Page 49 - 2022-2023 Travel Guide to California
P. 49

SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART (SFMOMA),
right; The Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena, below.
tures an impressive library, art collections
and 130 acres of themed botanical gardens.
San Francisco’s Legion of Honor, in
Lincoln Park, holds an extraordinary per-
manent collection and hosts top-notch
exhibitions from around the world. In
nearby Golden Gate Park, the de Young
showcases the arts of Africa, Oceania and
the New World. The San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) spans
7 dazzling floors of galleries and 45,000
square feet of free public art space. Across
the Bay, the Oakland Museum of California
(OMCA) is dedicated to Native arts, history
and ecology, and sponsors many family-
friendly events and hands-on activities.
Down the coast, the Santa Barbara
Museum of Art deserves a nod for its ambi-
tious and imaginative exhibitions. San
Diego’s Museum of Contemporary Art fea-
tures a variety of exhibits in the historic
Jacobs Building downtown. Its oceanfront La
Jolla property recently reopened after a
major expansion project which quadrupled
the gallery space, making room for its 4,700-
piece collection of contemporary art. For
photography buffs, there’s the excellent
Museum of Photographic Arts in Balboa
Park, as well as The Annenberg Space for
Photography in LA and Pier 24 Photography
Museum in San Francisco.
Science
The California Science Center in Los
Angeles’ Exposition Park presents exhibits
for all ages on invention, space travel and
life sciences—many of them interactive, all
of them free! Ice Age enthusiasts and
fossil-philes will love the popular and
gloriously sticky La Brea Tar Pits and
Museum, an active geological site in mid-
town. San Francisco’s California Academy
of Sciences, in Golden Gate Park, features
the impressive Steinhart Aquarium, the
walk-through Osher Rainforest with free-
ranging birds and butterflies, the Morrison
Planetarium which boasts one of the
world's largest all-digital domes, and a
“Living Roof” which was planted with 1.7
million native California plants. The long
admission lines can be daunting; buying
tickets online allows for quicker entry. At
Piers 15 and 17 on the Embarcadero, the
legendary Exploratorium houses more
than 600 interactive exhibits—including
an amazing “Tinkerer’s Clock” and the
crawl-through Tactile Dome.
Designed for explorers under ten,
Sausalito’s Bay Area Discovery Museum is
a pint-sized Wonderland dedicated to
promoting creative thinking. And, while
not a museum per se, the Monterey Bay
Aquarium deserves to be included among
the Wonders of the World for its aston-
ishing displays of sea otters and jellies,
mesmerizing three-story kelp forest and a
staggering million-gallon “Open Sea” tank.
Culture
California is a rare and enduring alloy of
more than 50 ethnic groups. Its museums
reflect the racial diversity and cultural his-
tory of this melting pot in microcosm.
What follows is but a sample; there are
many, many more to choose from.
San Francisco’s Contemporary Jewish
Museum and Museum of the African Dias-
pora (MoAD) provide fascinating insights
into two of California’s most creative ethnic
traditions. A visit to the Asian Art Museum
in Civic Center is the next best thing to a
trip along the ancient Silk Road.
In Long Beach, the Museum of Latin
American Art (MoLAA) features contem-
porary works of the New World. San Diego’s
tiny-but-mighty New Americans Museum
honors the cultural diversity of immigrants
through art and storytelling in Liberty
Station. The Women’s Museum of California
is dedicated to women’s history.
2022-23 TRAVEL GUIDE TO CALIFORNIA 47








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