California has a reputation as a haven for people with creative minds, and you can see this in its multifaceted cultural offerings. Arts abound here in four main formats: large-scale, world-class organizations; smaller, quirkier museums, often showcasing the Golden State’s history and its abundant idiosyncratic subcultures (think surfers, Silicon Valley techno-wizards, and Peanuts aficionados); music venues galore; robust artists’ communities, and cultural offerings through California State Parks. Below you'll find a small sampling of California’s cultural bounty. Want to learn more? Come to California!
For information about the California Cultural and Heritage Tourism Council’s 5th Annual Symposium, click here.
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R e c o m m e n d a t i o n s
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Cultural Institutions: The Big Guns
California is chock-full of large, internationally renowned arts
institutions—world-class museums, concert halls, and theaters.
- Contemplate both old master and contemporary paintings at Los
Angeles’ richly landscaped J. Paul Getty Museum.
- Revel in the sounds of the Los Angeles Philharmonic at Frank
Gehry’s wildly angled, stainless steel–clad architectural
landmark, Walt Disney Concert
Hall.
- In San Francisco, enjoy music and dance at the opulent French
Renaissance–style War
Memorial Opera House, home to the San Francisco Opera and its
younger sibling, the San Francisco Ballet. Or stroll a few blocks
to the American Conservatory
Theater, one of the most acclaimed regional theaters in the nation.
- San Diego’s verdant Balboa Park claims that it’s
“the nation’s largest urban cultural park.” The
assertion is tough to debate: Balboa hosts 15 major arts organizations,
including the multistage Old Globe
Theatre, modeled on Shakespeare’s London theatre.
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Regional Museums: Eclectic Collections
Smaller arts organizations flourish throughout the state. Many stand
out as monuments to distinctive California traditions.
- It’s a testament to the significance of surfing in California
that you can cruise collections of vintage boards at not one but three
fine coastal surf museums: the California Surf Museum in
Oceanside, the International
Surfing Museum in Huntington Beach, and the Santa Cruz Surfing
Museum.
- Get a hands-on education at San Jose’s Tech Museum of Innovation, which
showcases the fruits of Silicon Valley’s boundless scientific
inventiveness.
- The Charles M. Schulz
Museum—located near the Santa Rosa studio where the prolific
Peanuts cartoonist worked for 30 years—contains more than
6,000 of his gently wry original strips.
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Music: Hitting All the Right Notes
- During the annual Inland Empire Jazz
and Blues Festival, music soars through the pine-covered mountains
of Wrightwood’s Angeles National Forest.
- If the riffs could travel far enough north, they might well bump
into the craggy Sierra Nevada and the hot licks being laid down at the
Mammoth Lakes Jazz Jubilee.
- The Bakersfield
Symphony Orchestra performs free summer band concerts under a canopy
of stars in Beale Park every Sunday.
- In San Francisco, the summer of love plays on, with multiple
outdoor venues spreading the good vibes with free concerts. Bring your
own harmonica to the San Francisco Free Folk
Festival, or stop by Stern Grove any Sunday afternoon and groove to
acts ranging from top pop bands to bhangra (Punjabi folk dance)
collectives.
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Arts Communities: Living by the Work
For decades, artists and galleries have created their own pocket
communities throughout California, famously in Carmel, Mendocino, and
Laguna Beach. The state boasts many more arts enclaves, equally rich in
creativity (and shopping opportunities).
- Painters attracted to desert beauty have been drawn to Palm Springs
since the late 1800s. Wander the Backstreet Art District, anchored by Dezart One Gallery. The
gallery hosts everything from play and poetry readings to film
screenings to exhibitions of contemporary painting.
- Sacramento’s reputation as an arts community is
growing. Dozens of
well-established midtown galleries span media from tribal jewelry to
bronze sculpture.
- In Chico, watch Richard Satava working in his public open studio,
Satava Art Glass. His trademark
ethereal glass jellyfish sculptures are shipped all over the world.
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