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Cinema Makeup School

1993 establishments in CaliforniaCosmeticsEducational institutions established in 1993Film schools in CaliforniaLos Angeles County, California school stubs
Los Angeles building and structure stubsSchools in Los AngelesVocational education in the United States
Cinema Makeup School
Cinema Makeup School

Cinema Makeup School is a private, for-profit makeup training school located in Los Angeles. The school was founded in 1993. Specialties include beauty make-up for film and television as well as fashion and editorial purposes, hairstyling, airbrushing and bodypainting, character make-up, special make-up effects and prosthetics, creature maquette sculpture and digital makeup effects design, along with Advanced Lab Techniques and Advanced Beauty Techniques. Several graduates of the school have appeared as contestants on Syfy's reality game show Face Off.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cinema Makeup School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Cinema Makeup School
South Western Avenue, Los Angeles Koreatown

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 34.061944444444 ° E -118.30916666667 °
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Address

Western & Wilshire

South Western Avenue
90010 Los Angeles, Koreatown
California, United States
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Cinema Makeup School
Cinema Makeup School
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Wilshire Boulevard Temple
Wilshire Boulevard Temple

Wilshire Boulevard Temple, known from 1862 to 1933 as Congregation B'nai B'rith, is the oldest Jewish congregation in Los Angeles, California. Wilshire Boulevard Temple's main building, with a sanctuary topped by a large Byzantine revival dome and decorated with interior murals, is a City of Los Angeles Historic Cultural Monument and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Moorish-style building, located on Wilshire Boulevard in the Wilshire Center district, was completed in 1929 and was designed by architect Abram M. Edelman (a son of the congregation's first rabbi, Abram Wolf Edelman). Wilshire Boulevard Temple is one of the largest Jewish congregations in Los Angeles, and has been led by several influential rabbis. Edgar Magnin has been described as the "John Wayne" of rabbis, and served for 69 years, from 1915 to 1984. The congregation has built a second campus on the Westside, following relocations among its people, and this opened in 1998. Despite repeated reports that the congregation might sell its older, landmark building in what had become known as the Koreatown neighborhood, the temple began extensive renovations of the historic facility in 2008 under the leadership of Senior Rabbi Steven Z. Leder. The remodeled sanctuary reopened in 2013. In 2018, construction began on the Audrey Irmas Pavilion, a major expansion on the original site designed by Rem Koolhaas. Construction was completed in September 2021. The building is "designed to host religious and cultural activities and performances...[with] three distinct gathering spaces that puncture through the building—a Grand Ballroom, a smaller Chapel/event space, and a sunken garden."The 55,000 square foot structure designed by the world-class architecture firm Office of Metropolitan Architecture (OMA)