This page is dedicated to exhibition of the artworks installed in public space.
本网页用来展览安装在公共场所美术作品。
The Los Angeles METRO subway systems opens three new stations on Friday, June 16, 2023 to make the transfer-free rides possible between Azusa and Long Beach, and between East Los Angeles and Long Santa Monica Beach. The three news stations are the Little Tokyo/Arts District Station, Historic Broadway Station, and the Grand Avenue Arts/Bunker Hill Station. The previous Gold Line connecting Azusa and East Los Angeles is divided into two portions; the northern portion of the Gold Line connecting Azusa and Union Station is merged with the Exposition Line to become the A Line connected by the three new stations; and the Southern portion of the Gold Line is merged with the Blue Line to become the E Line, also connected by the same three new stations. In each station, new artworks are installed. The most amazing ones are the 61 feet high and 17 feet wide glass mosaic that towers over the Grand Avene Arts/Bunker Hill Station’s prominent concourse elevator lobby. Titled High Prismatic, the glass mosaic is created by Pearl C. Hsiung, and Red Car Requiem by Mark Steven Greenfield, a 10 feet high by approximately 165 feet long glass mosaic at the The Historic Broadway Station.
Little Tokyo Art District Station
Entrance to the Little Tokyo Art District Station.
Plateform at the Little Tokyo Art District Station.
Historic Broadway Station
Mark Steven Greenfield, Red Car Requiem, 2022, glass mosaic.
Ralph Gilbert, Performance on the Street, 2023, lightbox exhibition, Duratrans films.
Entrance to the HistoricBroadway Station.
Inside the HistoricBroadway Station.
Grand Av Arts/Bunker Hill Station
Samira Yamin, All is Flux, 023, lightbox exhibition, Duratrans films.
Pearl C. Hsiung, High Prismatic, 2022, glass mosaic.
Edward Locke and LACC Cub in front of Pearl C. Hsiung's High Prismatic, glass mosaic.
Details of Pearl C. Hsiung, High Prismatic, 2022, glass mosaic.
Entrance to the Grand Avenue Arts/Bunker Hill Station.
Platform at the Grand Avenue Arts/Bunker Hill Station.
Murals in the Latino Community (Cities of Los Angeles, City Terrace and Monterey Park)
Analysis of other artworks in permanent display in public space in Latino-American communities in the Greater Los Angeles area can be found in Artistic Expressions in Public Spaces in Los Angeles and Some Other American Cities (1st file, 2nd file, 3rd file, and 4th file). These research papers explore art works (murals, sculptures, building decorations and others) found in permanent display in public and commercial spaces, such as shopping malls, college campuses, and parks, in the Greater Los Angeles Area and some other American cities. The research paper intends to understand the meaning of arts in the everyday life of the communities. Another article, The Great Wall of Los Angeles, deals with a series of mural paintings on the western wall of the aqueduct along the Coldwater Canyon Avenues, beneath the Tujunga Greenbelt, between the Oxnard Street and the Burbank Boulevard, by the western border of Los Angeles Valley College, a great mural project on the history of California sponsored by the Social and Public Art Resource Center.