Globelite Travel Marketing

Travel Guide to California

Issue link: http://globelitetravelmarketing.uberflip.com/i/149733

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 104 of 195

5 » HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD, opposite page, is busier today than it was in 1958 when the Hollywood Walk of Fame was created as a tribute to artists working in the entertainment industry; a Venice Beach skate park, below, is popular with kids of all ages. MUST SEE , DO » Venice Boardwalk Hang out with surfers, skateboarders, body builders, street basketball players, buskers, fortune-tellers and artists at the Venice boardwalk on Ocean Front Walk, a 1.5-mile pedestrian-only promenade. Don't miss the Venice Public Art Walls featuring graffiti art on the sand, west of the bike path between Windward Street and Market Street. › venicebeach.com › veniceartwalls.com » Music at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) Listen to some of the 100 free concerts presented annually by LACMA, featuring international and local standouts in classical, jazz, Latin and new music. Programs include the long-running Sundays Live program whose weekly, one-hour classical chamber music concerts are presented free to the public at 6 p.m. on Sundays. › lacma.org/music › lacma.org/programs/music/sundays-live › sundayslive.org » Downtown Art Walk Celebrate the arts in downtown Los Angeles the second Thursday of every month with a tour through the ever-evolving and vibrant gallery scene located primarily on Spring and Main streets between 2nd and 9th streets. Hours vary by gallery but can range from noon to 10 p.m. › downtownartwalk.org » Getty Museums in LA and Malibu » Kayak the Los Angeles River Prepare to be as awestruck by the views as by the treasures within the museums. The Getty Center in Los Angeles houses mostly European and American art, whereas the Getty Villa in Malibu focuses on arts and cultures of ancient Greece, Rome and Etruria. › getty.edu/visit Paddle with the LA Conservation Corps and its partners down a 1.5-mile stretch of the Los Angeles River in the San Fernando Valley within the Sepulveda Basin. This waterway has been open to the public through supervised kayak trips since the summer of 2011. Tickets for the 2012 season sold out in minutes, so don't hesitate, book now and paddle! › paddlethelariver.org 2 0 1 3 t r av e l g u i d e to c a l i fo rnia 1 0 3

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Globelite Travel Marketing - Travel Guide to California