Art and Design Take Center Stage in Beverly Hills This Fall
The city within Los Angeles County has unveiled a cultural evolution, rolling out a special arts and design agenda that has turned its streets into vibrant galleries with showcases from August to October.
Beverly Hills is finding its place on the global cultural map with a special art and design agenda that will transform the city into a creative epicenter over the next few months, from contemporary art exhibitions to ephemeral installations and collaborations between fashion and design.
Accompanied by wine, live music, real-time exhibitions and food trucks, among its offerings is the Beverly Hills Art Show 2025, an open-air gallery with more than 235 artists presenting original works of painting, sculpture, photography, ceramics, jewelry and glass art, which will take place on October 18th and 19th.
In a culture-packed calendar, Beverly Hills also reinvents Friday and Saturday nights with October Immersive Nights, a series of experimental nights featuring audiovisual installations, immersive projections, interactive digital art and sound performances in outdoor spaces in collaboration with artists from Rhizomatiks, Refik Anadol Studio, and local generative design collectives.
Beverly Hills has given voice to a dialogue between fashion, architecture and digital art
Beverly Hills also featured an August full of exhibitions and cultural displays from the fashion industry, such as Dreamscapes: Fashion Meets Arts, an immersive experimental design pop up where a dialogue was created between fashion, architecture and digital art, with the participation of designers such as Iris van Herpen, Craig Green and No Sesso, who transformed the space into a sensory catwalk with some of the pieces available for purchase in limited edition.
It also had bets such as Materials Icons, a group show that explored materiality in art through iconic artists such as Richard Serra, Jenny Holzer, Sterling Ruby and Theaser Gates, at Gagosian Gallery, as well as a photographic exhibition of portraits of the artist’s work. as well as a photographic exhibition of intimate portraits of Hollywood icons from the 1960s to today, through the eyes of legendary photographers such as Terry O’Neill, Slim Aarons and Roxanne Lowit, under the name Through the Lens of Stardom.
In the midst of an expanding art scene, Beverly Hills has given space to museums, private foundations, galleries and alternative spaces that have generated synergies that have turned design into a reference of contemporary visual culture, with proposals designed for all audiences.