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CAL STATE FULLERTON GRAND CENTRAL ART CENTER
125 N. Broadway,
Santa Ana, CA 92701
General Phone: 714.567.7233
Director's Phone: 714.567.7234
Fax: 714.567.4145
Grand Central Art Center Mission Statement
California State University, Fullerton Grand Central Art Center is dedicated
to the investigation and promotion of contemporary art and visual culture:
regionally, nationally, and internationally through unique collaborations
between artists, students, and the community.
General Information
We are approximately one mile from the Santa Ana freeway (Interstate 5).
The center is approximately twenty-five miles south of Los Angeles and seventy miles north of San Diego.
The Cal State Fullerton Grand Central Art Center is the result of a unique partnership between the university and the city of Santa Ana. Located ten miles south of the main campus in the heart of downtown Santa Ana the art center is a mixed residential, commercial and educational complex. The art center is a 45,000 square-foot, half-city block deep and full city-block long, three-level structure and houses: live/studio spaces for visual arts graduate students, the Grand Central Gallery, the Project room, the Grand Central Theater, Watermark Press, the Gypsy Den Café, a Rental and Sales gallery, classrooms and computer lab, Community room and computer lab, and a studio and living space dedicated to the center’s international artist-in-residence program.
Santa Ana community activist and visionary Don Cribb and Cal State Fullerton Gallery Director Mike McGee originally conceived the Grand Central Art Center in 1994 as the anchor and catalyst for a ten-square block area in the heart of downtown designated as the Artists Village. The subsequent success of the Artists Village has helped spawn a cultural and economic renewal in a city once burdened with a reputation as a crime ridden, fiscally depressed and undesirable urban environment.
The city of Santa Ana spent $7.5 million to purchase and refurbish what was the Grand Central Building—originally built in 1924 the building served as the central market for Orange County up until the 1940s. LA-based architect Steven Ehrlich did the original design for the remodel; Orange County-based Robbins, Jorgensen and Christopher was the executive architectural firm. The project has won three architectural awards.
An innovative fiscal plan allows the center to generate enough income to support basic day-to-day operations. The restaurant, printmaking studio and classroom/computer lab are subleased to third-party operators. The apartments and studios are sub-leased to students.
Twenty-seven apartments are available for students who have been accepted into the university MA or MFA visual and performing arts programs. Currently, the apartments are fully occupied and there is a waiting list of potential residents. Students live and work at the Grand Central. Each resident who rents an apartment is assigned a studio and parking at the twenty-four-hour-guarded parking structure on 3rd Street. They also have free access to a T1 connection to the university VAX (Internet access) and the extensive university electronic databases.
One of the residential apartments is reserved for the art center’s artist-in-residence program. In addition, an 800-square-foot private studio space is designated for the artist-in-residence. A G3 Macintosh Internet capable computer is available for use in either the studio area or apartment.
The Grand Central Gallery and Project Room feature exhibitions and projects by internationally noted artists. We present four to six exhibitions a year in each space.
The Rental and Sales Gallery offers new exhibitions each month. Currently, we represent more than 200 local artists including CSUF alumni, staff, faculty and students.
Watermark Printmaking is a private business run by owner James Lorigan. Lorigan is a master printmaker and artist. He is also the contracted printer for most of the Grand Central Press projects. The Grand Central Press publishes limited edition prints, folio editions and catalogues. The Press project is managed by art center director and supported by the Grand Central Art Forum.
The Grand Central Art Forum is a group of 20 arts supporters who provide professional expertise and sponsor exhibitions, programs and events.
The Theater is centrally located in the building. It is configured in-the-round and seats an audience of eighty-five. We are currently scheduling various performance groups and theater companies to utilize the theater space throughout the year, including productions presented by the university’s nationally recognized dance and theater department. Participating artists in residence also utilize the theatre for performances, film presentations and lectures.

Overview
he CSUF Auxiliary Services Corporation, one of four auxiliary corporations on the CSUF campus, was incorporated in 1959 as a nonprofit public corporation for the purpose of promoting and assisting the educational mission of Cal State Fullerton. In fulfilling its mission, the CSUF Auxiliary Services Corporation employs over 500 people as it performs a variety of services throughout the campus community. Specifically, it oversees commercial operations; administers research and educational grants and contracts for the University; is responsible for the fiscal administration for numerous University programs; recently acquired College Park to provide additional offices and classrooms for the university; and administers the CSUF Housing Authority -- the developer of 86 “for sale” homes for faculty and staff currently in nearby Buena Park.
The CSUF Auxiliary Services Corporation is governed by a 25-member Board of Directors consisting of students, faculty, administrators and prominent leaders from the surrounding community. The Foundation’s Executive Director, representing the administrative staff, serves as the Chief Executive Officer for the CSUF Auxiliary Services Corporation and reports to the Executive Committee of the Board.
As is evident, the CSUF Auxiliary Services Corporation is a multi-dimensional organization created by the University to provide a multitude of various services that can be administered efficiently and effectively under the auspices of a single organization. Suffice it to say, CSUF Auxiliary Services Corporation returns a significant portion of its revenues generated through these programs (in excess of $1.3 million each of the last several years) to aid the University in achieving its educational mission. |