LACMA: A picture of progress

May 13, 2009 

It’s called “The Transformation”—a small catchphrase for the hugely ambitious, two-phase expansion of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

Already, 60,000 square feet of gallery space has been added with the opening in 2008 of the Broad Contemporary Art Museum (BCAM), designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Renzo Piano. What’s more, construction is now finished on an open-air pavilion and a concourse that connects the east and west sides of LACMA’s 20-acre mid-city campus.

Another hallmark of the transformation’s first phase: the installation of stunning public artworks, including Topanga Artist Chris Burden’s Urban Light, a neatly aligned collection of 202 vintage Los Angeles street lamps that has drawn crowds of locals and tourists alike.

All this was financed by $201 million in donations—a figure that LACMA officials say surpassed their fundraising goal by $51 million.

So now it’s on to phase two, which is well underway. The centerpiece this time is the Lynda and Stewart Resnick Exhibition Pavillion, also designed by architect Renzo Piano. The Resnicks donated $55 million in funding and artwork to construct the new exhibition space, located just north of the BCAM.

The single-story pavilion, scheduled for completion in the summer of 2010, will feature a twenty-foot ceiling and no interior walls, creating a flexible floor plan that can accommodate any kind of exhibition.

Also included in this phase of construction will be the complete rehabilitation of LACMA West, the 300,000 square-foot former May Company department store, built in the late 1930s as a gateway to the historic Miracle Mile.

Since the earliest stages of planning, Supervisor Yaroslavsky has been closely involved with LACMA’s transformation, championing the decade-long project in philanthropic and government circles. He is widely considered to be the board’s most ardent advocate of the arts.

“LACMA’s expansion has been—and will continue to be—a boon for all of Los Angeles,” says the supervisor, whose district includes the museum. “Whether through its architecture, its collections, its outdoor sculptures or its stellar public programs, LACMA is creating a museum in a park that welcomes every resident of Los Angeles County and millions of visitors from throughout the world.”
For pictures and more information on LACMA’s transformation, click here.

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