LOS ANGELES UNITED METHODIST MUSEUM OF SOCIAL JUSTICE
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​​WELCOME TO THE MUSEUM OF SOCIAL JUSTICE!

​The Museum & Education Center are home to a series of diverse Public Programs and Education Initiatives. Revolving Exhibitions showcase the history of Los Angeles and social change from the perspective of the poor, minorities, and other marginalized groups.
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NOW OPEN: HUGO CROSTHWAITE: IN MEMORIAM LOS ANGELES

7/20/2017

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HUGO CROSTHWAITE: IN MEMORIAM LOS ANGELES 
SEPTEMBER 6, 2017 – FEBRUARY 25, 2018


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Courtesy of Luis De Jesus Los Angeles

​Artist Hugo Crosthwaite will produce a new mural at the Museum of Social Justice while visitors watch.  The mural will wrap the gallery walls and will only be complete for a matter of weeks before the artist paints it out, bit by bit, during museum hours. This mural as performance is part of a series of murals he calls In Memoriam which the artist has been painting at sites in the US and abroad. Visitors are invited to speak with him, ask questions, or just watch while he is working.

Crosthwaite works in a style which brings together portraiture of ordinary people, comic book characters, street signage, urban facades, and mythological references, among other things, into dense and layered compositions. His work reflects the character of frenetic urban settings, especially border towns like Tijuana where the artist lives. Fear, hope, sorrow, and celebration are all represented together as he incorporates his observations of daily life. He elevates the ordinary person to heroic showing the trials they endure in surviving and thriving in our contemporary cities. Through his work, Crosthwaite invites us to have compassion for people who struggle in the margins of society.

For In Memoriam Los Angeles, Crosthwaite will observe people in the local Los Angeles downtown area as he works in an improvisational manner to complete the mural. Working only during the museum’s open hours when visitors can observe, he will engage the public and allow the interactions to influence his work. At the end of the exhibition, the artist will produce an animation from still photographs taken throughout the process which will show the painting’s production from beginning to end.

This exhibition is co-presented with the California Historical Society, courtesy of Luis De Jesus Los Angeles. 
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  • Home
  • About
    • Board of Directors
    • Museum & Education Partners
    • Get Involved
  • Board of Advisors
  • Exhibitions
    • Comrade Sisters: Women of the Black Panther Party
    • Future Exhibitions
    • Past Exhibitions >
      • That Stubborn Resistance
      • Hope and Dignity: The Farmworker Movement
      • "Comfort Women" Then and Now: Who They Were and Why We Should Remember Them
      • Finding Sequins in the Rubble: Archives of Jotería Memories in Los Angeles
      • La Plaza: A Center of Injustice and Transformation
      • Ink Tributes
      • Deported Veterans
      • Caravanas del Diablo
      • Thai El Monte Garment Workers >
        • Quilting Project
      • New Black City
      • Impact on Innocence >
        • Lies by Deborah McDuff
      • One of Us: How We See It
      • Transportapueblos: The Resilientes
      • Visualizing the People's History
      • Goodwill: Its Founding and History in Southern California
      • Greyhound Diaries
      • One of Us
      • California Dream: A Community Response
      • In Memoriam: Los Angeles
      • Shattered Mural
      • Con Safos: Reflections of Life in the Barrio
      • African American Civil Rights Movement L.A. Exhibition
      • Exodus
  • Support/Membership
  • Visit
  • Supporters
  • Educational Tools and Resources
  • Historical Archive
  • Allyship and Support
    • BLM Resources for Kids
  • Tardeada 2022
  • Tardeada 2021
  • Tardeada 2020
  • Contact
  • Link Page