Freak Funeral
Saturday, November 1st, 7:00 PM
Three Clubs, 1123 Vine Street, Los Angeles, CA 90038
KCRW has you covered for Halloween events here. But if you want to carry on celebrating the dead, the Hollywood Fringe Festival has a fundraising party for you on Saturday night. At their Freak Funeral to raise funds for the 2026 Hollywood Fringe Festival and low-income Angeleno creators, you'll experience "the wake of the decade!" Join as they "celebrate the freaks [who] died as they lived: Freaky."
Past HFF artists + special guests, including Woody Fu, Natasha Mercado, Liz Toonkel, Sylvie Wang, and Couplet, will offer up cabaret performances in the newly redesigned Three Clubs in Hollywood, a historic dive-bar and club, complete with productive design from Rody Villegas of Zanni Theatrics.
Click here for tickets.
Image courtesy Hollywood Fringe Festival
Architecture Uncorked
Barnsdall Gallery Theatre, 4800 Hollywood Blvd, Los Angeles
Saturday, November 8th, 5:00–6:30 PM
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Is LA in Freefall?
Public conversation, online
Tuesday, October 28th, 5:00 PM
Trivia, Important Topics, and wine come together again at the latest outing of FORT:LA's Architecture Uncorked at Barnsdall Gallery Theatre. I'll talk with the very lively Max Podemski, urban planner and author of A Paradise of Small Houses. He'll preview his upcoming FORT Trail centered on Silver Lake. Then sommelier and historian India Mandelkern will uncork a custom-selected wine inspired by the Silver Lake spirit.
Before that... on Tuesday, October 28th, starting at 5:00 PM, FORT and I have convened some great speakers to discuss "Is LA in Freefall?," an online conversation about the state of the City of Angels, in light of Fires, ICE, Housing, Hollywood, and Budget woes, and an Olympics to host.
Click here for Is LA in Freefall?; Click here for Architecture Uncorked.
Image courtesy Barnsdall.org
 
50 Years: A Golden Anniversary Weekend 
Friday, November 7th–Sunday November, 9th
Norton Simon Museum, 411 West Colorado Boulevard
Pasadena, California 91105
The Norton Simon Museum, designed by Ladd & Kelsey, later renovated by Frank Gehry, has reached middle age.
So the museum embarked on a big exterior cleanup, encompassing repairing the Museum‘s sculpture garden, below, redesigned by Nancy Goslee Power in the late 1990s; restoring and cleaning the thousands of ceramic tiles designed by Edith Heath, and improving entranceways — which meant relocating their prize sculpture, Rodin’s The Thinker.
Come see the shiny new place next weekend when everyone's invited to enjoy live music and art-making activities, along with viewing the exhibition Gold: Enduring Power and Sacred Craft and Retrospect.
Click here for information.
Image courtesy Norton Simon Museum.
Historic Moons Redux
Sunday, November 9th, 3:00 PM–7:00 PM
496 Stonehurst Drive, Altadena
There's more from India Mandelkern (above). She wrote an eloquent book about LA's streetlights called Electric Moons. Now she has curated a show of seven “electric moons” as painted by French artist and winemaker Vincent Cruège. 
It's at a pop-up gallery in Altadena, at the Eaton Fire’s western boundary. Mandelkern chose paintings that "transpose ideas of light and renewal into a new visual language." 
L.A. streetlamps, as painted by Vincent Cruège
The House I Grew Up In
Making Space: L.A. Symposium
Wednesday, November 12th, 6:00 PM–8:30 PM, program starts 6:30 PM
Henrybuilt, 806 Mateo Street,  Los Angeles, CA 90021
How are designers shaped by their childhood homes? Find out at Making Space, a symposium cohosted by the design journal Untapped and L.A. Forum for Architecture and Urban Design, at the DTLA showroom of Untapped publisher, the design company Henrybuilt. 
Architects, artists, directors, and journalists Kenturah Davis, Erich Joiner, Sam Klemick, Annie Chu, Joe Dangaran, and Yours Truly will share reflections on “The House I Grew Up In” and how it impacted our work and lives today. 
Click here for information and to RSVP.
Walter Hood’s childhood home on Moretz Avenue in Charlotte, North Carolina. Image courtesy Untapped.
The Porch: A Public Conversation
Annenberg Community Beach House, 415 Pacific Coast Hwy, Santa Monica, CA 90402
Thursday, November 13th, 6:00 PM–8:00 PM 
More outdoor dining in parklets? Gathering spaces on wide traffic medians? Community coffee served out of the garage? These are all examples of urban "porch-like" spaces to be analyzed and dreamed of at The Porch: A Public Conversation, led by three 2025 Santa Monica Artist Fellows (below) — Nicola Goode, Jona Frank, and me.
Inspired by this year's US Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennial, themed PORCH: An Architecture of Generosity, we will talk about porches both literal and metaphorical through the lens of Santa Monica’s people, places, and culture.
Click here to RSVP for this free event.
Enjoy the good life in an urban "porch." Image courtesy City of Santa Monica
Case Study: Adapt (CSA) Symposium and Design Launch
Friday, November 14th, 6:00 PM
Wong Conference Center (HAR101), Watt Hall, USC School of Architecture, 823 Exposition Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90007 
You may have read about Case Study: Adapt (CSA), a revival of the pioneering mid-century Case Study House Program, reimagined for today’s climate challenges.
Ten architects partnered with households who lost their homes in recent wildfires, and they will reveal their "innovative, climate-resilient residences" to the public at an event being held at USC Architecture school on November 14th.
Expect a reception, an exhibition, and explainers about the designs from the architects and CSA founders Leo Seigal and Dustin Bramell. The architects are: Barbara Bestor (Bestor Architecture), Noah Walker (Walker Workshop), Sharon Johnston (Johnston Marklee), Brett Woods (Woods + Dangaran), Ron Radziner (Marmol Radziner), Silvia Kuhle (Standard Architecture | Design), David Montalba (Montalba Architects), Steven Ehrlich (EYRC Architects), David Thompson (Assembledge+), and Geoffrey von Oeyen (von Oeyen Architects).
Click here to RSVP.    
CSA at its inception. Image courtesy casestudyadapt.org.