Our day wasn't done after Walt's Barn. We did lunch and then moved on to the Autry Museum of the American West.
This Museum brings together the stories of all peoples of the American West, connecting the past with the present to inspire our shared future. The Autry features unique galleries filled with paintings, sculptures, film memorabilia, photographs, historic firearms and so much more, all related to the American West. The Autry’s more than 600,000 pieces of art and cultural objects include one of the largest and most significant collections of Native American materials in the United States.For those who don't know the namesake of this museum, Orvon Grover "Gene" Autry, nicknamed the Singing Cowboy, was an American actor, musician, singer, composer, rodeo performer, and baseball team owner, who largely gained fame by singing in a crooning style on radio, in films, and on television for more than three decades, beginning in the early 1930s. He co-founded the Autry Museum of the American West in 1988.While we didn't have quite enough energy to do this museum justice we did have an incredibly fun time exploring what we could. In the long-term exhibition Imagined Wests, visitors of all ages can explore the ways we tell stories about the American West through pop culture, clothing, toys, art, archives, and other media. The exhibition features over 250 objects from the Autry collections, as well as multimedia and hands-on activities, including the museum’s popular “green screen.” The gallery asks, as we so often do at the Autry, “What is a Western?Oh my gosh, the green screen. We were so ripe to be thoroughly impressed by this. Just looking at these images makes me crack up as hard as I did on Sunday. HYSTERICAL.The green backdrop means that only the subject is picked up in photography or filming, making it possible to add a different background or scene during post-production. This is achieved thanks to a technique called chroma keying. Green screens are popular in product photography, advertising, film, television and more. When can one sit happily while a great white approaches or a T-rex?Oh man, still laughing!The museum offered numerous hands-on activities. I enjoyed Write Your West. You spin each wheel to get two different words. The writing prompt is "What is the title of your book and what's it about?"With only a little time, Coyote Raygun read, "He took his taloned paws, aimed the raygun at his enemy and vaporized him. That coyote has skill. The enemy had no chance. 'Who's the big dog?' coyote asks." Funny stuff.
One exhibition illuminated the sweep of American Western history through one of its definitive artifacts: the firearm. The display in the Gamble Firearms Gallery features some of the finest specimens of the gun maker’s art by iconic manufacturers such as Remington, Colt, Smith & Wesson, and Winchester, among others. Their history, provenance, and craftsmanship contribute to a museum display of nearly unmatched value.Art of the West showcases the dynamic and evolving world of art that springs from the cultural practices of some of the many peoples who have shaped the American West. This exhibition is the first of its kind to explore how shared values and interests have inspired artists from different cultures and times to create distinctive, powerful works that speak to their experience of the West as both a destination and a home.Here we got to 'meet' various arts and learn about them through their holograms. This is Luis Tapia.He shares, via his Spanish Colonial Carreta, that "In Hispanic and Chicano culture, customized cars called lowriders have special meaning. Designed to cruise low and slow, lowriders sport spectacular paint jobs and handcrafted interiors."One exhibit that really demands more time, and explanation, is Future Imaginaries. "It explores the rise of Futurism in contemporary Indigenous art as a means of enduring colonial trauma, creating alternative futures and advocating for Indigenous technologies in a more inclusive present and sustainable future. Over 50 artworks are on display, some interspersed throughout the museum, creating unexpected encounters and dialogues between contemporary Indigenous creations and historic Autry works."Wendy Red Star places Indigenous people in surreal spacescapes wearing fantastical regalia.
Out of Site: Survey Science and the Hidden West demanded a much longer explore and maybe Steve to explain it to me. The exhibit focused on three technological revolutions to examine how visual technologies, artistic interventions, and the workings of state power have evolved in tandem with the Western landscape: wet-plate photography, used to theorize geological processes; the rise of aerial photography and pattern recognition; and the increasing use of drones, satellites, and other long-range photographic technologies to image secretive sites, military installations, and other technologically-mediated locales. The exhibition features 90 artworks, archival materials, and devices ranging from mammoth plate cameras to drones.This image sums up our day. It was one of whimsy, discovery, perplexities, and great friendship. It was truly an exceptional LA day!
Recent Comments