Las Vegas Review-Journal

No Jedi mind trick: Lucas breaks ground on museum

- By John Rogers The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — “Star Wars” creator George Lucas visited a galaxy on the edge of downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday to break ground on his $1.5 billion Lucas Museum of Narrative Art.

The institutio­n, scheduled to open in 2021, is envisioned as not just a repository for “Star Wars” memorabili­a but a wide-ranging museum representi­ng all forms of visual storytelli­ng from paintings and drawings to comic strips and digital and traditiona­l films.

The latter will run the gamut from 1927’s futuristic masterpiec­e “Metropolis” to Orson Welles’ groundbrea­king 1941 film “Citizen Kane” to the Lucas-steven Spielberg collaborat­ions on the “Indiana Jones” movies.

Of course the Force will also be strong with “Star Wars” stuff, including Luke Skywalker’s first lightsaber and Darth Vader’s helmet.

But when the City Council voted 14-0 to approve the project last year, Lucas emphasized that the Lucas Museum for Narrative Art is hardly intended to be a vanity project.

Its wide-ranging collection will also include paintings by Norman Rockwell, Edgar Degas and Pierre-auguste Renoir, comic strips by “Peanuts” creator Charles Schulz and undergroun­d artist Robert Crumb, animation from films such as “Who Framed Roger Rabbit” and special effects from films such as “E.T. the Extra-terrestria­l.”

“The idea is that it’s popular art. It’s art that appeals to people emotionall­y and tells you something about who you are,” he said.

The museum’s constructi­on and endowment is being funded entirely by Lucas, his wife and their foundation, which Los Angeles officials say makes it the largest public gift ever given to a municipali­ty.

Schematic drawings show the building, with about 100,000 square feet of gallery space, looking a good deal like a version of Han Solo’s Millennium Falcon spacecraft as it appears to hover above a section of Exposition Park near downtown.

It will be walking distance from the Natural History Museum of

Los Angeles County, the California Science Center and the University of Southern California, which is where Lucas studied cinema before launching his career with the acclaimed 1971 science-fiction film “THX 1138.”

Plans are to offer programs for schoolchil­dren explaining the history of narrative storytelli­ng with the hope it will inspire them to become their own generation’s storytelle­rs.

 ?? Winslow Townson ?? “Star Wars” creator George Lucas (pictured) andhiswife were joined Wednesday byseveralc­ity and county officials who ceremoniou­sly started work on turning a section of Exposition Park into a new museum in Los Angeles.
The Associated Press file
Winslow Townson “Star Wars” creator George Lucas (pictured) andhiswife were joined Wednesday byseveralc­ity and county officials who ceremoniou­sly started work on turning a section of Exposition Park into a new museum in Los Angeles. The Associated Press file

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States