LAUSD Adobe Class

Workshop/Class

LAUSD Adobe Class

Today @ North Hollywood Adult Learning Center

In an age where memes are born, bred, and spread across the Internet in mere milliseconds, it can't hurt to have a few Adobe skills under your virtual tool belt, too. Thanks to money that comes straight from our own taxes, the LAUSD Adult Career Education Division is offering hundreds of hours of hands-on Adobe instruction for the low one-time fee of $110. There's none of the high-pressure tension or guilt that comes with missing any classes, because it's all taught at your own pace, with continuous enrollment through June 6. So there's no reason not to get started on that portfolio you've been meaning to build since, well, you know, high school.

Coming Up

LAUSD Adobe Class

Workshop/Class

LAUSD Adobe Class

Today @ North Hollywood Adult Learning Center

In an age where memes are born, bred, and spread across the Internet in mere milliseconds, it can't hurt to have a few Adobe skills under your virtual tool belt, too. Thanks to money that comes straight from our own taxes, the LAUSD Adult Career Education Division is offering hundreds of hours of hands-on Adobe instruction for the low one-time fee of $110. There's none of the high-pressure tension or guilt that comes with missing any classes, because it's all taught at your own pace, with continuous enrollment through June 6. So there's no reason not to get started on that portfolio you've been meaning to build since, well, you know, high school.

<em>Stanley Kubrick</em>

Art

Stanley Kubrick

Today @ LACMA

Los Angeles fans of Stanley Kubrick discover the process behind the director's many labors of love at the first US retrospective of his work at LACMA — the site of last year's Tim Burton exhibit. Among the 1000 objects on display are a typewriter from The Shining, annotated script pages for Lolita (printed on pink paper), the iconic costume from A Clockwork Orange, and a set model of the War Room from Dr. Strangelove. Cinephiles also delight in Kubrick's more personal items: the chessboard he played between takes, a press ID badge from his time as a photographer for Look magazine in the 1940s, as well as two incomplete projects: Napoleon and The Aryan Papers. Kubrick's uncompromising vision gave him the power to re-conceive each genre he helmed — from horror to satire — and LACMA's exhibit offers fans a rare glimpse into the reclusive pioneer's cinematic masterpieces.