In Case You Miss It
Here are several ways to enjoy Getty exhibitions even after they close.

Sade Elhawary’s ancestral makeup is illustrated in Alta’s two-volume book spread.
Photo: © Marcus Lyon / A Human Atlas
Body Content
It would be great to have time to see every museum exhibition you come across.
But just in case you can't, there are still several ways to enjoy Getty exhibitions even after they close. You can explore all of our current exhibitions after they’ve closed—or from home if you see an exhibition that you love, but are far away.

There are over 100 neighborhoods in the city of Los Angeles alone, each with its own unique identity.
Photo: © Marcus Lyon / A Human Atlas
Alta / A Human Atlas of a City of Angels
Alta / A Human Atlas of a City of Angels is a free exhibition, on at the Los Angeles Public Library until April 27. It is also a social-impact art project (read more about it here) told through a book that has all of the photographs and DNA maps from the exhibition, plus an accompanying mobile app available here.
The 100 Altaneans featured in the book also share their stories in the free podcast Intersections: Los Angeles, available for download here.
Or, if you just have time for a quick read, check out our News & Stories article What Does It Mean to Be from LA? about the genetic science, photographic portraits, and oral storytelling to tell a deeper story of Los Angeles.

Red Composition, 1997, from the series Los Caminos (The Path), María Magdalena Campos-Pons. Triptych of Polaroid Polacolor Pro photographs. Collection of Wendi Norris. Courtesy of and © María Magdalena Campos-Pons
María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold
María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold is on at the Getty center until May 4.
In case you miss it, you can purchase the accompanying exhibition catalog—a beautiful coffee table book that features artwork from the exhibition, along with essays that "explore her vibrant, arresting artwork, which confronts issues of agency and the construction of race and belonging and challenges us to reckon with these issues in our own lives."
Or, read A Triptych as Compass, an article from Mazie Harris, the exhibition's curator, about one of the art works in the show.

Our Voices, Our Getty: Reflecting on Manuscripts
Our Voices, Our Getty: Reflecting on Manuscripts is a selection of never-before-seen pages from the Museum’s collection of medieval manuscripts, accompanied by personal interpretations by Getty’s 2024 participants in the Getty Marrow Undergraduate Internship program.
You can read more about the Getty Marrow Undergraduate Internship program here, and read what the interns had to say about the manuscripts in the exhibition in the accompanying News & Stories article What's the Story Here, and view several of the exhibited manuscripts on the exhibition page.