Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945-1980

Saving endangered histories of postwar art in Southern California and sharing them with the public

A painting of the back of the Hollywood sign with a deep red and yellow sunset.

Detail, "The Back of Hollywood," Ed Ruscha, 1977, oil on canvas, 22 x 80

Photo: Paul Ruscha

About

Goal

Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945–1980 was the first in what has become a regular series of region-wide initiatives of thematically linked public programming completed in partnership with cultural institutions across Southern California. There were three goals for the inaugural Pacific Standard Time: rescue an endangered history of L.A. art, making it accessible to future generations; create broad recognition of the international significance of art in Los Angeles; and create a new model for large-scale collaboration.

Outcomes

  • 68 linked exhibitions and public programs throughout Southern California supported by Getty funding

  • Related exhibitions at the Getty Center

  • 40 publications containing new research on postwar art across the region

  • Regional weekends in which museums worked together on joint programming to move audiences from exhibition to exhibition

  • Two “college fairs” that promoted PST exhibitions and events for local faculty in art history, studio art, film, and other related disciplines

  • Significant archives of artists, gallerists, curators, and critics processed at thirteen different institutions

  • Completion of nearly 350 oral history interview, now permanently available in the Special Collections of the Getty Research Institute

  • Impact report on grantmaking outcomes

  • Economic impact study from the LA Economic Development Corporation

Background

Resources