Assorted Updates

Over the last month or two we have seen more than the usual number of items in the press that tie into places we have visited recently. Here is a sampling:

La Brea Tarpits History. The Los Angeles Times ran a retrospective article, A mammoth move to the tar pits, on November 1, 2015 (November 2 print edition), pulling from coverage they did in 1967 explaining the history of the outdoor mammoth sculptures in and around the large tar lake in Hancock Park. The article included several striking photos of the sculptures being transported and put in place. The famous fiberglass mammoths at the La Brea tar pits have kept watch over Wilshire Boulevard for five decades. But few who gaze at the tourist attraction know how the prehistoric “creatures” got there. It turns out the first one got a lift from a 1958 Volkswagen.

Urban Planners Give Olvera Street a Shout Out. Also in the Los Angeles Times, we saw an article reporting on Olvera Street’s grand honor, namely national recognition as a “great street,” based on architectural features, accessibility, functionality, and community involvement. Downtown’s historic Olvera Street, one of the oldest streets in Los Angeles, was named this week as one of the country’s top five “Great Streets” by the American Planning Assn. The brick pedestrian street “is a place where visitors can get a taste of Mexican culture and a sense of the history that still stands preserved in the buildings and plazas that surround the street,” the association said in its designation.

Everybody Loves Vermeer. The Vermeer painting we loved so much when we saw it at the Timken Museum in San Diego — Woman in Blue Reading a Letter — has moved on, this time to the National Gallery in Washington, DC, where it will be on display just until December 1. NPR ran this story about the exhibition.

Timken Acquires New Art. Not content to rest on its laurels after the Vermeer and Raphael special exhibitions, the Timken Museum has purchased a painting, Saint Francis in Meditation by Francisco Zurbaran. The San Diego Union Tribune reported on the acquisition in an article in its October 30, 2015 online edition (November 1 print): The Timken Museum of Art has purchased Zurbarán’s 1635 masterpiece “Saint Francis in Meditation,” the first acquisition in a decade for the 50-year-old Balboa Park institution and the second Zurbarán acquired by a San Diego museum this year.

Hammer Museum Acquires More Room to Spread Out. Just after we had been on our most recent visit to the Hammer Museum in Westwood, we saw an article in the Los Angeles Times, More space, more room for art, which appeared online October 26, 2015 (October 27 in the print edition). The Hammer Museum at UCLA is expanding its footprint in Westwood, taking over five floors of the Occidental Petroleum office tower that will give the contemporary art institution more than 30% additional exhibition and administrative space. Until recently, the Hammer had leased its space from Occidental. Officials at the Hammer and UCLA said Monday that the expansion is part of a recent real estate deal in which the university has become the Hammer’s new landlord. UCLA said it has acquired a full city block of property from Occidental that includes the office tower and the museum building, both of which had belonged to the oil company. The acquisition also includes the 634-space underground parking garage.

Page Museum — La Brea Tar Pits

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

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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.

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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.

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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.