#re: nikki martinez
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you don't have to tell me.
don’t starters
“I know – but I don’t mind. There’s not much to tell,” she sighs, before taking another sip of her drink ( she needs it if she’s going to tell this particular story ). “Girl fell in love with boy, girl followed boy to Vegas, boy took everything girl had. And that’s it. That’s the end of it – and that’s why I’m here.”
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~Navigation for Desktop & Mobile~
ABOUT ME...
Nikoru or Nikki || 24 || She/They || ENG, PT, ESP || Timezones: WET & EST
Aspiring Writer & Graphic Designer/Illustrator
THIS BLOG HAS 18+ CONTENT ON IT SO PLEASE MINORS DNI! (TW’s are posted on all my fics and there are SWF fics on the blog as well!)
WHAT FANDOMS I’M IN...
TV/Movies:
Marvel/MCU
Teen Wolf
The Vampire Diaries
American Horror Story
The Walking Dead
Brooklyn 99
Stranger Things
Schitt's Creek
Dynasty
Maze Runner
You
Euphoria
Sherlock Holmes (Downey Films)
Mortal Instruments/Shadow Hunters
Criminal Minds
And many more, just ask if you want to know more!
Books:
The Maze Runner Trilogy
The Great Gatsby
Mortal Instruments Series
House of Night Series
And many more, just ask if you want to know more!
Music:
5SOS
Chase Atlantic
Halsey
The Weeknd
Zayn
Melanie Martinez
Ashnikko
Sleep Token
Bad Omens
And many more, just ask if you want to know more!
Anime/Manga:
Attack On Titan
Haikyuu
Tokyo Revengers
Tokyo Ghoul
Yuri On Ice
Psycho Pass
Food Wars
Jujitsu Kaisen
Demon Slayer
Castlevania
Mo Dao Zu Shi
And many more, just ask if you want to know more!
WHAT VIDEO GAMES I PLAY...
Fortnite
The Sims 4 (Modded)
Animal Crossing New Horizons
Faefarm
Stardew Valley
Dead by Daylight
Genshin Impact
Saints Row Series
Monster Prom
Hatsumiku Colorful Stage
Cyberpunk 2077
Baldur's Gate 3
Hogwarts Legacy
COD MW 2 & 3
Resident Evil (RE 2, 3, 4 Remakes & RE4, 5, 6, 7 & 8)
Detroit Become Human
Spider-Man Remastered & 2 (PS4/PS5)
Red Dead Redemption (1 & 2)
Games I haven't played but I’m still apart of the fandom...
Until Dawn & The Dark Anthropology Series
Dead Space
Mystic Messenger
WHAT I’M TYPING...
Complete Masterlist
Requests: CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE! || Guidelines || Request Masterlist
Fic Recs: COMING SOON!
MY BLOG TAGS...
#nikkithoughts : For all my random thoughts & crazy daily commentary
#nikkireblogs : For all the stuff I reblog from all type of fandoms
#faq & FAQ Original Post : For all my Frequently Asked Questions that come into my Ask box that I answer & also were my FAQ/Guidelines posts are so people can read/view it
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1990′s
Some events that happened during the 90’s have now evolved into becoming unremarkable if not unproblematic features of our daily lives. For example, changes in politics, new technology inventions, the emergence of a global art scene and the series of international festivals and events and a newfound sensitivity to the questions of race, class, and sexuality so long neglected by artists and humanists.
Art of the 90’s
Some artists:
Doug Aitken (born 1968, USA)
Laylah Ali (born 1968, USA)
Janine Antoni (born 1964, Bahamas) Aziz + Cucher (Anthony Aziz, b. 1961 USA and Sammy Cucher, b. 1958 Peru) Alex Bag (born 1969, USA) Matthew Barney (born 1967, USA) Michael Ray Charles (born 1967, USA) Mark Dion (born 1961, USA)
Jeanne Dunning (born 1960, USA) Andrea Fraser (born 1965, USA) Ellen Gallagher (born 1965, USA) Felix Gonzalez-Torres (born 1957 Cuba – died 1996 USA) JODI (Joan Heemskerk, b. 1968 Netherlands and Dirk Paesmans, b. 1965 Belgium) Glenn Kaino (born 1972, USA) Karen Kilimnik (born 1955, USA) Byron Kim (born 1961, USA) Nikki S. Lee (born 1970, South Korea)
Glenn Ligon (born 1960, USA) Sharon Lockhart (born 1964, USA) Daniel Joseph Martinez (born 1957, USA now, barbies dolls are purchased nearly every 3 seconds around the world where they are sold. Julie Mehretu (born 1970, Ethiopia)
Barbie dolls by the 90’s
After Barbie was created in 1959, 300,000 dolls were sold. Now, a Barbie doll is purchased every three seconds somewhere in the 150 countries where they are sold. Ken, her partner, wasn't born for another two years.
By the 90’s people were tired of the impossible feminine ideal represented by Barbie. The way Barbie was made was almost showing society how women should actually look; the figure, hair, voice, makeup, etc. In that decade, In a guerilla art action, the Barbie Liberation Organization, changed the voice boxes on Barbie’s and G.I. Joes and re-installed them in stores. Little girls and boys got more important messages than how to look pretty.
Top hits of the 90’s
1. Elton John, Candle in the wind 1997 2. Robson & Jerome, Unchained Melody 3. Wet Wet Wet, Love Is All Around 4. Aqua, Barbie Girl 5. Cher, Believe 6. Bryan Adams, (Everything I Do) I Do it for you 7. Various Artists, Perfect Day 8. Britney Spears, Baby One More Time 9. Puff Daddy & Faith Evans, I’ll Be Missing You 10. Whitney Houston, I Will Always Love You
Body Art
During the late-1960s a type of performance art appeared, called Body art. This is where the artist's own body became the "canvas". Typical body art can be body painting, tattoos, nail art, piercings, face painting, brandings or implants. The more active performance-related types of body art, in which artists abuse their own body as a way of conveying their particular "artistic message", can include mutilation, drug-taking, extreme physical activity, or extreme pain endurance. In the 90’s, body art became more popular.
THE DECADE'S BEST BUILDINGS
1991 SAINSBURY WING, NATIONAL GALLERY Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown 1997 GETTY CENTER, LA Richard Meier 1997 PETRONAS TOWERS, KUALA LUMPUR Cesar Pelli 1997 GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM, BILBAO Frank Gehry 1998 PRIVATE VILLA, BORDEAUX Rem Koolhaas/ OMA 1998 HONG KONG INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT Norman Foster 1999 JEWISH MUSEUM, BERLIN Daniel Libeskind 1999 LORD'S MEDIA CENTRE Future Systems 1999 MILLENNIUM DOME Richard Rogers 2000 TATE MODERN, BANKSIDE Herzog & de Meuron
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Self Love
Somethings I need to remeber that are happening right now. Even though I can't see it, I can feel it.
What you learn when you start dating the right one.
You are enough When you start dating someone who loves you for who you are, you learn that your authentic self is more than enough, life coach Kali Rogers tells Bustle. You no longer have to feel like you have to be someone other than exactly the person you are. "The right partner can encourage you to embrace your flaws and be proud of who you are," Rogers says. "The wrong partner does the exact opposite."
Relationships are worth it New-York–based relationship expert and author April Masini tells Bustle, "When you’ve been in one bad relationship after another, it’s easy to think that the whole thing just isn’t worth your time and energy." You might have even sworn off dating. "But when you break your own pattern of dating the wrong people and choose someone who treats you right, you’ll learn that relationships are worth the time and energy," Masini says. "You just have to be with the right person [to learn this lesson]."
You can ask for what you need "When you finally start dating someone who treats you right, you can actually begin to identify and outline your expectations from a relationship and from your partner," Salama Marine, psychologist and online dating expert for dating website EliteSingles, tells Bustle. This means you can ask for what you need.
"You’re allowed to be demanding," she says. "When you are ready to completely commit yourself to a relationship and give everything to another person, having certain expectations makes sense." So when you find something lacking, you can have the confidence to speak up. "It also reaffirms your dedication to building a strong and lasting relationship." With a strong foundation, you'll also feel more empowered to voice what you want.
Giving & Receiving is awesome So you're dating someone who treats you with kindness and generosity. "The one thing you lean when this happens is that there is happiness in both receiving and giving pleasure," Rob Alex, who created Sexy Challenges and Mission Date Night with his wife, tells Bustle. "When you find that right person, all the of sudden, you have a balance in the pleasures you give and receive," he says. You don't sit around hoping your partner will show up for you, but you don't only give of yourself with no return in sight.
"[This balance] works in all areas of your relationship, in your friendship, your partnership, and your intimacy," he says. "Many people have a hard time either giving or receiving pleasure, but when that right person comes around, you find that balance that allows you to soar."
5.Life is Good "When you finally start dating someone who treats you right, you end up finding something that you may have lost previously: your smile," dating expert Noah Van Hochman tells Bustle. It's like someone sprinkled sunshine on the world. "Everything just seems a little bit better," he says. But don't get totally carried away just yet, he warns.
"It’s important to remember that just because you finally found someone who treats you right, it does not mean that this is the right person for you," but you are one step closer to that discovery. And who knows; you just might have found the perfect person for you.
Relationships don't have to be difficult Dating someone right for you can make you realize an important lesson. "Being in a relationship is actually really easy when you're with the right one," psychologist, author and speaker Karin Anderson Abrell tells Bustle. It doesn't have to be a struggle, and the struggle doesn't have to be real. You can just enjoy your relationship, and not constantly complain about how hard it is.
7.Relationships involve serenity "A healthy relationship is calm and comforting, not super exciting," Tina B. Tessina, aka Dr. Romance, psychotherapist and author of Love Styles: How to Celebrate Your Differences, tells Bustle. It doesn't have to be a roller coaster, one minute flying on the highest of highs and the next freaking out. "Love is mutual, not codependent," she says. You'll find that out mighty quick, as well.
You can feel good about yourself
"When you're dating a person who treats you right, you begin to feel good about yourself," relationship coach and psychic medium Cindi Sansone-Braff, author of Why Good People Can't Leave Bad Relationships, tells Bustle. "You start realizing your own self-worth, and suddenly you like being you." Of course, you have to feel this way already, as a baseline, before you get involved with anyone if you want a healthy relationship. But it is true that a good partnership can buoy you up in a way that you might not have previously imagined.
"You want to be the best you that you possibly can be, and you really try to put your best foot forward with this person," she says. "This self-love then starts spilling out onto all of your relationships, and you come to expect, everyone at home, work and at play to treat you right as well."
You know your valuable "If you notice that someone treats you right, that means you are finally letting yourself be treated right," zen psychotherapist and neuromarketing strategist Michele Paiva tells Bustle. "You must love your body, see it as a gift, don't allow stress or painful experiences to reside in your body," she says. "My clients are fantastic at learning to love themselves." And by learning this, they open themselves up to true love.
"Being in love with yourself is a body-mind connection," she says.
You have high self -esteem "I think you finally start realizing you are dating someone who treats you right when you have decided for yourself what you deserve and what you are worth," BetterHelp telehealth counselor and psychologist Nikki Martinez tells Bustle. "It is only when you have a good sense of self-esteem, and of what you want for yourself and in a mate, that you realize that this person actually matches up with that ideal." And you can relax and enjoy the ride.
You deserve to be treated well When you're dating someone who is right for you, you realize that you're worthy of being treated well, relationship coach and psychic medium Melinda Carver tells Bustle. "Many people choose partners that are corrosive — they are critical, emotionally or physically abusive, or tend to treat you badly," she says. After a lot of that, it can be painful to fall in love. But if you've been working on yourself, and you're with someone wonderful, things can turn around. Abusive, awful relationships will really lower your self-esteem, she says.
"When you do finally find someone who treats you in a loving, respectful, supportive manner, it is heaven," Carver says. "Tell yourself that you do deserve to be happy and to be regarded in a positive light. Once you allow yourself to be cared for in this way, you will raise your self-esteem and be happier in other aspects of your life."
You can relax To sum it all up, being in a supportive, nurturing, uplifting relationship is the best. "You learn to relax and not overanalyze everything," Stefanie Safran, Chicago's "Introductionista" and founder of Stef and the City, tells Bustle. And that is the best place in the world to be.
*I did not write this I found it on
https://www.bustle.com/articles/156119-what-you-learn-when-you-finally-start-dating-someone-who-treats-you-right
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Image courtesy of Matthew Marks Gallery.
Thursday, November 2
Diane Arbus, Nan Goldin, Peter Hujar, Matthew Marks Gallery (West Hollywood), 10am–6pm.
Art Matters Fall 2017, Santa Barbara Museum of Art (Santa Barbara), 10–11:30am.
Kourtney Roy: Enter as Fiction: CALIFORNIA, KM Fine Arts Los Angeles (Culver City), 11am–6pm.
Pablo Vargas Lugo: Seascape, Laguna Art Museum (Laguna Beach), 11am–9pm.
FANTASIA, ARTAMO GALLERY (Santa Barbara), 12–5pm.
Been Dark Uines Noon Concert, CalArts (Valencia), 12–1pm.
Untested Address Event Series, Klowden Mann (Culver City), 1–4pm.
MFA 2018 Preview Exhibition, UCLA (Westwood), 5–8pm.
Suzanne Lacy and Pablo Helguera in Conversation, AD&A Museum, UC Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara), 5–6:30pm.
Galeria Perdida: Oh is it, expert, Todd Madigan Gallery (Bakersfield), 5–7pm.
Artist and scholar walkthroughs: Nao Bustamante, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 6pm.
Walton Ford: Calafia, Gagosian (Beverly Hills), 6–8pm.
MOCA Music: DJDS, DJ Frosty, WYLDEFLOWER, and Deejay.fm, MOCA Grand Avenue (Downtown), 6–9:30pm.
Malik Gaines book release, Ooga Booga (Chinatown), 6–8pm.
Around Town and Day of the Dead Altar, Laguna Art Museum (Laguna Beach), 6–9pm.
Greg Kahn: Havana Youth, Annenberg Space for Photography (Century City), 6:30pm.
2017 Common Field Convening Los Angeles, Japanese American Cultural & Community Center - JACCC (Downtown), 6:30pm. Through November 5.
Contents Under Pressure No. 1 | Presenting Johnny Quintanilla, Oliver Laurent Salon (Beverly Hills), 7–10pm.
Ism, Ism, Ism: Cine reciclado, MAK Center for Art and Architecture (West Hollywood), 7pm. $7–10.
CraftNight: Día de los Muertos: Workshop with Marcus Kuiland-Nazario, Craft and Folk Art Museum (Miracle Mile), 7–9pm. $10.
Liam Young on Adrián Villar Rojas, The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA (Downtown), 7pm.
ARTIST TALK: PATRICK MARTINEZ, Art + Practice (Leimert Park), 7–8:30pm.
RUSSELL LECTURE > MIGUEL CALDERÓN, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (San Diego), 7pm.
BFA II Solo Dance Concert, CalArts (Valencia), 7–9pm.
Paul Brach Lecture Series: Mara McCarthy, CalArts (Valencia), 7pm.
This is Bob Hope…, Palm Springs Art Museum (Palm Springs), 7pm. $75–100.
Ayer Es Hoy, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 7:30pm.
Latinas Out Loud: ¡Pa’rriba!, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 7:30–10:30pm.
Dancenorth/Lucy Guerin Inc.: Attractor, CAP UCLA (Westwood), 8pm. Also November 3.
JOSHUA LIGHT SHOW, The Broad (Downtown), 8pm. Through November 4.
Verónica Peña, PØST (Downtown), 8pm.
Friday, November 3
Encounters, Utopias, and Experimentation: From Pre-Columbian Tenochtitlan to Contemporary Buenos Aires, The Getty Center (Brentwood), 9:30am. Through November 5.
Docent Guided A+D Walking Tours: The Architects and Visionaries Who Built Palm Springs, Palm Springs Art Museum (Palm Springs), 9:30am. Fridays and Saturdays until April 2018. $25.
Bob Van Breda: Lost & Found, Palm Springs Art Museum (Palm Springs), 10am–5pm.
STORY TIME AT THE FOWLER, Fowler Museum (Westwood), 11:30am–12:30pm.
Sound Tracks: A Musical Conversation, Santa Barbara Museum of Art (Santa Barbara), 12–1pm.
LECTURE: JEROME SILBERGELD ON CHAEKGEORI (KOREAN SCREEN PAINTING), Fowler Museum (Westwood), 2–3pm.
Jonas Wood: Interiors and Landscapes, David Kordansky (Mid-City), 6–8pm.
Closing reception: Skip Arnold | Stephen Neidich, ltd los angeles (Mid-City), 6–8pm.
Ellen Gallagher. Accidental Records, Hauser & Wirth (Downtown), 6–8pm.
Mikael B: Momentum, Mondrian Los Angeles (West Hollywood), 7pm.
Erica Ryan Stallones: STAR DECK Academy, elephant (Glassell Park), 7–10pm.
Priced Out, Los Angeles Poverty Department (Downtown), 7pm.
In Person: Pablo Vargas Lugo, Laguna Art Museum (Laguna Beach), 7pm; reception, 6pm.
Deirdre Sullivan-Beeman: Girls, Girls, Girls, La Luz de Jesus Gallery (Los Feliz), 8–11pm.
Nightmusic 8, CalArts (Valencia), 8–10pm.
Andrew DeGraff and Down Time, G1988 (Koreatown), 7–9pm.
Saturday, November 4
Landscape as Catalyst: Lawrence Halprin's Legacy and Los Angeles, A+D Architecture and Design Museum (Downtown), 9:30am–4pm.
Point/Counterpoint: Contemporary Mexican Photography, Museum of Photographic Arts (San Diego), 10am–5pm.
Fall Yoga Series, Women’s Center for Creative Work (Frogtown), 10:30am–11:30am. $12–15.
Gallery Talk: Astrid Preston & Rose-Lynn Fisher, Craig Krull Gallery (Santa Monica), 11am.
Grand Avenue Arts: All Access, Grand Avenue (Downtown), 11am–5pm.
Workshop: INHABITANTS, A Physical Theatre Activation Lab with Gema Galiana + Emily Meister, Pieter (Lincoln Heights), 11:30am–3pm. $35.
Performance - Human Nature: Sonic Botany, The Huntington (San Marino), 12–1pm.
ROJO: A Cochineal Natural Dye Workshop with Mimi Haddon, Craft & Folk Art Museum (Miracle Mile), 1–4pm. $60–70.
Aztlán to Magulandia Curator-Led Tour & Book Signing, UCI Claire Trevor School of the Arts (Irvine), 1–3pm.
Docent-Led Tour, Claire Trevor School of the Arts (Irvine), 1–2pm.
Can This Marriage Be Saved?, Proxy Gallery (Westchester), 2–4pm.
Alex Israel: Self-Portrait, Mixografia (Downtown), 2–4pm.
California Mexicana: Land Into Landscape, Laguna Art Museum (Laguna Beach), 2pm.
Día de los Muertos Themed Printmaking Workshop with Art Division at Fisher, USC Fisher Museum of Art (Downtown, 3–6pm.
Video Art + Film Festival: La Esperanza, ESMoA (El Segundo), 3–5pm.
Miguel Rio Branco: Out of Nowhere and Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle: The Garden of Delights, Christopher Grimes Gallery (Santa Monica), 4–6pm.
Courtney Murphy: A Night In New Paintings and Eric Nash: BLVD, Skidmore Contemporary Art (Santa Monica), 4–6pm.
Elias Hansen, Not Right Now, Anat Ebgi (Culver City), 4–6pm.
Film: Through the Repellent Fence, Laguna Art Museum (Laguna Beach), 4pm.
Coastal / Border Performances, Angels Gate Cultural Center (San Pedro), 4pm.
ADC Welcome Back Road to Rio Party!, Palm Springs Art Museum (Palm Springs), 4–6pm. $45.
Christian Rex van Minnen: Mourning Wood in Liminal Dawn, Richard Heller Gallery (Santa Monica), 5–8pm.
Sarah McEneaney and Ann Toebbe: Home Work, Zevitas Marcus (Culver City), 5–8pm.
ektor garcia: cochi, Visitor Welcome Center (Koreatown), 5–9pm.
Gala Porras-Kim: An Index and its Histories, Commonwealth and Council (Koreatown), 5–8pm.
WRDSMTH: I'd Like To Have a WRD With You, Fais Do-Do (West Adams), 5–10pm. $5–75.
44th Annual Día de los Muertos celebration, Self Help Graphics & Art (Felicitas and Gonzalo Mendez High School, Downtown), 5–11pm.
Phyllis Green: Life After Life After Life, Chimento Contemporary (Downtown), 5–8pm.
Jeremy Blake: Station to Station, Mel Davis: Meet Me in the Usual Place, and Miriam Schapiro, Honor Fraser (Culver City), 6–8pm.
ICY & SOT, Thinkspace Gallery (Culver CIty), 6–9pm.
Queer Califas: LA Latinx Art, Plummer Park (West Hollywood), 6–9pm.
Guy Yanai: Barbarian In The Garden, Praz-Delavallade Los Angeles (Miracle Mile), 6–8pm.
Victoria Colmegna: Broken Ego, Park View (MacArthur Park), 6–8pm.
Ty Joseph, Gloria Delson Gallery (Downtown), 6–10pm.
Bunnie Reiss: Space Angels, Superchief Gallery LA (Downtown), 6–11pm.
Khipu, Body, Line: A Writing in Space, Getty Center (Brentwood), 7pm.
ARMANDO LERMA: Dreamland and the Discovered Paintings of Joseph Ernst and Philipp Lachenmann Part II, ACE Gallery (Miracle Mile), 7–10pm.
J.A.W. Cooper: Familiars, Flora and Fauna, Viscera, La Luz de Jesus (Los Feliz), 7–10pm.
LAndscape, Monte Vista Projects (Downtown), 7–10pm.
Amy Green: Drench, PØST (Downtown), 7–10pm.
Miami-Dutch: Traffic in the Square, Club Pro Los Angeles (Downtown), 7–11pm.
Nora Riggs: Fancy Hand, QUEENS LA (Montecito Heights), 7–10pm.
Keynote Lecture: William Deverell, Laguna Art Museum (Laguna Beach), 7pm; reception, 6pm.
Unnatural Selection, Automata (Chinatown), 8pm.
Ballroom B- Oren Pine BFA Mid-Res Recital, CalArts (Valencia), 8–9pm.
2017 Art+Film Gala Honoring Mark Bradford and George Lucas, LACMA (Miracle Mile).
Sunday, November 5
Really?, Wilding Cran Gallery (Downtown), 1–3pm.
Similar Sunlight, Gait (Downtown), 1–4pm.
FAMILY JAM: SALVADOR AND SAMBA WITH VIVER BRASIL, Fowler Museum (Westwood), 1–4pm.
ArtCenter College of Design Open House, ArtCenter College of Design (Pasadena), 1:30–4:30pm.
Art & Nature Family Festival, Laguna Art Museum (Laguna Beach), 2–5pm.
Rediscovered Botanical Treasures from the Smithsonian and the Hunt Institute, The Huntington (San Marino), 2:30pm.
Talking to Action Book Launch + Roundtable Conversation, Otis College (Westchester), 3–5pm.
Escenas Latinas: Changing the Narrative, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 3pm.
Imagination, Place & Possibility: A Conversation with Curator Lowery Sims and Amalia Mesa-Bains, Craft & Folk Art Museum (Miracle Mile), 3pm.
Heidi Zuckerman: Conversations with Artists, Hauser & Wirth (Downtown), 3–5pm.
ELLEN GALLAGHER IN CONVERSATION WITH LACMA CURATOR CHRISTINE Y. KIM, Hauser & Wirth (Downtown), 3pm.
Presentation: Janine Antoni in Dialog with Artwork from Relational Undercurrents, Museum of Latin American Art (Long Beach), 3pm.
Nikki Maloof: Chauve-Souris and Nerve Center, The Pit (Glendale), 4–7pm.
Big City Forum - community dinner with RootDown LA, Blue Roof Studios (South Los Angeles), 5–9pm.
Juan Bastos: California Portraits, Denenberg Fine Arts (West Hollywood).
Monday, November 6
Kip's Desert Book Club: The Talker by Mary Sojourner, Copper Mountain Mesa Community Center (Twentynine Palms), 7pm.
Too Clever by Half: What We Learn from the Mistakes of Great Literary Characters, Getty Villa (Pacific Palisades), $7:30pm.
Talk: The Director’s Series: Michael Govan and Cheech Marin, LACMA (Miracle Mile), 7:30pm.
Pre-release benefit screening of Disney • Pixar’s Coco, Atlantic Times Square (Monterey Park), 8pm. $25–60.
Tuesday, November 7
Film: High Flyers, LACMA (Miracle Mile), 1pm.
Radical Women Walk-through: Micol Hebron, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 6pm.
Wednesday, November 8
CULTURE FIX: SARAH K. CHENAULT ON CREOLE JEWELRY OF AXÉ BAHIA, Fowler Museum (Westwood), 12–1pm.
FOWLER OUT LOUD: UCLA MUSIC OF CHINA ENSEMBLE, Fowler Museum (Westwood), 6–7pm.
South of the Border panel discussion, The Loft at Liz’s (Mid-City), 7–9pm.
Petra Collins in conversation with Miranda July, ARTBOOK @ Hauser & Wirth (Downtown), 6–8pm.
Por que somos e não somos tropicalistas: Moving image from Recife, Brazil, Human Resources (Chinatown), 7–9pm.
Chasing Coral, Hammer Museum (Westwood), 7:30pm.
Soundbath With Chakra Crystal Singing Bowls Series, Women’s Center for Creative Work (Frogtown), 7:30–8:30pm. $16–20.
Distinguished Fellow Lecture - The Lords Proprietors: Land and Power in 17th-Century America, The Huntington (San Marino), 7:30pm.
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