LACMA

Los Angeles County Museum of Art
October 12, 2014
“Miracle Mile” Wilshire Boulevard

We took Margaret to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) to see a special exhibition, “Haunted Screens: German Cinema in the 1920s.” The exhibition featured over 150 drawings and set photos from German movies of the 1920s, both silent and early sound era. There were also several screens showing clips from the movies featured in the exhibit, and a number of contemporary movie posters were displayed on the wall. We first heard about the exhibition through an article we saw in the Los Angeles Times. The set design drawings were quite evocative. Meredith was struck by the skill and artistry of some of the watercolors. Bob was amused by the directions written on some of them including the word “achtung.”

LACMA haunted-screens

We next went to see another special exhibition, “Big Quilts in Small Sizes: Children’s Historical Bedcovers.” The museum has drawn on some of its reserve collection and displayed a dozen quilts, mostly from the 19th century and a few from the 20th century, all handmade and small in size. This was the exhibit Margaret liked best. She has been quite adept at handwork of all sorts and particularly likes quilting. She admired the careful work on several of the pieces displayed. After seeing the quilts we strolled through some of the permanent collection in the Art of the America’s building, stopping to admire a gigantic mirror that once adorned a mansion in Menlo Park, then served as a Hollywood prop for decades, before finally joining the museum collection in the 1990s. On our way out of the museum complex we went through the Japanese art building and stopped to browse through the special exhibition of modern kimonos. We particularly liked the ones that illustrated abstract flowing water designs, especially one that had dragonflies on it.

The museum complex is quite large and encompasses nine different buildings. It has an impressive collection spanning many countries and eras. One could certainly spend a full day there and still not see everything. The museum is located at the west end of Hancock Park; the Page Museum, better known as the La Brea tar pits museum, is at the east end of the park. The park is a fun place to stroll, and features the novel sight of various tar pits large and small interspersed throughout the lawn area that makes up the park. The aroma of liquid tar may not be to everyone’s taste, however!

We parked at the east end of Hancock Park, in the lot that is actually associated with the Page Museum. That lot cost $9 – the weekend rate – and put us closer to our favorite area restaurant, Johnnie’s New York Pizzeria. (There is also parking in a garage at the west end of the museum, which costs a little more.)

We met up with our youngest daughter and her boyfriend for lunch at Johnnie’s before going over to the museum. Margaret surprised us by choosing something other than her regular dish, turkey panini. This time she had what Johnny’s calls its Italian quesadilla – thin pizza dough with melted mozzarella and pesto sauce. It was quite good. The young people had other plans so did not join us at LACMA. Discussion over lunch of our visit to the Torrey Pines reserve prompted Margaret to recall a very large white pine which grew in the yard at the Dresden Avenue home where she grew up, in Gardiner, Maine.

Admission to LACMA is $15 for adults, $10 for seniors. Bank of America customers who visit on the first full weekend of the month can get in free by showing a B of A debit or credit card. Wheelchair accessibility is good, although one sometimes has to hunt for the ramps and interconnecting bridges between buildings.

Torrey Pines State Reserve

Torrey Pines State Reserve
October 11, 2014
San Diego

This outing was just the two of us, close to home; Margaret did not go with us. Torrey Pines State Reserve is in the northwest corner of the City of San Diego, just south of Del Mar. There are multiple interlocking trails up on the mesa overlooking the beach. The trails are mostly of intermediate difficulty; a couple are easier, but none are wheelchair accessible.

Torrey M&R

There is a $15 day use fee for the park, which is part of the state park system.

Our main purpose in coming here was to hike, but we also spoke with the docents stationed at the trailhead, who told us a great deal about the geology of the area and showed us rock samples to illustrate their points. After our hike we explored the visitor center which, although small, offers well designed explanatory displays about the area vegetation, animals, and geology.

Torrey VC

The different colored layers of the cliffs are quite striking. As we hiked to Red Butte and Razor Point we were able to see the effects of erosion and observe the sedimentary layers in the cliffs. We then hiked south over to Yucca Point, and then back to the visitor’s center. After viewing the exhibits in the center, we walked up to the High Point overlook, from which we could look inland to the east as well as north up the coast.

The land for the reserve was purchased and donated to the public by Ellen Browning Scripps in the early 20th Century. Her foresight and generosity saved the last large wild Torrey Pine woodland from development. This remarkable tree is the rarest pine in North America. It is only found in coastal San Diego County and on Santa Rosa Island. The tree is well adapted for the arid coastal climate; its extra long needles have grooves which channel dew and fog droplets to the ground where it can be absorbed by the tree’s roots. (It is also grown as an ornamental plant by some gardeners; seeds can be purchased from Anderson Seed Company.)

Park up top if you are hiking the cliff top trails or seeing the visitor center, or down below if visiting the beach. You can get plenty of scenic climbing on the trails; there is little point in a long walk up the steep driveway between the two parking lots!