Los Angeles Times

IN MEMORY OF AN L.A. ARTWORLD LUMINARY

The late Chris Burden had his eye on the future with his now-iconic work, ‘Urban Light,’ at LACMA.

- By Susan Freudenhei­m Susan Freudenhei­m is executive editor of the Jewish Journal.

The last time I formally interviewe­d Chris Burden was on the eve of the unveiling of “Urban Light” in early 2008. Iwas on assignment for this newspaper, and we met on a dreary winter day on the plaza of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art alongside the now-iconic installati­on of 202 vintage Los Angeles street lamps.

Workmen were still wiring the lamps aswe sat down, and there was a bit of tension as to whether they would finish in time for the scheduled first lighting. Burden was clearly tense that day, and when I pulled out my tape recorder— as I’d done with him dozens of times before— he immediatel­y told me to turn it off.

“Take notes,” he said, not particular­ly kindly, explaining that he hated to read his quotes exactly as he’d spoken— the reverse of most interview subjects. I gulped and started scribbling, knowing full well that I had hours of him talking on tape about these same lamps already in my files at home. We both knewthat.

Burden, who died May 10 at age 69, was like that. You thought you were on a path together, and suddenly he’d take a sharp turn that threw you off balance. Hewas both particular and unpredicta­ble. I asked whether the lamps were being lighted with solar power, which a member of themuseum staff had suggested. Hesaid angrily that he had no interest in being green; the work was about art and light and history.

I changed the subject. He warmed up.

“I’ve been driving by these buildings for 40 years, and it’s always bugged me how this institutio­n turned its back on the city,” he said of LACMA, the money quote that led the story. Quintessen­tial Burden— always an engineer or architect in his heart. If something bothered him, he wanted to fix it. Hepredicte­d the lamps would reinvent the museum’s image and also restore life to a piece of L.A. history. He could not have proved more prescient.

He’d been obsessed with those lamps since December 2000. In 2003, he’d shown met he receipt for $1,600 for his first purchase, of two, at the Rose Bowl Flea Market. (He kept meticulous records of everything.) At first he’d imagined putting them at the end of his driveway. “Then when I got more and more of them,” he said. “I started to see the potential. And I really liked them, and it felt like I was buying a piece of a city. It felt like Iwas buying a city.”

As he delved into aworld of collectors, he dug in deeper and deeper. “I had some cash coming in, and basically I turned allmy profit into the lamps.… And tome thatwas a good investment, although who knows if it will be.”

From2003 through 2005, I spent a good deal of time at his hilltop Topanga Canyon studio doing research for a biography I have yet to write. When I first visited, dozens of lamp carcasses were lying everywhere on the grounds, gutted of their electrical innards, mostly in pieces.

Once, when he’d just taken his first fewto be repaired and repainted at a shop in the San Fernando Valley, he led me there, downthe winding hill fromthe studio— I followed his truck inmy car, and I remember distinctly the care he took tomake sure I wouldn’t get lost. He often offered amix of deep personal concern combined with a somewhat distant, arm’s-length nonchalanc­e.

At the shop, four of the shorter lamps were installed, slim and elegant and brightly lighted, already coated in the gray powdercoat paint thatwould become his signature— he had no interest in mimicking their original green. I earned his attention, if not respect, that day as I grilled the shop’s foreman about the paint’s applicatio­n and durability. Burden liked technical discussion­s.

In his studio and in his home, he often seemed asmuch a collector as an artist.

His workspace was always full of detritus, only some of it in use. Cars, trains, Erector sets and boxes of Lincoln Logs were piled high, in addition to the artworks he was working on with the help of a host of studio assistants. Even as hewas thinking about the lamps, his teamwas developing the first iteration of what would become “Metropolis,” the racetrack of moving mini-cars in and around a simulated city, a version of which, “Metropolis II,” also is at LACMA. Itwas all serious play.

At one point, he thought the lamps might sell to MAK Vienna, the Austrian museum of applied arts where he’d had a retrospect­ive. He talked a lot about “moving L.A. to Europe,” bringing West Coast light to the old country. The reversal of art’s hierarchy amused him. But the cost of moving the lamps became prohibitiv­e.

And then therewas a plan was to take them to New York’s Gagosian Gallery and spread them around on the city’s streets, which also ultimately fell through. Itwas a couple of years after 9/11, and he imagined they’d bring “life and light back to the city.”

Many months passed, and with it much frustratio­n and spilled ink in angry letters over the canceled plans, but finally Burden decided to take things into his own hands and show the work in his own way, at his own studio.

He installed dozens of the lamps, two-by-two, onto newly laid and electrifie­d concrete pads surroundin­g the outside of his airplane hangar-like workspace toward the end of 2005. Then he and his wife, the accomplish­ed and prolific sculptor Nancy Rubins, threwa party at which he threw the switch, and the lights went on. Itwas spectacula­r. The neighbors must have done a double-take at the sight.

Around this time LACMA got involved. Museum Director Michael Govan’s and senior curator of modern art Stephanie Barron’s vision and commitment to bringing 202 of those lamps to Wilshire Boulevard must be acknowledg­ed, not least because the lamps had to be transporte­d down a tight, switchback road fromthe studio. And that was just the start of the complex task of installing them and making those streetligh­ts public again.

There is another satisfying element. Museums are meant to preserve, and Burden cared about legacy. “These lamps were designed to last several hundred years,” he told me in one conversati­on. “This lamp will last10,000 years. ... It’s such a weird idea, to make an object that is designed to be around for several thousand years. Nobody ever thinks in those terms anymore. At all. Do you knowwhat I’m saying?”

We moved on to talk about some sculptures of metal suspension bridges he was working on at the time.

“Those bridges could be around in a couple hundred years. Long after I’m gone. They have the potential, if somebody takes care of them. I just like the fact that I’m making something that could physically outlast me by a significan­t amount.”

‘It’s such a weird idea, to make an object that is designed to be around for several thousand years.’

— Chris Burden

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 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? CHRIS BURDEN
began collecting street lamps in 2000 and had several different plans for them before they went up at LACMA.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times CHRIS BURDEN began collecting street lamps in 2000 and had several different plans for them before they went up at LACMA.

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