EXPLORE INDIGENOUS TONGVA CULTURE AND NATURAL LANDSCAPES THROUGH ARTMAKING
Take part in PST ART’s Downtown Regional Weekend and join an engaging, hands-on workshop that celebrates the vibrant intersection of Los Angeles’s cultural heritage and natural environment. Led by Tongva artist and educator Lazaro Arvizu Jr., the workshop features an original board game he designed. Working in small groups, participants will collaborate to complete the game and create a vision for the future of Los Angeles. Together, you'll design a map of your ideal city: will it have more freeways or flourishing forests? Oil rigs or roaming bears? Dream big and imagine what the landscape of LA could become through this fun, family-friendly activity!
This activity is inspired by The Broad’s reforestation project, Social Forest: Oaks of Tovaangar, in conjunction with our collection exhibition, Joseph Beuys: In Defense of Nature.
Born and based in Germany, Joseph Beuys was one of the most important European artists of his time. Beuys was known for introducing “social sculpture,” acts of art that include everyday activities used to organize people to make a change in their community. Through his work, he was a voice for democracy, environmental justice, and the idea that everybody is an artist.
Social Forest: Oaks of Tovaangar is a reforestation project inspired by Beuys’ work, 7000 Oaks, which involved planting 7,000 trees and stone markers in Kassel, Germany as a way to come together after World War II. This project brings his work to Los Angeles to take on new meaning. The Broad has partnered with North East Trees, a community-based nonprofit, to plant 100 coast live oaks in Elysian Park and five at Kuruvungna Village Springs. Planted alongside stone markers made from local sandstone, this project is shaped in partnership with Tongva leaders to recognize the deep history of the Tongva people and celebrate their thrivance today.
Family Weekend Workshops offer free activities and workshops to engage with the art on view in the museum. Workshops give families the opportunity to make their own artworks to take home, inspired by the Broad collection. Family Weekend Workshops are free with advance ticket reservations. Walk-ups without reserved tickets may be accommodated, pending capacity.
Image credit: Photographs taken in Elysian Park, Los Angeles, 2024. Photos by Elon Schoenholz Photography, courtesy of The Broad. Family photo taken by Salvador Ceja Garcia
Timed tickets for Family Weekend Workshops are available from 11 am to 4 pm. Families who reserve tickets in advance will receive a wristband when they check in onsite at the museum. Workshops are available to families with wristbands on a first-come, first-served basis. Walk-ups are encouraged pending capacity.
Tickets include same-day access to The Broad. Tickets to this event do not include access to Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Mirror Room—The Souls of Millions of Light Years Away (2013), and must be booked separately.
For information on our current visitor policies, visit Know Before You Go & FAQ. Visitor policies are subject to change.
Lazaro Arvizu Jr. (Gabrielino/Tongva) is an artist, educator, musician, and researcher dedicated to the culture of the First Peoples of Los Angeles. Born in the Los Angeles Basin, he is knowledgeable of the landscape and cosmology of the Gabrielino culture. He has worked for over twenty years facilitating creative and meaningful cultural experiences to people of all ages and walks of life.
The Broad's Family Weekend Workshops offer free activities and workshops to engage with the art of The Broad. Workshops give families the opportunity to make their own artworks to take home, inspired by the Broad collection. Family Weekend Workshops are free but have limited availability. Entrance is not guaranteed without a reservation. Family Weekend Workshops are presented by Leading Partner East West Bank.
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