The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California (2024)

2004:06:23:13:53:39 8DAYS: MUSEUMS CALENDAR WEEKENDLOS ANGELES E66 Come discover the strange-but-true ways ocean animals survive and thrive in their watery world at Weird, Wild, and Wonderful at the Aquarium of the Pacific beginning May 21, 2004.Meet mysterious sea dragons, prehistoric sawfish, deadly stonefish, and a sea of unusual creatures. And learn why these fantastic and bizarre adapta- tions are necessary for these ani- mals to reproduce, eat, oravoid being eaten. Discover another world with your family at the Aquarium of the Pacific! DO CHAINSAWS SOME PREDATORS CARRY For advance tickets, call (562) 590-3100 or visit www.aquariumofpacific.org. 100 AQUARIUM WAY LONG BEACH, CA 90802 Museum of Contemporary Art, down- town San Diego 1001 Kettner San Diego. 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

Free. (619) 234-1001. Cerca Series: Mark Mulroney Car- toon-like paintings of landscapes that in- clude abandoned mattresses, fragments of ranch-style homes and old shipping pal- ettes; ends Aug. 8. Chicano Now: American Ex- pressions Contemporary Chicano culture is explored, with a touch of irreverent humor, in this exhibition that offers performance, installation and video art, photography and ahydraulically operated low-rider car simu- lator; ends Sept.

12. Museum of Latin American Art 628 Alami- tos Long Beach. 11:30 a.m.-7 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m.

11 and younger, free. (562) 437-1689. Hunter of Fantasies Aretro- spective of works of the Salvadoran painter who creates surreal and brilliantly colored compositions in the tradition of Central American expressionists; ends Oct. 17. Museum of Tolerance 9786 W.

Pico mon Wiesenthal Plaza, L.A. 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tolerance Center and Holocaust Exhibit, some exhibits may require separate admission. (310) 553- 8403. Friedl Dicker-Brandeis and the Children of Terezin: An Exhibition of Art and Hope Paint- ings by the children of Terezin concen- tration camp, as well as about 165 works by their teacher, Dicker-Brandeis; ends July 20.

Norton Simon Museum of Art 411 W. Colo- rado Pasadena. noon-6 p.m.; noon-9 p.m. 18 and younger, free. (626) 449-6840.

Chinese Art From the Permanent Collection A selection of Chinese works of art, most on view at the museum for the first time; ends Sept. 20. The Magical World of Ynez Johnston Rarely seen works on paper, including 30 watercolor paintings, etchings and litho- graphs created during the 1950s and ends Sept. 6. Painted Poems: Rajput Paintings from the Ramesh and Urmil Kapoor Collection Colorful works depict stories from the great Hindu epics, religious texts, poems from devotional literature and scenes from daily life; ends Sept.

6. Pacific Asia Museum 46 N. Los Robles Pasadena. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 11 and younger, free.

(626) 449-2742. AModern Pursuit of Ancient Feel- ings: Chinese Paintings by Zhou Ping-guang The local detailed paintings of birds and flowers incorporate modern sensibil- ities into traditional Chinese paintings; ends July 4. Petersen Automotive Museum 6060 Wil- shire L.A. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. (323) 930-2277.

French Curves: The Automobile as Sculpture An exhibit celebrat- ing the graceful coach work of Delahaye, Bugatti, Hispano-Suiza, and other French coach builders who designed according to the Art Deco Streamline Moderne aesthetic; ends Jan. 23. Richard J. Riordan Central Library 630 W. 5th L.A.

10 a.m.-8 p.m.; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; 1-5 p.m. (213) 228- 7000. Enterprising Women: 250 Years of Ameri- can Business Artifactstell the stories of more than 40 women who helped shape the landscape of American Business; ends Sept. 19. Richard Nixon Library Birthplace 18001 Yorba Linda Yorba Linda.

10 a.m.-5 p.m.; 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 7and younger, free. (714) 993-3393. How American! Commemorates Richard and Pat Nixon on the 10th anniversary of the former death; ends Oct. 3.

Ronald Reagan Presidential Library 40 Presidential Drive, Simi Valley. Daily 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 10 and younger, free. (805) 577-4000. Lewis Clark: Discoveries for All Ages Alook at the travels of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark through the American Northwest; ends Oct.

7. San Diego Museum of Art 1450 El Prado, San Diego. 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; 10 a.m.-9 p.m. 5 and younger, free. Special admission for 5 and younger, free.

(619) 232- 7931. American Beauty: Painting and Sculpture From the Detroit Institute of Arts Works that reflect major movements in visual art in early America, including the Hudson River School and American Impressionism; ends Oct. 3. Saint Peter and the Vatican: The Legacy of the Popes More than 390 of the works of art and historically significant ob- jects, many never before on view to the pub- lic. Ends Sept.

6. Sultans and Sufis: Paintings From the Deccan Aug. 15. Santa Monica Museum of Art 2525 Michi- gan Ave. Bergamot Station, Santa Monica.

11 a.m.-6 p.m. $3. (310) 586-6488. Alex Slade: Vacant Lot Aug. 14.

Ant Farm: 1968-1978 Aretrospective of the under- ground architectural collective Ant Farm, known for the iconic in- stallation of 10 Cadillacs buried nose down in the desert near Amarillo, Texas; ends Aug. 14. Hugh Poco*ck: This Garden Making Salt and Evaporation Drawings In the project room; ends Aug. 14. Skirball Cultural Center 2701 N.

Sepulveda L.A. noon-5 p.m.; 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 11 and younger, free. (310) 440-4500. Jewish Life in Ancient Egypt: A Fam- ily Archive From the Nile Valley Eight papyrus scrolls are accompanied by a life-size statue, bronze statuettes, reliefs and silver vessels and describe the daily life in an an- cient Jewish, Persian and Egyptian com- munity; ends July 18.

Traveling the Holy Land Through the Stereoscope Aug. 15. UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History Sunset and Westwood boulevards, West- wood. noon-5 p.m.; noon-8 p.m. Free.

(310) 825-4361. The Art of Exhibi- tion Afocus on the presentation of banners, signage, pedestals, security guards and wall texts that, along with the art displayed, shape museum experiences; ends July 18. Through My Eyes: The Filipino American Photographs of Ricardo Ocreto Alva- rado Arare collection of 51 photographs taken in Northern California during the 1940s and ends Aug. 1. Traces of India: Photography, Architecture and the Politics of Representation, 1850-1900 More than 200 photographs by travelers, military survey- ors and professional studios, within the context of the British colonial era; ends July 3.

UCLA Hammer Museum 10899 Wilshire Westwood. 11 a.m.-7 p.m.; 11 a.m.-9 p.m.; 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 17 and younger, free. (310) 443-7000. The Chinese Looking Glass: Dau- Voyages in a Foreign Land See version of Meets in lithographs that play on 19th century visual stereotypes that the French held about the Chinese and their culture; ends Aug.

15. Hammer Projects: Tara Donovan The sculpture takes commonplace monofila- ments and turns them into full, voluminous shapes by way of accumulation; ends Sept. 5. Made in Mexico Contemporary works that address artistic inspiration from socioeconomic, cultural and environmental landscape; ends Sept. 12.

Museum listings may be submitted to Compiled by Jess Holl. Openings TODAY Joe Schmelzer: New Photographs Medita- tions on ordinary life through images such as a personsmoking a cigarette, three red- wood trees or a clock on the table. Western Project Gallery, 3830 Main Culver City; ends July 24. (310) 838-0609. Taryn Simon: The Innocents Arecent photographic project that documents the stories of wrongfully convicted individuals who have served time in prison for violent crimes they commit.

Gagosian Gal- lery, 456 N. Camden Drive, Beverly Hills; ends Sept. 3. (310) 271-9400. FRIDAY Coco Fusco: Mrs.

George Gilbert A single channel video work about black phi- losopher Angela Davis that uses fictional and documentary source materials; Fusco also shows the video 10 by The Project, 962-B E. 4th L.A.; ends July 24. (213) 620-0692. SATURDAY 3 Solo Projects: Jane Mulfinger, Ross Rudel, Elizabeth Turk and Eve Luckring: Chicken installation invites visitors to walk on an inflated, silver vinyl cloud; sculptures rise from the gal- corners; and Turk has created seven carved marble sculptures. video installation projects a hide-and-seek chase with human-sized chickens.

Ben Maltz Gal- lery, 9045 Lincoln Blvd. Otis College of Art and Design, Westchester; ends Aug. 14. (310) 665-6905. Rachel Allen: Dream House and Group Show: Stay Inside Architect Allen presents a scale model, study model and video stills of her dream house; New York and Los Angeles artists present works that focus on interior spaces.

Shoshana Wayne Gallery, 2525 Michigan Santa Monica; ends Sept. 4. (310) 453-7535. American Stories: Marion Post Wolcott and FSA Photographers Photographs by Wolcott and other photographers who worked for the Farm Security Administra- tion beginning in 1935, documenting the wealth, poverty, land and people of America through 1943. Staton Greenberg Gallery, 15 W.

Anapamu Santa Barbara; ends Sept. 5. (805) 962-9876. Daniel Brice: Ocotillo and Benicia Gant- ner New drawings of charcoal lines and squares by Brice; Gantner constructs a stylized, synthetic landscape from materi- als such as laminated acrylic and adhesive vinyl. Ruth Bachofner Gallery, 2525 Michi- gan Santa Monica; ends July 31.

(310) 829-3300. Julia Snug and Group Show: Tight shows two pieces that use re- peated vessel forms made from patent leather, velveteen or cast vinyl; shows works that are highly crafted and contain conceptual elements. Post, 1904 E. 7th Place, L.A.; ends July 24. (213) 622-8580.

Elizabeth Gill Lui: China Vernacular The second half of From Both Sides of the exhibition features photographs of landscapes, build- ings and people. LMAN Gallery, 949 Chung King Road, L.A.; ends July 31. (213) 628- 3883. Tree Stokes: Places In Between Water- colors reconstruct memories of counters with ancient European ruins. Gal- lery 825 La Cienega West Hollywood; ends July 24.

(310) 652-8272. Group Show: Hombres Works by 10 Chicano artists, including Carlos Alma- raz, Raul Guerrero, Leo Limon, Gilbert Lu- jan and Eloy Torrez, whose works are also featured in the Museum of Contemporary Art, San show. Patricia Correia Gallery, 2525 Michigan Santa Monica; ends July 24. (310) 264- 1760. Group Show: Outsiders Works by Paul Pitsker, Dan Van Clapp and Anna Pelkey deal with being singled out for religious be- Galleries CALENDAR WEEKENDLOS ANGELES E11 Moviefone.com www.thenotebookmovie.com from the best-selling novel from the best-selling novel NEW LINE CINEMA PRESENTS A GRAN VIA PRODUCTION RYAN GOSLINGRACHEL ADAMSJAMES GARNERGENA JAMES MARSDENKEVIN CONNOLLY WITH SAM SHEPARD KARYN WAGNER COSTUME DESIGNER AARON ZIGMAN MUSIC COMPOSED BY SARAH KNOWLES PRODUCTION DESIGNER ALAN HEIM, A.C.E.

EDITOR AND NANCYGREEN-KEYES, C.S.A. MATTHEWBARRY, C.S.A. CASTING BY AND JOAN ALLEN ROBERT FRAISSE, AFC DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY TOBY EMMERICHAVRAM BUTCH KAPLAN EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS MARK JOHNSONLYNN HARRIS PRODUCED BY NICHOLASSPARKS BASED ON THE NOVEL BY JANSARDI ADAPTATION BY JEREMY LEVEN SCREENPLAY BY NICK CASSAVETES DIRECTED BY NEW LINE PRODUCTIONS, INC.ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE ON FOR SOME SEXUALITY ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE ON NEW LINE RECORDS FEATURING CLASSIC SONGS FROM JIMMY DURANTE, DUKE GOODMAN, BILLIE HOLIDAY GLENN MILLER. kind of passionate no-holds-barred love story we rarely see on with great performances by both generations of LEONARD MALTIN, HOT TICKET ROEPER are so powerful that they will touch you deeply LYONS, NBC-TV tofind sofine a film as as beautifuland rare a love story as ever caressed the SHALIT, THE TODAY SHOW THIS ROMANCE! 1 on THENEWYORKTIMES PaperbackList Mann Festival Daily 1:20 4:20 7:20 10:20 PM $3.00 parking after 6:00 PM in Parking $1.00 refunded with paid admission after 6:00 PM.

HOLLYWOOD at Sunset Vine On 2 Screens Fri, Tues 1:20 2:15 4:00 5:15 7:00 8:15 9:40 11:15 PM Sat-Sun 11:35 AM 1:20 2:15 4:00 5:15 7:00 8:15 9:40 11:15 PM Mon 1:20 2:15 4:00 5:15 7:00 8:15 9:40 11:05 PM 4 hours free validated parking with ticket purchase. CITY AMC Century 14 Fri, Mon-Tues 12:50 4:20 7:35 10:45 PM Sat-Sun 9:50 AM 12:50 4:20 7:35 10:45 PM 3 hrs free parking. Additional 2 hr parking $3.00 with AMC validation. HILLS The Grove Stadium 14 Fri-Sun, Mon 10:45 AM 1:40 4:30 7:20 10:10 PM Tues 10:45 AM 1:40 4:30 PM 4 hours on-site validated parking only $2.00. MONICA Loews Cineplex Broadway Cinemas Daily 12:00 3:00 7:15 10:15 PM CITY Loews Cineplex Universal Studios Cinema Fri-Sun, Mon-Tues 1:20 4:20 7:15 10:20 PM $2.00 parking rebate when you purchase a ticket for any show.

(Offer excludes Valet Parking Imax). LOS ANGELES The Bridge Cinema De Lux Fri-Sun 10:40 AM 1:30 4:20 7:10 10:00 PM Fri-Sat LateShow 12:30 AM Mon-Tues 1:30 4:20 7:10 10:00 PM Edwards Renaissance Stadium 14 VIEJO Edwards Aliso Viejo Stadium 20 AMC at Downtown District HILLS Cinema City Theatres HILLS Edwards Anaheim Hills Festival VALLEY Cinemark Movies 10 GRANDE Signature Theatres Festival 10 Cinemas ATASCADERO Century Cinemas Edwards Bakersfield Stadium 14 Valley Plaza Stadium 16 United Artists East Hills Mall New Barstow Station Edwards Brea Stadium 22 Cinemas PARK Metroplex 18 AMC Burbank 16 AMC Media Center North 6 Edwards Grand Palace Stadium Cinemas At The Commons Edwards Camarillo Palace 12 Cinemas CITY Mary Pickford 14 Edwards Cerritos Stadium 10 United Artists Galaxy Theatre at Los Cerritos Center Winnetka Stadium 21 Chino Spectrum Marketplace 12 Edwards Corona 15 Cinemas MESA Edwards Metro Pointe Stadium 12 MESA Edwards Triangle Square 8 AMC Covina 30 CITY Culver Stadium 12 Cypress Family Twin Downey Cinema 10 UltraStar Fontana 8 RANCH Regal Cinemas Foothill Towne Center Stadium 22 AMC Fullerton 20 GROVE Regal Cinemas Garden Grove Stadium 16 Glendale Cinemas HILLS Mann Granada Hills 9 Regal Cinemas Hemet 12 BEACH Edwards Charter Centre Edwards 21 Megaplex Cinemas Edwards Marketplace Stadium Cinema 10 Edwards Park Place 10 VALLEY Edwards Jurupa Stadium 14 Cinemas HABRA Regal Cinemas La Habra Marketplace Stadium 16 VERNE Edwards La Verne Stadium 12 HILLS Laguna Hills Mall Cinemas Lakewood Center Stadium 16 Cinemark 22 BEACH AMC Marina Pacifica 12 BEACH AMC Pine Square 16 BEACH Cinemark The Pike BEACH Edwards Long Beach Stadium 26 Cinemas MAMMOTH Plaza DEL REY United Artists Cinema VIEJO Edwards Kaleidoscope Stadium 10 Cinemas Monrovia Cinema 12 VALLEY UltraStar Canyon Springs Cinema 7 The Movie Experience 17 At California Oaks BEACH Edwards the Island Cinemas HOLLYWOOD United Artists Valley Plaza Northridge Fashion Center Stadium 10 AMC Norwalk 20 AMC Ontario Mills 30 Edwards Mountain Village Stadium 14 Cinemas Edwards Ontario Palace Stadium 22 AMC 30 At The Block Century Stadium 25 SPRINGS Signature Palm Springs One Colorado Cinemas Paseo Stadium 14 ROBLES Park Cinemas HILLS AMC Puente Hills 20 MIRAGE Century River 12 MIRAGE Signature Theatres Rancho 16 Redlands Cinema 14 BEACH AMC Galleria at South Bay 16 CinemaStar Ultraplex(TM) 18 at Mission Grove University Village Cinemas HILLS AMC Rolling Hills HILLS ESTATES Regal Cinemas The Avenue Stadium 13 BERNARDINO CinemaStar Empire 20 Theaters CLEMENTE San Clemente Cinema 6 JACINTO Signature Theatres Metro 12 LUIS OBISPO The Movie Experience Downtown Centre BARBARA Metro 4 BARBARA Plaza de Oro MARIA Edwards Santa Maria 10 Cinemas PAULA Santa Paula 7 Theatres OAKS Galleria Stadium 16 OAKS Sherman Oaks 5 VALLEY Edwards Simi Valley Plaza 10 Cinemas VALLEY Regal Cinemas Civic Center Stadium 16 BAY Beach Cities Stadium 16 Mann Valley West Edwards Temecula Stadium 15 Cinemas The Movie Experience At Tower Plaza OAKS Mann Janss Marketplace 9 Edwards Valencia Stadium 12 Cinemas Century Downtown 10 Century Stadium 16 Cinemark Movies 10 COVINA Edwards West Covina Stadium 18 HILLS Fallbrook 7 VILLAGE Mann Village 8 Whittier Village HILLS AMC Promenade 16 CHECK THEATRE DIRECTORIES OR CALL FOR SHOWTIMES SORRY, NO PASSES ACCEPTED FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT STARTS TOMORROW.

The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California (2024)

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