![]() ![]() “We’re open at 10:00 a.m., six days a week, and the fact that we have free general admission for the first decade, people keep saying, ‘Really? It’s free?’ We know that contemporary art can be weird or scary for people, so to remove as many barriers to entry as possible, it’s just a dream come true.”Īmong the artists in attendance - many of whom, Zuckerman said, she’s known more than half her life - were Sanford Biggers, Fred Eversley, Alexandra Grant, Doug Aitken, Lily Stockman, Fred Tomaselli and Peter Shelton. ![]() “As the last piece of the cultural puzzle here on the Segerstrom campus, we’re able to animate and activate this space in a way that’s never been possible,” she said of the new museum building. The evening for her was “thrilling,” she said. McNeill, and he wore a Scottish tartan.) Then Zuckerman turned serious. Museum Director Heidi Zuckerman joked that her midnight blue, tiered tulle dress was “prom dress utopia” because “my boyfriend and I feel like teenagers together.” (His name was J.P. The scene was punctuated by colorful, pre-dinner cocktails, such as a vodka-spiked lemonade that morphed from clear to purple thanks to the organic butterfly pea flower floating in each glass. All of which made for a festive inauguration for Costa Mesa’s newest neighbor, which completes the campus at Segerstrom Center for the Arts.
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