finale or a preview—as well as a conversation, and as you might expect, the talent lineup is pretty staggering.

  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Westlake
  • Recommended

Grab a cold one and gather ’round for a daylong celebration of America’s favorite beverage as the LA Beer fest celebrates its 20th anniversary. The festival returns to LA Center Studios with 200 pours from over 80 breweries, along with food trucks and live music. Tickets include unlimited beer samplings (food is sold separately); choose from either a GA ticket or a connoisseur ticket, which will get you access to a VIP lounge and event deck, tacos, exclusive beers and more.

Advertising
  • Music
  • Rock and indie
  • Hollywood
  • Recommended

Mitski has a talent for swift transformation. Over the past several years, she’s rocketed from self-releasing her first two albums and playing DIY gigs to selling out major venues months in advance. This time around, she’s going back to school—taking over Hollywood High School’s comparatively intimate auditorium for five nights this week. Expect to hear hits alongside new tracks from her latest album, Nothing’s About to Happen to Me.

  • Things to do
  • Late openings
  • USC/Exposition Park
  • Recommended

Spend your Friday night amid dinosaurs and DJs. For two decades now, the Natural History Museum has been staying open late for its popular First Fridays series. And during this year’s 20th season, the KCRW-presented after-hours event is returning to its roots, filling the museum’s iconic diorama halls with live music from around the globe, DJ sets and dancing from February to May. A new discussion series, “Life, From Our Guts to the Galaxy: Rethinking the Living World,” will explore different topics each month. While you’re there, you can check out all the galleries and exhibitions, sip cocktails and order food from a revolving selection of local trucks. Check out the museum’s website for advance tickets and updates on lineups.

Advertising
  • Music
  • Music festivals
  • Indio

Nearly 125,000 music lovers make a pilgrimage to the Empire Polo Club during each identical weekend of Coachella, whether bound for campgrounds or shuttling over from golf resorts and midcentury modern homes. Though its bespoke dining experiences and hotel party scene may try to steal headlines, Coachella remains about the relaxed desert air euphoria of a well-curated music festival. Coachella’s all-embracing three-day lineup consistently crafts the pool of performers from which all other summer music festivals borrow. This year’s headliners lead a stacked lineup: Sabrina Carpenter, Justin Bieber, Karol G and Anyma, plus the XX, the Strokes, Addison Rae, Young Thug, BIGBANG and more.

RECOMMENDED: See our complete Coachella coverage

  • Things to do
  • Pasadena

Search for Easter eggs on one of the most iconic grass fields in the country: the Rose Bowl. The Pasadena stadium hosts its annual Easter celebration—a day before Easter Sunday—with more than 80,000 colorful eggs laid out on the field for kids (up to 12 years old) to find, plus a springtime family festival with free activities, face painting, games, entertainment and arts and crafts just outside the field. Early risers can opt for the ticketed Bunny Brunch, which includes a VIP egg hunt. 

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Late openings
  • Culver City
  • Recommended

This U.S.-via-France arts-and-culture marathon of performances, discussions and screenings returns to the Wende Museum with an all-day program stretching into the night. Daytime highlights include kid-friendly hands-on workshops in animation and climate awareness, a video games forum, a performance by the Bob Baker Marionette Theater and more. Once the sun goes down, hear a new work by composer Victor Le Masne (music director of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games), take a curator tour of the Wende, listen to talks on journalism, art, literature, astronomy and the Declaration of Independence, step into a VR experience and hear data artist Refik Anadol (whose Dataland is set to open this spring) share his thoughts on AI. Did we mention it’s all free?

  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Huntington Beach
  • Recommended

Is it the stumpy legs? The size-too-big ears? The woolly rump? Whatever the cause, we love corgis, and so do the devoted dog owners at So Cal Corgi Nation. This free, semiannual meetup invades the Huntington Dog Beach (two blocks south of the Huntington Beach Pier). The “Tiki Beach Pawty” welcomes all dogs and their humans for a day of corgi contests, shopping at a pet-centric marketplace, food trucks, photo ops, goodie bags and even a corgi kissing booth.

RECOMMENDED: The cutest corgis at Corg-A-Palooza

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Chinatown
  • Recommended

In celebration of the late Bob Baker’s legacy, his namesake puppet theater hosts this annual celebration at Los Angeles State Historic Park. The free fest and outdoor carnival features puppet performances throughout the day, plus an assortment of other entertainment, vendors, crafts and family-friendly activities. For the first time this year, there will be a doggie costume conest you can enter your pup into. Stay tuned for the grand marshal announcement and lineup of special guests.

  • Things to do
  • Markets and fairs
  • San Gabriel Valley

The hour stands before another springtime, and the Renaissance Pleasure Faire is upon us. Good mistresses and masters, prepareth thy schedules and costumes for the return of the oldest Ren Faire in the country, a spectacle that cov’reth 20 Irwindale acres with Elizabethan libations and amusement: fully armored joust tournaments and tea parties with the queen along with beguiling stage acts, rides, games, delicious edibles and ales abound. The festivities will transpire each weekend at the Santa Fe Dam Recreation Area; procureth day or season passes in advance by visiting ye olde online box office. And no, we can’t stop talking like this.

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Performances
  • Westside

Listening to live poetry in the Getty Center’s Central Garden—can you think of a more idyllic way to spend an afternoon? On April 12, the museum will host the next edition of its Poetry in the Garden series. This time around, it’s partnering with Dublab and taking inspiration from scores by midcentury experimental artists (think Yvonne Rainer, John Cage and Benjamin Patterson). Words and live music will mingle with nature throughout the day, interspersed with DJ sets. Make a free reservation, bring a blanket, settle in and enjoy the experimental performances.

  • Things to do
  • Literary events
  • USC/Exposition Park
  • Recommended

Bibliophiles flock to the USC campus each spring for this annual two-day event. The outdoor book fair of sorts features stalls from a variety of booksellers, as well as author readings, signings and culinary demos. The sheer variety and quality of talent the festival attracts is impressive and legendary—this year’s lineup includes a mix of superstars from the literary, entertainment and culinary worlds, including Amy Tan, Elvira, David Duchovny, Hannah Brown, Larry David, Lisa Rinna, Megan Abbott, Roxana Jullapat, Roxane Gay, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Susan Orlean. Bring the kids and spend the weekend discovering new titles, watching screenings and enjoying live music and cultural entertainment. Entry and tickets to conversations are free (reservations open up April 12), while a limited number of speaker-series events are ticketed, starting at $28. Before the weekend kicks off, the 46th annual Los Angeles Times Book Prizes awards the year’s best in literature on Friday (tickets are $28–$83).

Advertising
  • Comedy
  • Stand-up
  • Melrose
  • Recommended

Ron Funches has been a fixture in stand-up and sitcoms for years, but he’s recently enjoyed a new wave of attention, thanks to a memorable run on NBC’s The Traitors. Funches’s sweet, soft, hypnotizing voice punctuates each line in his deliberate performances, which range from more classic observational set-ups to very personal topics. He performs periodically at the Hollywood Improv’s intimate Lab—including a Netflix is a Joke show in May.

  • Museums
  • Art and design
  • Westwood

The multisensory nature of art is explored in this exhibition, which looks at the intertwined relationship between contemporary art and living materials through large-scale installations, painting, mixed-media sculpture, video and sound. Over 20 artists from North, Central and South America have employed mediums like stones, avocado, cacao, achiote, cochineal and clay in their works, inviting visitors to engage their senses of touch, smell and hearing when interacting with the art. On Saturday, April 4, get an after-hours sneak peek of “Several Eternities,” plus three more new spring exhibitions, complemented by sets by Chulita Vinyl Club DJs in the courtyard, a photobooth and a cyanotype art-making activity—all free.

Advertising
  • Attractions
  • Theme parks
  • Universal City

With Halloween Horror Nights still a ways off, Universal Studios Hollywood is bringing back this new after-hours event for its second year—and this one is all about fans, not frights. On select nights through May 16, the theme park will brings the fandoms for a range of franchises together, immersing guests in the worlds of Star TrekDungeons & DragonsOne PieceJujutsu Kaisen and Back to the Future—especially exciting if you still miss the theme park’s erstwhile DeLorean ride. The Wizarding World of Harry Potter and Super Nintendo World are also getting in on the action, with exclusive merch, menu items and the debut of fan-favorite Mario character Yoshi, plus a new light show, “Hogwarts Always,” projected on the castle. Costumes (as long as they follow these guidelines) are encouraged.

  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • USC/Exposition Park

This show aims to give Black queer culture in California—particularly in Los Angeles—the credit it’s due as a part of the decades-long fight for LGBTQ+ rights and recognition. Through historical materials, photographs, film and vintage newspapers, the exhibition recovers a history that’s been largely excluded from the record, introducing visitors to sites, protagonists and allies who played a role in the fight for democracy and free expression. 

Advertising
  • Musicals
  • Downtown
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Making its L.A. premiere at the Mark Taper Forum, Here Lies Love is a disco musical about the rise and fall of former Filipino first lady Imelda Marcos, with music and lyrics by the Talking Heads’s David Byrne and beats by Fatboy Slim. While director Snehal Desai’s production is less immersive than its Off Broadway and Broadway predecessors, the all-Filipino cast—especially Reanne Acasio as Imelda—shines here. This year marks the 40th anniversary of the peaceful People Power Revolution that overthrew the Marcos regime, yet the play’s warnings about fascism, celebrity, economic inequality and the fragility of democracy seem as relevant as ever. Here Lies Love may present itself as a party, but it packs a sobering punch.

  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Indio

Strap on your cowboy hat and make the pilgrimage to country music’s biggest jamboree, taking up residence at Coachella’s digs, the Empire Polo Club. Stagecoach is coming back for a three-day fest; expect the usual mix of contemporary and classic country. Cody Johnson, Lainey Wilson and Post Malone headline, with additional sets on the lineup from Bailey Zimmerman, Red Clay Strays, Riley Green, Journey, Brooks & Dunn, Hootie & the Blowfish, Diplo, Pitbull and Ludacris, among others.

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Recommended

The term CicLAvia stems from a similar Spanish word for “bike way,” and in L.A. it’s become a shorthand for the temporary, festival-like closing of L.A.’s streets. The event welcomes bikes, tricycles, skateboards, strollers and basically anything else without an engine to ride a rotating cast of car-free routes—this month’s West L.A. edition features a new three-mile route that connects Santa Monica and Westwood Boulevards (see the map here). Shop owners and restaurants along the CicLAvia route tend to host specials. And it goes without saying that you should bike or take the Metro to your desired spot along the route.

  • Art
  • Public art

Nonprofit arts organization the Billboard Creative mounts this annual show around town, which turns the city into an open-air gallery. Billboards around L.A. will sport works by a diverse group of 20 artists working across different mediums, whose art will be seen by hundreds of thousands of commuters. This year’s “Sightlines: Art in Public View” iteration kicks off April 6 and runs through May 4. A mobile map shows you all of the entries’ locations and shares info about each artist. 

Advertising
  • Movie theaters
  • Outdoor
  • West Hollywood

For dinner and a movie, all in one, just follow the food trucks. During the spring, summer and fall, Street Food Cinema throws together a series of outdoor parties that include screenings of some of our favorite movies, paired with an assortment of gourmet food trucks and even a live music performance from a cool local band. The screenings are held in venues across L.A. into October and alternate from week to week, so make sure to check the schedule. Some of the outdoor venues are dog-friendly, allowing you to bring your four-legged cinema lover along.

See more of this season’s outdoor movie screenings in L.A.

  • Things to do
  • Van Nuys

Tied to Earth Day, Friends of the L.A. River is teaming up with the California Native Plant Society and the San Fernando Valley Audubon Society for a community clean-up event that expands upon its monthly Habitat Restoration Days. Roll up to the Sepulveda Basin Wildlife Preserve ready to get your hands dirty—you’ll be helping remove invasive vegetation inside the San Fernando Valley park, planting native species and rolling seedballs to scatter across the land. Afterward, take a guided nature walk and refuel with food truck fare. Participation is free, but registration is required.

Advertising
  • Dance
  • Contemporary and experimental
  • Hollywood

The Los Angeles company literally balances athleticism and architecture in creative director Jacques Heim’s choreography, as his dancers climb, dangle, soar and perch on custom-made structures while they explore movement, space and time. Diavolo was founded in 1992, made the top 10 of America’s Got Talent in 2017 and now is presenting its latest show, Escape, in the troupe’s intimate black box performance space, so you can see the gravity-defying action up close. For the best sightlines, spring for VIP tickets, which will also get you a complimentary drink and priority access to ride one of the structures featured in the show yourself.

  • Museums
  • Art and design
  • Torrance

Artist Ralph Steadman—known for his unmistakable illustrations, cartoons and collaborations with Hunter S. Thompson—has imbued his work with political, satirical, environmental and spiritual threads throughout his six-decade-plus career. Now, on the eve of his 90th birthday, you can see 149 of Steadman’s works, including some influenced by Los Angeles, for free at the Torrance Art Museum—it’s the only Southern California stop on the show’s national tour. If you’re feeling inspired, you can embark on your own off-the-page adventure, thanks to the exhibition’s accompanying interactive Gonzo Art Trail (find details here).

Advertising
  • Comedy
  • Downtown

The popular Netflix comedy about a Korean-family-run corner store was actually inspired by this stage play, which arrives in L.A. with a monthlong run at the Ahmanson Theatre. The production is playwright and Appa actor Ins Choi’s “love letter to his parents and to all first-generation immigrants who call Canada their home.”

  • Things to do
  • Markets and fairs
  • Downtown

Easy like Saturday morning—that’s the saying, isn’t it? It will be this month, when Grand Park hosts two community-centric days of free, family-friendly programming to rejuvenate Angelenos’ minds, bodies and souls. Enjoy yoga, arts and crafts, music, dancing, nature-inspired activities and more. Local favorite Bob Baker Marionette Theater will be on hand for puppet shows.

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Quirky events
  • Atwater Village

A sound bath already represents peak relaxation, but Alice Moon doubles down on peace and tranquility in her Moon Soul Sound Baths by hosting them inside a mattress store. The result is part zen retreat, part self-care slumber party. Bring a pillow and get cozy in the showroom of Mattress Central in Atwater Village as Moon helps you unwind with singing bowls, chimes and an ocean drum. Note: Fresh sheets are provided for all attendees to lay on, and you’ll receive a sleep mask to wear and take home with you.

  • Things to do
  • Walks and tours
  • Lincoln Heights

Exercise your support for L.A.’s artists at the biannual Brewery ArtWalk. Totally free to attend (and park), this open studio weekend takes place at the roomy Lincoln Heights arts complex, where over 100 resident artists—including Guillermo Bert, Andre Miripolsky and Jane Szabo—show off their new works for purchase or simply the admiration of art-loving locals. Chat with midcentury-inspired ceramicists and multimedia sculptors before dining and drinking at the Brewery’s on-site restaurant. You’ll return home buzzed on culture—and potentially the proud owner of a one-of-a-kind piece of art.

Advertising
  • Shopping
  • Markets and fairs
  • Chinatown
  • Recommended

Any crafter worth their weight in cashmere yarn knows that Renegade Craft Fair is the fair all others aspire to. Held in urban epicenters around the country, Renegade is a locally focused marketplace showcasing work from hundreds of the best contemporary indie craft artists. Aside from the wares, Renegade offers all sorts of homemade DIY fun and festivities: Think classes and demos, photo booths and tons of tasty food trucks. Renegade’s epic Los Angeles spring fair is held at L.A. State Historic ParkPlus, entry is free. 

Advertising
  • Shopping
  • Markets and fairs
  • Old Pasadena

The multicity Jackalope art fair is back in Old Pasadena this month, featuring over 200 local artisans selling their high-quality, handcrafted goods at Central Park. You’ll find everything from luxe candles and cactus-inspired lamps to plant-based skin care and homemade treats, as well as family-friendly activities. Kids can make their own slime, get their face painted, make friendship bracelets and feed butterflies in an interactive garden. For grown-ups, there’s custom poetry, tarot readings and screen-printing. And unlike some artisan markets, Jackalope offers free admission.

Advertising
  • Attractions
  • Theme parks
  • Anaheim
  • Recommended

Disneyland’s already the happiest place on earth, but throw in a massive parkwide food festival—and now it’s somehow even happier. Running nearly two full months, the Disney California Adventure Food & Wine Festival takes over the state-themed park with eight different culinary marketplaces with themes such as garlic, local breweries and wineries, peppers and food-truck fare. Just be sure you don’t forget the rides in all of the culinary whirlwind—fan-favorite Soarin’ will temporarily bring back its California-themed version just for the occasion.

  • Music
  • Latin and world
  • Westside

Catch sets from up-and-coming performers, local legends and global talents during this free music series at the Getty, which features a pair of shows from a different band each weekend. The concerts kick off in February with Inuit soul musicians Pamyua and continue in March with gospel choir Jimetta Rose & the Voices of Creation and April with Persian poets Mahsa and Marjan Vahdat. Get there early to check out the museum’s exhibitions, then head to the Harold M. Williams Auditorium for the show.

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • Miracle Mile

It doesn’t matter if you win by an inch or a mile—or if you’re more of a fan of the street racing and respect era or heists and hackers phase of Fast & Furious: There’s plenty of familiar motorized might to behold at this Petersen Automotive Museum exhibition honoring the high-adrenaline film franchise. You’ll find roughly 20 screen-used cars and production prototypes—including ones on loan from Vin Diesel’s private collection, as well as from the late Paul Walker—on display in the second floor of the Miracle Mile museum.

It’s a very Fast & Furious kind of year in L.A. between Universal Studios’ roller coaster and this 25th anniversary exhibition. While the Petersen’s exhibition is certainly encyclopedic (the selections here span the entirety of the franchise, with a particular focus on the first three films), it’s not overly academic: Brief labels will let you know the story behind the stunt car you’re staring at, but this is ultimately an opportunity to ogle American muscle cars and custom Japanese imports (as well as the franchise’s melodramatic quotes about family). Highlights on display include the 1993 Toyota Supra “Stunt #3” and 1995 Mitsubishi Eclipse driven by Brian O’Conner (Paul Walker) in the original film, Dominic Toretto’s (Vin Diesel) 1968 Dodge Charger R/T and 1993 Mazda RX-7, and Suki’s (Devon Aoki) very pink 2001 Honda S2000.

  • Things to do
  • Markets and fairs
  • USC/Exposition Park

More than 200 of SoCal’s most innovative inventors, tinkerers and makers will come together to share their creations during this free celebration of science and creativity. Last year’s event at Exposition Park drew over 30,000 people; this year, the faire is back with educational programming aplenty. Fuel up at food trucks in the middle of all the hands-on learning and inspiration.

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • USC/Exposition Park
  • Recommended

Nature lovers, rejoice! The Natural History Museum is bringing back its annual Butterfly Pavilion, which will be open March 22 through August 23 and house up to 30 butterfly and moth species, as well as an assortment of California plants. The seasonal outdoor exhibit allows for adults and children alike to witness nature up close—we’re talking walking amid hundreds of butterflies and having them land on your arms or shoulders. You’ll need to purchase a $10 add-on ticket on top of your museum ticket in order to explore the pavilion for a half-hour.

  • Things to do
  • Late openings
  • Griffith Park
  • Recommended

Explore the Autry into the evening at the Griffith Park museum’s Thursday-night series that spotlights the city’s emerging and established artists, musicians, poets and writers. Programming ranges from free salsa lessons to DJ sets to old-timey radio plays. The museum galleries stay open late, too, plus drinks and food trucks are also on offer.

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • Rancho Palos Verdes/Rolling Hills Estates

You may have come across Danish artist Thomas Dambo’s massive troll sculptures—which he makes from reclaimed wood and hides in nature to encourage people to get out and enjoy the outdoors—on Instagram. But you don’t need to book a trip to Denmark to see the gentle giants. The 87 acres of Palos Verdes’s South Coast Botanic Garden are currently home to 12 of the whimsical figures, and you can glimpse them all with your general admission ticket. For $33, you can take a guided walking tour of the Twelvelings (with general admission included). To see the trolls in a different light, one night a month, the gardens will host the Canopy Club—an after-hours dance party in the woods with pop-up performances, food and drinks ($34–$50).

  • Things to do
  • Little Tokyo

Cure a case of the Mondays with a restorative sound bath at the Japanese American Cultural & Community Center’s private Garden of the Clear Stream, an urban oasis in Little Tokyo. At the start of every week in April, you can bring a mat and enjoy an hour of healing sounds and reflection amid the garden’s lush flora and cascading waterfall. Afterward, stick around to purchase lunch and a matcha and enjoy them in the garden.

Advertising
  • Music
  • Downtown

Treat your ears to a vibrant concert on a spring or summer night by attending MUSE/IQUE’s annual program. This concert series, held at cultural venues across L.A., features a mix of performances inspired by music movements and public figures, including tributes to Quincy Jones, Joni Mitchell, the world of Oz, the Harlem Renaissance, the American Sound and more. You can make a $75 donation to the performing arts nonprofit for a single event, or become a MUSE/IQUE member if you’re interested in multiple programs.

  • Shopping
  • Pasadena
  • Recommended

Perhaps the Los Angeles area’s most iconic flea market, this event around the exterior of the Rose Bowl is staggeringly colossal—but what else would you expect from a 90,000-seat stadium? The sheer size and scale of this flea market means that it encompasses multitudes: new and old, handcrafted and salvaged, the cheap and the costly. On the second Sunday of each month, treasure hunt among the odd mix of vendors that populates the loop around the stadium—and don’t miss the rows and rows of old furniture, albums and vintage clothes and accessories that fill the adjacent parking lot.

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Long Beach

Step aboard the Queen Mary and into your own Agatha Christie novel at this new interactive murder mystery dinner from the team behind Murder & Mayhem on the Mary. Based on the ocean liner’s real-life “Last Great Cruise,” which set off from Southampton on Halloween 1967, the spooky yet silly experience combines a multi-course dinner with comedy, clues, live music and audience participation. 

  • Puppet shows
  • Highland Park

Celebrate the history, diversity and wildlife of our fair city with the locally beloved Bob Baker Marionette Theater. This puppet-filled ode to L.A. first debuted in 1981 for the city’s bicentennial, and while it retains its retro charm, it’s been refreshed for 2026 with new animal puppets and updates that reflect Los Angeles today.

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Walks and tours
  • Rancho Palos Verdes/Rolling Hills Estates
  • Recommended

Feeling like you and your four-legged friend are attached at the hip? Spend even more quality time together during this dog-friendly series at Palos Verdes’ South Coast Botanic Garden. One Sunday a month, you can roam the gardens’ 87 acres with your fur baby. Nearly all of the paths are open to pups, except for the rose garden and a couple of other small areas. You’ll find plenty of water stations set up across the grounds, as well as an optional obedience class for purchase. You—the human—will need a reservation, while your best friend—the pup—will need to remain on their leash at all times, including in the parking lot.

  • Art
  • Film and video
  • Miracle Mile
  • Recommended

When Mexican director Alejandro G. Iñárritu made his debut feature, Amores Perros, over a million feet of film didn’t make it to the final cut (to put that into perspective, the finished two-and-a-half-hour movie used around 18,000 feet of film). Twenty five years later, some of these unearthed reels of celluloid now zip through a ground-floor gallery at LACMA as part of a multi-channel film installation. As much a piece of sculpture as it is film or video art, Sueño Perro assembles six 35mm projectors that pierce the hazy near-dark space with raw, nonlinear snippets of the movie, fed from a mesmerizing curtain of film stock speeding along sprockets. It’s an intense experience, both sonically (during the car crash that connects the feature’s storylines) and visually (dog fighting plays a pivotal role in the film, though you’ll see here some of the behind-the-scenes tricks that kept the production cruelty-free).

Advertising
  • Art
  • Galleries
  • Hollywood

Celebrated Chicana artist Judy Baca’s half-mile-long The Great Wall of Los Angeles, a collaborative mural begun in the ’70s along the Tujunga Wash, has received all sorts of museum love in the past few years, including at a LACMA show where the muralist and her team painted new sections of the work during museum hours. Now, Baca and the Social and Public Art Resource Center are returning to Jeffrey Deitch Los Angeles to exhibit the newest segment of the mural—which documents activism and resistance in the 1970s—continuing their mission to give voice to the voiceless through art.

  • Things to do
  • Markets and fairs
  • Downtown Arts District
  • Recommended

Every Sunday, you can find dozens of food vendors at this market at ROW DTLA, a Brooklyn import that boasts a mix of much-loved pop-ups and future foodie stars. Thirteen new vendors are joining the lineup this year: Feast on burgers and orange chicken sandwiches from Terrible Burger, Viennese street food from Franzl’s Franks, Neapolitan-meets-Persian pies from Mamani Pizza, plant-based corn dogs from Stick Talk and more. Wash it all down at the family-friendly beer garden. You’ll also find shopping stalls selling everything from framed vintage ads to jewelry made locally with ethically sourced gemstones. Entry and the first two hours of parking are free.

Advertising
  • Movies
  • Downtown
  • Recommended

The masters of alfresco rooftop movie viewing, Rooftop Cinema Club is your snazzy, comfortable and less stressful alternative to other outdoor movie screenings. The series is known for its excellent film choices, comfy lawn chairs and a steady supply of snacks and booze. And instead of listening to the movie over loudspeakers, you’ll get a set of wireless headphones so you never have to miss a word. Enjoy a steady stream of modern classics (InceptionPride & Prejudicelocal favorites (La La LandFriday) and recent releases (Sinners, The Housemaid), as well as the odd TV marathon, screened atop LEVEL DTLA. 

  • Things to do
  • Buena Park

Spring at Knott’s Berry Farm means a celebration of its namesake fruit, and come mid-March you’ll be able to stuff your face with all things boysenberry. Knott’s turns its theme park into a food fest of sorts, with dozens of boysenberry-infused items that you can try to work your way through, thanks to an event tasting card. (Of course, there’ll be boysenberry-themed merch, too, plus crafts from local artisans.) Expect both delicious and questionable boysenberry creations alike—think elote, sausage, tortillas, smoothies, Brussels sprouts, bao buns, wings, sangria, beer and wine. Park admission starts at $65, while a pass with three tasting items and parking costs $95. If you already have a season pass or an admission ticket, a six-item tasting card costs $55.

Advertising
  • Art
  • Sculpture
  • Downtown

Robert Therrien’s Under the Table has long been one of the most popular pieces in the Broad’s collection (you know the one—the giant table and chairs that you ask your friend to snap a photo of as you stand underneath). Well now the museum is hosting the largest-ever solo exhibition of the artist’s work, displaying more than 120 pieces, including many that have never been shown in museums before. Expect more huge housewares and striking works, plus some intimate drawings and surprises from the late L.A.-based artist. The specially ticketed show will fill the first-floor galleries through April 5, 2026.

  • Art
  • Prints & editions
  • Melrose

Made up of a Melrose Avenue workshop and two galleries—including one designed by Frank Gehry—Gemini G.E.L. has been at the forefront of fine art printmaking for 60 years now, an accomplishment it’s celebrating in this show which doubles as a love letter to L.A. On display are innovative works by artists including David Hockney, Roy Lichtenstein, Ed Ruscha and Robert Rauschenberg—many of which haven’t been shown in decades—which are inspired by the atmosphere and streets of Los Angeles.

Advertising
  • Museums
  • Art and design
  • Miracle Mile

Whether or not you follow soccer, you probably know by now that Los Angeles is hosting eight matches of the World Cup in summer 2026. In celebration of its arrival, this LACMA show will display Lyndon J. Barrois Sr.’s ode to the world’s most beloved sport. The artist’s miniature “sportraits” re-create classic moments in both women’s and men’s soccer using materials like gum wrappers, glue and paint—even if you’re not a sports fan, the playful sculptures and stop-motion animations will win you over.

  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • Pacific Palisades

The reopened Getty Villa will descend into the underworld with this exhibition, which looks at the ritual spells and religious writings ancient Egyptians employed to garner favor with Re and Osiris in the afterlife. See the Getty’s collection of rare Book of the Dead rare hieroglyphics-adorned and illustrated manuscripts, dating back to around 1000 BCE, which were last displayed in 2023. The show should dovetail nicely with the museum’s “Sculpted Portraits From Ancient Egypt,” which runs through January 2027.

Advertising
  • Museums
  • History
  • USC/Exposition Park

A display of over 30 mummified people and animals is back at the California Science Center; after the exhibition debuted there back in 2010, it traveled through the U.S. and Europe before returning to L.A., which is the final stop on its tour before the artifacts are returned to their lending museums. This time around, you can see a selection of specimens never before shown in Los Angeles.

Mummies are, of course, most often associated with ancient Egypt, and while Egypt is represented here, you’ll also see mummified remains that were discovered in Germany, Hungary, Peru—even the University of Maryland, which in the 1990s carried out the first ancient Egyptian-style mummification performed in 2,800 years.

Memorable artifacts include the two Peruvian “bundle” mummies making their West Coast debut, amulets and organ jars (just like you learned about in history class), an ancient Egyptian cat mummy and a shrunken (but still very cute) sloth head. Be warned, though, that as you make your way through the different rooms, the displays become more macabre and, dare I say, haunting, with mummified organs and babies—so make sure you (and any kids in attendance) know what you’re getting into before visiting the exhibition.

The museum’s IMAX theater will be screening the complementary 40-minute Mummies 3D: Secrets of the Pharaohs, and if you buy combo tickets for both the exhibition and film, you get a small discount on both.

  • Museums
  • Fashion and costume
  • South Park

Step back into the era of grunge, supermodels and the dawn of the internet at this free exhibition at the ASU FIDM Museum in DTLA. This retrospective explores the decade’s spirit of rebellion and experimentation, featuring high-fashion couture from icons like Vivienne Westwood and Gianni Versace alongside the flannel shirts, slip dresses and bold prints that defined everyday style. Through a curated mix of garments, vintage magazines and video footage, visitors can trace how 1990s innovation continues to shape contemporary trends.

Advertising
  • Museums
  • Art and design
  • Westside

Anonymous feminist art collective the Guerrilla Girls—whose members gained notoriety for donning gorilla masks and fighting the patriarchy—is coming up on its 40th anniversary, and the Getty Center is marking the occasion with a behind-the-scenes look at the group. See photography, protest art and the group’s famed posters—sporting statistics, bold visuals and satirical humor—that showcase the tactics the members used to demand recognition for women and artists of color. The Guerrilla Girls have even created a newly commissioned work for the exhibition. And you can add your own mark on the “graffiti wall” installation, giving visitors a creative outlet for their complaints about the world today. 

Accompanying programming throughout the run of the show will include a conversation between the Guerrilla Girls and author Roxane Gay, a feminist Valentine’s Day mail art workshop, cocktail receptions with the exhibition curators, tours and more.

  • Museums
  • Movies and TV
  • Miracle Mile
  • 5 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

Ponyo loves Sosuke! And we love this exhibition at the Academy Museum dedicated to the wholesome Hayao Miyazaki film. Studio Ghibli donated more than 100 objects to the Academy Collection, and you’ll find everything from an animation desk to colorful art boards to dozens of frame-by-frame pencil drawings of the scene when Sosuke first finds Ponyo. Though you may recognize a couple of items from the museum’s debut Hayao Miyazaki retrospective, the vast majority of Ponyo pieces are new—and some have never been displayed in North America before. It’s also a colorful and super kid-friendly exhibition; you can watch clips of the gorgeously hand-drawn movie, recreate the wave-running scene and even make your own stop-motion animation. You’ll find it on the museum’s second floor, inside the first few galleries of the “Stories of Cinema’ space.

Advertising
  • Museums
  • Music
  • South Park

The beloved late singer, who’s ascended to music and fashion icon status since her untimely death in 1995, is the focus of a new show at the Grammy Museum. Co-curated by the singer’s sister, Suzette Quintanilla, the exhibition peeks behind the curtain of Selena’s life, artistry and career, exploring how her legacy continues as a symbol of empowerment for both young women and Latin communities. Though the exhibition is limited to a single gallery on the fourth floor, it’s packed with iconic items: You can see the singer’s personal artifacts displayed for the first time outside of the Selena Museum in Corpus Christi, Texas, including her Grammy Award, cellphone, hand-drawn fashions and microphone, still marked with her signature red lipstick. In preparation for the opening, artist Mister Toledo recently created a mural of the singer outside the museum.

  • Museums
  • History
  • Pasadena Playhouse District

The Pacific Asia Museum’s galleries have been closed for months in preparation for this immersive new exhibition, which is taking over the entire museum and marks a new, artist-centered shift to its programming. The ambitious show will use the visual language of mythology to take visitors on an immersive journey through the immigrant experience, combining objects from USC PAM’s 5,000-year-spanning historical collection with new media technology and works by over 20 contemporary artists, led by L.A.-based Korean American muralist Dave Young Kim. Highlights include a wrap-around video installation in a reconstructed airplane cabin and an AI feature that puts visitors in the shoes of an immigrant. Along the way, mythical creatures—dragons, cranes, guardian spirits and shapeshifters—nod to intergenerational legacies.

Advertising
  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • Little Tokyo
  • 5 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

When I first stepped foot inside of this exhibition of decommissioned Confederate monuments and reflective contemporary art pieces, I was taken aback by the scale of it all. I’d seen the installation photos of the side-by-side statues of Confederate generals Stonewall Jackson and Robert E. Lee on horseback, but as I craned my neck up at these towering tributes, they felt awe-inspiring in the most dreadful meaning of the phrase.

Most Angelenos don’t need to be convinced of the immoralities of the Confederacy—but most likely haven’t been forced to come face-to-face with such Civil War iconography either. “Monuments,” displayed almost entirely at MOCA’s Little Tokyo warehouse with a single Kara Walker installation at the Brick in East Hollywood, presents tangible proof that these monuments removed from public view over the past decade were not simple, somber remembrances for the recently deceased, these were larger-than-life celebrations of the Confederacy forged in the Jim Crow era and often financed by folks seeking to twist its history.

Works from 19 artists respond either directly or thematically to the many statues on display, or in some cases physically alter them: Bethany Collins’s Love is dangerous chisels pieces of the granite pedestal of a Stonewall Jackson monument into Carolina rose petals. Other graffitied or paint-splattered statues speak for themselves: The Robert E. Lee monument at the center of 2017’s Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia resides here reduced to a pile of bronze ingots and a bucket of leftover slag.

The matter-of-fact wall text lends context to hauntingly-shot portraits of wicked people and beautifully-detailed busts of complicated figures. Seated in front of a colossal globe, a monument to Matthew Fontaine Maury pays homage to the father of modern oceanography—who, the wall text notes, sought to expand American slavery into Brazil. The text next to a comparatively modest statue of Josephus Daniels notes his progressive stances on women’s suffrage and trust busting—and advocacy for white supremacy.

“Monuments” is a tremendous undertaking in every sense, and easily L.A.’s most essential exhibition to see in 2025 (and 2026, as its run extends through the spring). It’s worth every cent of its $18 ticket price, though if you book far enough ahead of time, you can take advantage of free admission on the first Friday of every month.

  • Museums
  • Movies and TV
  • Miracle Mile
  • Recommended

Don’t go in the water, but do go to the Academy Museum to see the largest exhibition ever dedicated to Steven Spielberg’s original summer blockbuster, Jaws—which is celebrating its 50th anniversary. The museum was already home to the last surviving model shark from filming, but now you can go behind the scenes and see some 200 original objects from the film across multiple galleries. Some highlights: a re-creation of the Orca fishing boat, the dorsal fin used both in Jaws and its sequels, costumes worn by the central trio and a room full of vintage film posters and merch promoting the film. There are interactive elements, too: You can have your own Chief Brody dolly-zoom moment (and see the lens used to film the famous shot), play the iconic John Williams two-note score and control a replica of the mechanical shark.

Advertising
  • Museums
  • Science and technology
  • USC/Exposition Park

The California Science Center is inviting kids to get in the game with a new 17,000-square-foot exhibition about the power of play and the human body in motion. Besides teaching about the science behind sports, it also offers interactive challenges and video coaching from a team of Los Angeles-based mentor athletes including dancer Debbie Allen, the Dodgers’ World Series hero Freddie Freeman, Olympic medalist softball player Rachel Garcia and more. And for the first time ever, the center has commissioned public art—all by local artists—to complement the exhibition, including a Dodgers mural by Gustavo Zermeño Jr. The free exhibition will run at the Science Center through the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

  • Art
  • Installation
  • USC/Exposition Park

The Natural History Museum’s taxidermy dioramas turn a century old this year, and to celebrate the museum is reviving an entire hall of displays that’ve been dark for decades. Expect some fresh approaches to these assembled snapshots of the wilderness, including alebrijes made of recycled materials, a crystalline depiction of pollution and a tech-driven display of the L.A. River.

Advertising
  • Museums
  • Movies and TV
  • Miracle Mile

Right on the heels of the release of his new film, Mickey 17, director Bong Joon Ho steps into the spotlight at the Academy Museum’s new exhibition. The first-ever museum show dedicated to the Oscar-winning South Korean filmmaker will trace Ho’s career, creative process and cinematic influences. See over 100 storyboards, posters, concept art, creature models, props and on-set photos from the director’s archive and personal collection. On Sundays, the museum’s on-site restaurant, Fanny’s, is offering an accompanying Korean Sunday Supper series with dishes like bibimbap and galbi jjim. You can reserve a spot here.

Advertising
Recommended
    Latest news
      Advertising