Should LACMA's Imperfection Be Erased or Embraced?

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Being away for two weeks, I missed the openings of two major exhibitions at LACMA, so I rushed to see them immediately upon my return. The first is a retrospective of work by celebrated American artist James Turrell, whose transcendental Light and Space installations are shown in two museum pavilions. I can't remember ever spending so much time staying with a single work of art, but here I willingly and happily got "lost." Again and again, I found myself meditating in front — and inside — of each of Turrell's installations, with their poetic, highly spiritual presentation of eternity.

 

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Installation view of "Presence of the Past: Peter Zumthor Reconsiders LACMA"
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Photo © 2013 Museum Associates/LACMA


The second important exhibition I wanted to see deals with the ambitious plans by renowned Swiss architect Peter Zumthor to completely re-imagine LACMA's campus, by erasing most of the existing buildings in favor of an imposing, amoeba-like structure wrapped in glass.

 

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Los Angeles County Museum of Art, c. 1965
William L. Pereira and Associates, architect
Photo © 2013 Museum Associates/LACMA, photographic archives

 

After a failed attempt more than ten years ago to replace these very buildings with a singular dramatic structure by another star architect, Rem Koolhaas, one hoped that the new proposal would be less grandiose and more sympathetic to the existing campus. I was pleasantly surprised by the curators of the exhibition, who generously delve into the near-half-century history of the campus. There are numerous photos and models of the museum's early pavilions, which while definitely not masterpieces are not bad either. Pardon my nostalgia, but I find that they convincingly capture the cultural optimism of the 1960's and aesthetic confusion of the 1980's.

 

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Installation view of "Presence of the Past: Peter Zumthor Reconsiders LACMA"
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Photo © 2013 Museum Associates/LACMA

 

One could understand the dismissal of a mere 50 years of LACMA history by Peter Zumthor, who sees Los Angeles through the millennial prism of European history. The same goes for LACMA director Michael Govan, who came from New York with a lot of enthusiasm and intriguing ideas for our relatively young city, but not necessarily an appreciation for its history.

 

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Installation view of "Presence of the Past: Peter Zumthor Reconsiders LACMA"
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Photo © 2013 Museum Associates/LACMA

 

First, he proposed to erect in front of the museum a gigantic sculpture by Jeff Koons, which would have had a choo-choo train suspended from a crane. Govan hoped it would become a new symbol for LA, but luckily for us, it never materialized.

Shortly after, he tried to raise money to acquire the famous "Golden Adele," one of the five paintings by Gustav Klimt returned by the Austrian government to Maria Altmann, and triumphantly exhibited upon their arrival to the USA here at LACMA. Unfortunately Govan was not able to raise sufficient funds for the acquisition, and "Adele" went to New York to become a much-admired centerpiece of Ronald Lauder's collection at Neue Galerie.

 

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Installation view of "Presence of the Past: Peter Zumthor Reconsiders LACMA"
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Photo © 2013 Museum Associates/LACMA


However, among the many impressive achievements of Michael Govan's leadership are: adding the Resnick Pavilion by Renzo Piano to the museum campus; installing a remarkable cluster of street lamps by Chris Burden in front of the museum; and arranging the operatic arrival onto the campus of the gigantic rock by Michael Heizer.

 

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Still from the video "The Museum, Reimagined," directed by Lucy Walker
© 2013 Museum Associates/LACMA


All of the above appear to be only a warm-up for Govan's most ambitious plan yet. Complaining about various deficiencies of the old buildings, he and Zumthor are proposing to get rid of them, in spite of the fact that they represent a significant chunk of our cultural history. To me, this cluster of aging buildings comes across as an unintended portrait of all of us, coming to this City of Angels from the four corners of the world. These buildings are not perfect, but neither are we.

 

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Therme Vals, Switzerland, 1996
Peter Zumthor, architect
© 2013 Atelier Peter Zumthor & Partner
Photo © 2013 Hélène Binet


Watching the video of the conversation between Michael Govan and Peter Zumthor, one cannot help but admire Zumthor's numerous visionary projects, mostly built on a rather modest scale. But what he came up with here, for LACMA, is a rather intimidating and aloof superstructure on a monumental scale he has never worked on before.

 

Looking at the various models presented in the exhibition, I couldn't help but feel lost in the elaborate labyrinth of his building. But more importantly, the way the collections would be shown in this new superstructure makes the art look overwhelmed if not even imprisoned by the whole grand scheme.


Banner view: Installation view of Presence of the Past: Peter Zumthor Reconsiders LACMA, Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Photo © 2013 Museum Associates/LACMA

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