Page Museum — La Brea Tar Pits

Page Museum / La Brea Tar Pits
Wilshire Boulevard Miracle Mile
August 15, 2015

Page_exterior

We took Margaret to see the Ice Age fossil collection at the Page Museum. We have been there several times before but our most recent visit was two years ago. The La Brea “tar pits” (technically asphalt seep pools) are home to an unparalleled set of fossil remains from the Pleistocene period. In 1913, the first systematic excavations began when the Hancock family gave the newly established Los Angeles County Museum the sole right to excavate fossils from the tar pits for two years. Inside the museum are displayed many full skeleton fossils of extinct mammals such as mastodons, mammoths, sloths, horses, camels, dire wolves, and of course saber toothed cats, which Margaret liked best.

Page_interior

We opted to see one of the two shows on offer, “Ice Age Encounter,” a family friendly 15 minute docent presentation with media clips and a life size saber toothed cat puppet. There is also a 30 minute “Titans of the Ice Age” 3D film shown in another theater inside the museum. Both shows are ticketed separately from the basic museum admission.

Page_theater

We decided to skip the outside tour of the current excavations because of the record heat. That tour is included with the museum admission. The Page Museum is located in Hancock Park, next to LACMA (Los Angeles County Museum of Art), and it is generally a very nice park to stroll through. There are several active asphalt seeps within the park grounds, including a pit where excavation is still going on. Additionally, the museum is very busy with Project 23, an exploration of 23 separate large excavated boxes of material dug up recently when LACMA expanded its parking garage.

There is an area inside the museum where visitors can look through glass windows to see scientists, both paid and volunteers, sorting through fossils of various sizes, cleaning and categorizing them. It is fun to watch that activity and realize that this institution is not just a warehouse for fossils dug up years ago; it is also an ongoing research institution.

The basic admission price for adults is $12; with one show added, the price is $16; a “passport” including both shows is $19. Student, youth, and senior prices are $9 basic, $13 with one show, and $16 for the passport. For children ages 5-12 those prices are $5, $8, and $11. Wheelchair accessibility is good. The staff are cheerful and helpful.

We usually like to park in the lot behind the Page Museum when we visit it or LACMA. The charge is a $10 flat rate; that lot is located at the corner of Curson Ave. and 6th St., directly behind the museum. Enter from the western side of Curson Ave. However, it tends to fill by late morning, and we were running a little late today. We found it full, so parked across the street in the commercial parking garage behind Johnnie’s New York Pizzeria, our favorite area restaurant. We like to eat at Johnnie’s whenever we go to one of the Wilshire Boulevard museums – there are about half a dozen located within a block or two on “Museum Row” – and we made it our lunch stop today. Margaret was in touch with her inner hobbit and wanted mushrooms, so she ordered the mushroom calzone. Meredith ate cannelloni, and Bob had a chicken Panini. Both food and service were very good.

We met up with Meredith’s sister Kathleen at Starbucks back in the San Fernando Valley near Margaret’s home for cold drinks at the end of the day. The heat was even more extreme in the Valley then it had been at Hancock Park. We dashed from air-conditioned car to air-conditioned restaurant.

Margaret did a little better with the car / wheelchair transfers today. The exertion tires her, but her balance and ability to stand seemed a little better than on our last several visits. She did not talk much today, although she asked after her grandchildren, and she seemed engaged and happy at the museum.

Hammer Museum

Hammer Museum
Westwood
August 1, 2015

Enough digression for now! Time for a blog post which is both about a museum AND located in Southern California. On this visit we took Margaret to the Hammer Museum. We have taken her there several times before, although not since we started keeping this blog. The Hammer has several things to recommend it: admission is free, the permanent collection includes some very nice pieces, and it is relatively close to Margaret’s home in the Valley, although traffic is usually bad on the West Side. We are not big fans of contemporary art, which is the Hammer’s focus, so we only visit there when there are exhibitions of particular interest to us.

Today we saw all three of the featured special exhibitions. The Afghan Carpet Project is displayed in a small gallery on the ground floor and consists of six handmade carpets, all designed by contemporary Los Angeles artists, then handmade by weavers in Afghanistan. That exhibit runs through September 27, 2015, and when it has closed the carpets will be sold and the proceeds given to the nonprofit organization Arzu Studio Hope, working in Afghanistan.

Hammer cat

We enjoyed the photography exhibition Perfect Likeness: Photography and Composition, which runs through September 13, 2015. Meredith had seen a review of the exhibition in the Los Angeles Times, Making Photos, Not Taking Them. As the title of the exhibition suggests, the photographs featured are very beautiful and carefully composed, truly works of art in photographic media. Meredith was particularly taken by a large photo of a river landscape. Margaret was struck by a still life featuring a cat statuette and a vase of flowers. Bob liked a camera shop photo staged recently but based on an old snapshot of a camera store in the 1930s. The third special exhibition, Scorched Earth, features paintings and mixed media pieces by Mark Bradford. It runs through September 27, 2015.

We finished our visit with a swing through the permanent collection, which features traditional art, mainly paintings, from the Renaissance through the Impressionist era. Several signature pieces are currently not on exhibit, and a guard said they were on loan to other museums. The galleries have been rearranged so no obvious holes in the collection exist. There were plenty of nice pieces left for us to enjoy, including a large Eakins painting and a small Monet.

Hammer cafe

Partway through our visit we stopped to have lunch in the museum café. The menu was more extensive than we had recalled, and we all enjoyed our meals. Margaret had a BLT, Bob a grilled ham and cheese sandwich, and Meredith salmon benedict. The café is located in the museum courtyard, and the setting is quite pleasant, shaded by Chinese elms. The menu prices were a little high, but not unusually so for a museum restaurant or for Westwood.

As noted above, museum admission is free. (Their slogan is “free for good.”) On Saturday and Sunday parking costs a flat $3 charge for all day; during the week parking costs $3 for 3 hours with validation by the museum. Wheelchair accessibility is generally good. The elevator is quick and serves all floors. However, doors into galleries are heavy and do not have automatic opening mechanisms. Staff and other patrons assisted us with those doors today.

Margaret finds the car to wheelchair transfers harder than before. She tires easily. We are hoping that physical therapy will help her build strength so she can stand longer and take more steps, and we are trying to encourage her.

Inside Out

Pacific Winnetka Theater
Chatsworth
July 18, 2015

Meredith went up to Los Angeles without Bob, who was back in Massachusetts. She met up with our youngest daughter and her sister Kathleen, and they all took Margaret out to see the movie Inside Out. It proved to be, as we hoped, one of those animated movies with plenty of clever jokes for adults to enjoy, as well as a story line that younger viewers could follow. The group lingered in the coffee shop by the theater afterwards, and Meredith showed photos from our recent trip to Spain. She had also brought Comic-Con goodies, including an artist-signed print of the Inside Out emotion characters and the latest cartoon book by Lonnie Millsap for Margaret, and some Star Wars items for Kathleen.