The 125 objects on display are deliberately eclectic. Political buttons, family photographs and papers, commissioned installations, and even a 1967 Mark VII vehicle from Disneyland’s Autopia attraction sit alongside contemporary artworks. Among them is Chemehuevi artist Cara Romero’s Oil and Gold (2021), in which Romero and artist Leah Mata Fragua’s daughters pose in front of a South Bay refinery, linking Indigenous presence to the environmental costs of industry. For Brucken, the juxtaposition is key: “Objects are a form of historical evidence,” she said, “but art is almost like expert witness testimony.”
At first glance, a museum devoted to the American West might seem an unlikely venue for a meditation on the Declaration. But for the curators, Los Angeles offers a vantage point that reveals the nation’s founding values as ongoing struggles. Brucken pointed to a broader historical position: “To understand the future of America, you have to understand LA.”















