Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

‘Star Wars’ creator’s museum buys Rockwell masterpiec­e

- Photos and text from wire services

PITTSFIELD, MASS. » The Massachuse­tts museum that won a legal battle over its plan to sell dozens of works of art has sold a Norman Rockwell masterpiec­e to a Los Angeles museum founded by “Star Wars” creator George Lucas, officials said Wednesday.

The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art would not say how much it paid for Rockwell’s “Shuffleton’s Barbershop,” the piece at the center of a legal fight over the Berkshire Museum’s planned art sale.

The Lucas Museum said it plans to loan the painting to the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridg­e, Massachuse­tts, where it will be on display into 2020.

Lucas’ museum said it will then explore loaning the work to other museums in Massachuse­tts and other states to “maximize public access to this beloved work of art.”

“Norman Rockwell is one of our nation’s most important storytelle­rs, and this cultural treasure will continue to be seen and enjoyed by the public in an American museum, where it will be a source of inspiratio­n for generation­s to come,” Don Bacigalupi, founding president of the Lucas Museum, said in a statement.

The museum broke ground last month on its billion-dollar center dedicated to the art of visual storytelli­ng. The museum is expected to open to the public in 2022.

“Shuffleton’s Barbershop” is among up to 40 pieces of work being sold by the Berkshire Museum, which said it would be forced to close without an influx of cash.

The museum announced Tuesday that another Rockwell piece — “Blacksmith’s Boy-Heel and Toe” — and 12 other works will be auctioned by Sotheby’s next month. Works by William Bouguereau, Alexander Calder and John La Farge also are going on the auction block.

The goal of the sale is to raise $55 million to bolster the museum’s endowment and fund renovation­s as it changes its mission away from art and more toward science and natural history.

But sale of the Rockwell works struck a nerve with many because the famed illustrato­r lived in nearby Stockbridg­e for 25 years and had given the works to the museum as gifts.

The sale drew condemnati­on from national museum organizati­ons and spawned legal challenges, including one that involved Rockwell’s three sons.

His sons dropped their challenge after a separate deal was worked out to sell their father’s “Shuffleton’s Barbershop” painting to another nonprofit museum that will put on display locally for up to two years.

A single justice of the state’s highest court last week gave the green light for the sale of 39 other works.

The museum says it hopes to meet its $55 million goal without selling all the pieces.

“We now hope we can raise what the museum needs by offering for sale fewer than half of the works originally anticipate­d,” Elizabeth McGraw, president of the museum’s trustees, said in a statement. “That’s good for the museum and the community we serve.”

 ?? BEN GARVER — THE BERKSHIRE EAGLE VIA AP, FILE ?? In this file photo, a pedestrian passes the Berkshire Museum in Pittsfield, Mass.
BEN GARVER — THE BERKSHIRE EAGLE VIA AP, FILE In this file photo, a pedestrian passes the Berkshire Museum in Pittsfield, Mass.

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