3:01 PST. Pacific Standard Gift Book Time, Part 1

Forget the Rose Parade; the real reason to be in L.A. right now is Pacific Standard Time… the arts program, not just the zone.

A six-month “happening” that kicked off in October, PST is the largest collaborative art project ever undertaken in Southern California. Over 60 museums, galleries, and other institutions allow us to immerse ourselves in the various creative scenes that were exploding and expanding all around Los Angeles from the 1940s through to the ’80s.

Make it stand out

Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.

PST‘s primary focus is on the fine arts, but the exhibitions and events offer plenty for the design-minded as well. There are also scads of show catalogs for the print-oriented to peruse.

Here’s a sampling of a few of the lavishly illustrated books recently published in conjunction with all the events. Perhaps they’d work as seasonal presents in lieu of – if not in addition to – a West Coast winter vacation.

Ten years in the making, Pacific Standard Time was initiated through Getty Foundation grants. And PST, the book, charts the four-decade transformation of the post-World War II art scene, starting with the Case Study Houses of the mid-1940s and moving through to the opening of the Museum of Contemporary Art in 1980.

Drawing on photographs and other archival materials from the Getty Research Institute, the book, as well as the show, reveals refreshing new regional perspectives on a modernist history that until now has been largely dominated by New York.

Essays are by Andrew Perchuk, Catherine Taft, Lucy Bradnok, Rani Singh, Ken D. Allan, Lisa Turvey, Donna Conwell, Glenn Phillips, and Jane McFadden. PST and Getty, 352 pages.


I recently covered the Peace Press Graphics exhibition of political and cultural posters for Imprint. It just wrapped up, but the show’s 100-plus pieces are part of the comprehensive catalog, which includes many other images of progressive protest.

It’s an important document of the politics of the era as well as of the press’s printing and publishing business.

Essays are by Ilee Kaplan, Carol A. Wells, Lincoln Cushing, Gregory Sholette, and Henry Klein. CSPG and UAM/CSULB, 192 pages.


The book calls itself “the first comprehensive examination of California’s midcentury modern design.” So naturally it includes the architecture and furniture of Neutra, Schindler, and the Eameses as well as the graphic works of Lustig, Bass, and Danziger. But it’s equally enjoyable to discover the designs of others who aren’t instantly identifiable by their last names alone.

Essays are by Wendy Kaplan, Christopher Long, Bobbye Tigerman, Nicholas Olsberg, Pat Kirkham, Bill Stern, Glenn Adamson, Melissa Leventon, Jeremy Aynsley, and Staci Steinberger. MIT Press, 360 pages.


Proof, the book and the show, is an invaluable study of the origins of printmaking in Southern California and of the medium as a fine arts tool.

The Tamarind Lithographic Workshop is the central pivot point. Founded in 1960 to accommodate master artisan printers, it became the most important print shop in the United States. Proof also examines the growth of other significant workshops such as Cirrus Editions and Gemini G.E.L. Included are works by Josef Albers, Ed Ruscha, Robert Rauschenberg, Claus Oldenburg, and Sister Corita Kent.

Essays are by Leah Lehmbeck, David Acton, Jennifer Anderson, Karin Brueur, Cynthia Burlingham, and Damon Willick. Norton Simon Museum and Getty, 260 pages.

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3:02 PST. Pacific Standard Gift Book Time, Part 2

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2:01 PST. Pre-Occupy Protest Poster Art