Benita Bike's DanceArt at Discovery Cube LA

Date

January 24

Time

1:00 pm - 2:00 pm

Cost

Limited free tickets available by emailing benita@danceart.org. Otherwise an entry fee to the museum is required.

Council District

City Council District 7
Benita Bike's DanceArt in Discovery Cube Los Angeles' Science of Dance Weekend flyer, 2026.
Event Schedule

January 2026

  • Saturday 24th 1:00 AM
  • Sunday 25th 1:00 AM

On Saturday and Sunday, January 25 & 26, 2025, 1:00 pm, Benita Bike’s DanceArt will perform at Discovery Cube Los Angeles, 11800 Foothill Blvd in Los Angeles (Sylmar). This performance is one of a number of dance related events that are part of Discovery Cube’s Science of Dance Weekend. Benita Bike’s DanceArt will present excerpts from various dances interspersed with information about dance, Q&A, and a special “try-out-the-moves” session with DanceArt’s professional dancers.

 

Limited free tickets available by emailing benita@danceart.org. Otherwise an entry fee to the museum is required.

Upcoming Events

January 22 @ 11:00 am - 4:00 pm -
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$0.00 - $7.00

Hollyhock House Tours

Experience the interior of Hollyhock House at your own pace with a self-guided tour. Docents are on hand to provide information and answer questions.

January 21 @ 10:00 am - 5:00 pm -
Check the website for ticket price

Noé Montes: Regional History

Photographer Noé Montes presents Regional History, a body of work documenting the landscapes, people, and cultural narratives of the Inland Empire. The exhibition reflects on identity, migration, and the layered histories that shape Southern California.

January 21 @ 11:00 am - 4:00 pm -
Adults - $5, Seniors and Students - $3, Members and Children under 12 - Free

Our Bodies Are Memories of Our Bodies: Siapo ma Solo

siapo—indigenous Samoan barkcloth abstraction—and solo—poetry in the Samoan genre and worldview, here composed in English—by Fa’afafine, non-binary Samoan artist Dan Taulapapa McMullin. Printed on cloth with ink painting, these works embody the fa’asamoa understanding that the body itself is an archive, carrying ancestral and personal memory through the mana of social and environmental relationships.