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Art and Hollywood convened in Little Tokyo for the MOCA Gala

LA Times · Jun 2, 2026, 12:16 AM · Also reported by 1 other source

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  • Artist Piero Golia was the creative director of this year’s MOCA gala, which honored artists Kara Walker and Paul Mc Carthy, pictured here with Golia, along with MOCA trustee Eugenio López Alonso.
  • When entering the galleries for cocktail hour on Saturday, guests essentially walked into a small but immersive slice of these artists’ worlds.

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Artist Piero Golia was the creative director of this year’s MOCA gala, which honored artists Kara Walker and Paul Mc Carthy, pictured here with Golia, along with MOCA trustee Eugenio López Alonso. The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles hosted its annual gala over the weekend, bringing art world and Hollywood royalty to Little Tokyo — from Barbara Kruger and Charles Gaines to Ava DuVernay and Keanu Reeves. It was the second year that the gala took on the “Moca Legends” format, which recognizes figures who “cement the museum as a global leader in contemporary art,” per MOCA. This year’s event honored artists Kara Walker and Paul McCarthy, along with MOCA trustee Eugenio López Alonso.

When entering the galleries for cocktail hour on Saturday, guests essentially walked into a small but immersive slice of these artists’ worlds. An installation conceived by the evening’s creative director, artist Piero Golia, celebrated Walker’s seminal “Monuments” commission and McCarthy’s famous “White Snow.” Trees from the “White Snow” project were lit up moodily throughout the space. While a process photograph taken in Walker’s studio — something that was never meant to be seen — showing a diorama of a horse statue maquette hanging with toys and figurines, made in preparation of “Unmanned Drone,” was turned into a vinyl covering one of the back walls. (McCarthy also brought his 1992 sculpture “Dead Viking” to the gala, seating it at his table.)

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