LOS ANGELES, CA.- On Saturday, September 29, 2018, the
Petersen Automotive Museum will debut the first in a series of California-themed exhibititions to kick off its 25th anniversary in 2019. Titled Auto-Didactic: The Juxtapoz School, the display will examine a mix of art pieces and automobiles from the artists of Juxtapoz Magazine, who have helped redefine the role and imagery of automobiles in contemporary art.
Replacing The High Art of Riding Low: Ranflas, Corazón e Inspiración exhibit in the Armand Hammer Foundation Gallery, Auto-Didactic will feature more than 50 artists. Artists on display will include skateboarder, designer and OBEY Clothing Founder Shepard Fairey; famous pinstriper of the Kustom Kulture movement Von Dutch; and painter, cartoonist and Juxtapoz Magazine founder himself Robert Williams.
In addition to the selection of art pieces, the exhibition will highlight notable art cars including the 1932 Ford Roadster named Prickly Heat by Robert Williams, The Orbiton by Ed Big Daddy Roth, The Kenford Truck by Von Dutch and the 1959 Cadillac titled The New and Improved Ultima Suprema Deluxa by Kenny Scharf.
Our new exhibit will be unlike any other exhibit weve ever curated at the Petersen during the last 25 years, said Petersen Executive Director Terry L. Karges. While the focus is still on the automobile, the range of artwork on display will appeal to both car enthusiasts as well as the progressive art connoisseur.
Launched with the mission of connecting subculture genres such as psychedelic posters, hot rod art, street art and illustration with traditional highbrow mediums, Juxtapoz Magazine was founded in 1994. Since its inception, the magazine has continuously addressed themes deemed unsavory by staunch art critics. It was not until the Laguna Art Museums presented its Kustom Kulture exhibition in 1993 that the relative interests of underground artists and collectors were presented as a unified group, paving the way for the creation of the magazine.