Essential Arts: While you were hunkered down at home for a pandemic, the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art rose in Exposition Park. Here's an update.
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[Essential Arts] You may have seen our recent [swarm of stories]( on all things [Academy Museum of Motion Pictures](. The museum opens Sept. 30 and letâs just say the A, C, D and E keys have faded, entirely, on my computer keyboard after having typed out âAcademy Museumâ so frequently. But what about that other filmmaker museum rising in L.A.? Hi, Iâm arts writer Deborah Vankin, filling in for Carolina Miranda (whose computer keyboard, no doubt, has a few faded letters by now as well). Iâll start this weekâs Essential Arts with an update on George Lucasâ spaceship of a museum rising in Exposition Park next door to the Coliseum. Another opening on the horizon The $1-billion [Lucas Museum of Narrative Art]( is on track to premiere in 2023. Los Angeles has not had a major film museum until now, with the Academy Museum opening. But how much visitor appetite is there? And is there room for two large cinematic arts museums in one city? Absolutely, said Lucas Museum Director [Sandra Jackson-Dumont]( while also reminding everyone of an important distinction. âWeâre super excited about the opening of the Academy Museum â itâs so necessary as a new addition to the Los Angeles community and it will expand the cultural landscape,â Jackson-Dumont said. âBut Iâm happy to say that the only film museum in the city is the Academy Museum because the Lucas Museum is a museum dedicated to narrative art; itâs not about film only.â Narrative art, she added, âcuts across space and time and really is about visual storytelling through a range of material. Itâs photography, itâs painting, itâs sculpture, itâs ephemera from newspapers and magazines, itâs all of those things.â [A rendering of the future Lucas Museum of Narrative Art.]
A rendering of the future Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, which is aiming for a 2023 opening. (Lucas Museum of Narrative Art) COVID-19 health and safety protocols may have slowed construction and pushed the Lucas Museumâs targeted 2022 debut, but the futuristic-looking [Ma Yansong-designed building]( is progressing, Jackson-Dumont said. The museum secured the final beam in its steel structure and âtopped outâ in March. Construction of two movie theaters, second-floor classrooms and the fourth-floor galleries â about 80,000 square feet of exhibition space â is underway. The galleries will feature works from [Lucasâ personal collection]( of more than 100,000 pieces of fine and popular art as well as âStar Warsâ ephemera. The museum recently hired a deputy director of public programs and social impact, Regan Pro, who comes from the Seattle Art Museum, where she held a similar position. Key positions in the library, operations, programming and curatorial departments will be announced in the first quarter of next year. The Lucas Museum also is beefing up its collection. Earlier this month it acquired [Alice Neelâs]( painting âFish Marketâ (1947), which was part of the Metropolitan Museum of Artâs recent retrospective, âAlice Neel: People Come First.â In May the Lucas Museum acquired [Robert Colescottâs]( 1975 painting âGeorge Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware: Page From an American History Textbook,â which Jackson-Dumont calls a vehicle âto explore and unpack racially, socially and historically charged and significant figures.â Itâs also added contemporary works by Southern California artists to its permanent collection, including Cara Romeroâs âThe Last Indian Marketâ (2015) and Criselda Vasquezâs âThe New American Gothicâ (2017). But Jackson-Dumont may be most excited about a work the museum acquired in late 2020: [Frida Kahloâs]( âAutorretrato Dedicado al Dr. Eloesserâ (Self Portrait Dedicated to Dr. Eloesser) (1940), which was included in the de Young Museumâs recent exhibition âFrida Kahlo: Appearances Can Be Deceiving.â âItâs one of her most important works,â Jackson-Dumont said. âIt was painted during a particularly tumultuous time in her life, and it incorporates images that tell about aspects of her experiences. Thereâs a thorn necklace around the neck, the earrings were a gift from Picasso, the banner inscribed with a dedication to the physician that helped her during her time in the Bay Area. Weâre looking forward to inviting people to discuss this work, see this work. I think this is the âMona Lisaâ of Mexico, itâs beautiful.â The museum has also added several archives to its collection. This spring it acquired a nearly 3,000-object collection of artworks and other materials by Mexican political lithographer [José Guadalupe Posada](. It also acquired [Judith F. Bacaâs archive]( documenting the making her epic, half-mile-long mural, [âThe Great Wall of Los Angeles.â]( Sheâs the first female muralist represented in the museumâs collection. [Participants of the Lucas Museum and LA Commons construction fence project, along Bill Robertson Lane.]
Participants of the Lucas Museum and LA Commons construction fence project, along Bill Robertson Lane. (Photo: Marty Cotwright) And if youâre intrigued by the colorful art on the museumâs construction fence along Bill Robertson Lane, thatâs a project between the Lucas Museum and arts nonprofit [L.A. Commons](. The art is by 21 local students who worked with muralist [Noni Olabisi]( and L.A. artist Luis Mateo to create narrative art for the fence. The works touch on themes of neighborhood and community, family and friendship. âItâs exciting,â Jackson-Dumont said of all the momentum. âItâs a really amazing moment. Weâve been busy on every level.â ADVERTISEMENT
In other museum news ... âWhatâs happening over at MOCA?â That was the question of the week as top-level leadership changes at the museum unfolded in a [chaotic manner](. On Tuesday, MOCA [offered answers]( in an email: It confirmed that former director (then artistic director) Klaus Biesenbach is [headed to Berlin]( and newly hired [executive director]( Johanna Burton â who was to [co-lead the museum]( with Biesenbach â has been named sole director. Burton is the first female director in MOCAâs 42-year-history. What should have been a celebratory moment for Los Angeles and the museum turned into a botched transition of power and an embarrassment for the institutionâs new leader. Hereâs [my story]( on Burtonâs historic appointment. [Johanna Burton was named the new executive director of the Museum of Contemporary Art.]
Johanna Burton was named the new executive director of the Museum of Contemporary Art. (Erin Leland) [L.A. and O.C. museum happenings]( this month compiled by listings coordinator Matt Cooper include a must-see survey of videos, installations and sculptures by Swiss multimedia artist [Pipilotti Rist at MOCAâs Geffen Contemporary]( as well as rare Picasso prints at the Norton Simon Museum. A sound and video installation by avant-garde composer William Basinski at the Long Beach Museum of Art incorporates footage from the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, and contemporary works inspired by traditional East Asian ink art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Plus â wait for it â getaway cars, motorcycles, boats and other vehicles from James Bond movies will be on view at the Petersen Automotive Museum. Finally: little-known [factoids]( about the Academy Museum and a handy guide to [walkable destinations]( in the area. Make a day of it! [Pablo Picasso, "Two Nude Women"]
Pablo Picassoâs âTwo Nude Womenâ is on view at the Norton Simon Museum. (Norton Simon Museum/Estate of Pablo Picasso/Artists Rights Society, New York)
Theater notes How to end a ruinous war between Athens and Sparta? Organize a rollicking sex strike among Greek women. So goes the Troubadour Theater Companyâs âLizastrata,â a campy remake of ancient Greek playwright Aristophanesâ antiwar comedy, âLysistrata.â The production is a cabaret drag show-like homage to Liza Minnelli, writes Times theater critic Charles McNulty, who says [in his review]( âIt felt almost sacrilegious to be cackling, shimmying and occasionally blushing in my seat at the majestic Pacific Palisades venue, where just a stoneâs throw away the âStatue of a Victorious Youthâ stands triumphantly in the hallowed silence of the museumâs other archaic treasures.â [âLizastrata" at the Getty Villa. Left to right: Jess Coffman, Cloie Wyatt Taylor and Suzanne Jolie.]
âLizastrataâ at the Getty Villa. Left to right: Jess Coffman, Cloie Wyatt Taylor and Suzanne Jolie.
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The classical scene For its 9/11 tribute program, the Santa Monica new music series Jacaranda presented American composer Anthony Davisâ âRestless Mourningâ at the First Presbyterian Church â Jacarandaâs first concert since the pandemic closures. âHiding in what should have been plain sight,â Times classical music critic Mark Swed writes [in his review]( âthis grippingly poetic and politically candid 9/11 response hits home. It could have been written the day before yesterday.â [Anthony Davis prior to "Restless Mourning." ]
Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Anthony Davis speaks to the audience prior to âRestless Mourning,â the Santa Monica new music series Jacarandaâs 9/11 tribute program on Sept. 11, 2021. (Michael Baker) Los Angeles Philharmonic Music & Artistic Director Gustavo Dudamel established his Dudamel Fellowship Program in 2009. More than a decade later, former fellows [are making magic onstage](. Five of them â Tianyi Lu, Enluis Montes Olivar, Ruth Reinhardt, Gemma New and Marta Gardolinska â had their Hollywood Bowl debuts this summer. Many of Dudamelâs fellows are women, notes Swed, and at least one of them is âsure to smash the orchestra glass ceiling to smithereens once and for all.â Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( The Met and that dress âThe medium is the message,â Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said on [Instagram]( of her [Met Gala]( dress. Whatâs your take on AOCâs controversial white gown, which said âTax the Richâ on the back? Christi Carras [reports](. [Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, left, at the 2021 Met Gala. ]
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, left, at the Met Gala on Sept. 13, 2021, in New York City. (Mike Coppola/Getty Images )
A legend of this fall At 81, choreographer-director Graciela Daniele is marking dual milestones: After 10 Tony Award nominations, she is finally going home with a prize â a special Tony for lifetime achievement, to be bestowed upon her Sept. 26. Meanwhile, on the opposite coast, the Old Globe in San Diego is opening âThe Gardens of Anuncia,â composer-librettist Michael John LaChiusaâs musical based on Danieleâs extraordinary life. Times staff writer Daryl Miller has [the interview]( with the woman who danced in the original companies of âFolliesâ and âChicago,â choreographed âThe Mystery of Edwin Droodâ and is revered for her work on âRagtimeâ and âOnce on This Island.â Tickets, please Los Angeles Opera opens its season this weekend inside the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion with Verdiâs âIl Trovatore.â The venerable Ojai Music Festival â canceled last year and postponed from summer this year â is back at long last this weekend, with John Adams as artistic director programming the likes of Icelandic pianist VÃkingur Ãlafsson and Americana singer-songwriter Rhiannon Giddens. Performance artist John Fleck has a cabaret-style work in progress running Saturdays at the Odyssey Theatre. Rodrigo y Gabriela take center stage Saturday and Sunday at the Ford in Hollywood. And A Noise Within in Pasadena opens its 30th season with Lisa Peterson and Denis OâHareâs acclaimed âAn Iliad,â with company members Deborah Strang and Geoff Elliott alternating in a solo show reimagining Homerâs ancient tale. All of this and more gets wrapped into Cooperâs [weekend best bets](. Time to get out and about! ADVERTISEMENT
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