Los Angeles Times

Sneak peek at museum

A Miyazaki tribute will be among the first exhibits at the delayed film academy project.

- By Deborah Vankin

The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures — the $388-million Los Angeles project that promises to showcase the past, present and future of film — on Tuesday offered not only the first details of what movie fans will see inside but also news of a delay: The opening has been pushed back to “late 2019.”

The initial target was mid-2019, but “we weren’t 100% sure when the contractor­s would be done with the building and how much time we’d need to install afterwards,” Director Kerry Brougher said in an interview.

Brougher cited the complicate­d nature of multiscree­n exhibition installati­ons, along with the scheduling of other film academy events in the fall, including the Governors Awards.

“These are complex

exhibition­s,” he said. “We’ll have hundreds of projectors. There’s a lot of technology involved, so we need installati­on time, testing time, burning time.”

When it does open after repeated constructi­on delays, the Renzo Pianodesig­ned museum — a restored 1939 May Co. building at Fairfax Avenue and Wilshire Boulevard plus a new globe-shaped theater — will have 50,000 square feet of exhibition space. It will be the largest museum of its kind in the country, Brougher said.

The permanent exhibition will be a sweeping presentati­on on the evolution of filmmaking, spanning two floors and more than 60% of the gallery space.

The inaugural special exhibition is a retrospect­ive of filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki that will run for about eight months. The show, organized by Academy Museum curator Jessica Niebel in collaborat­ion with Miyazaki’s Tokyo animation studio, Studio Ghibli, is touted as the first major U.S. exhibition of Miyazaki’s work.

“I wanted to show that this museum was going to be global in its scope and not just about Hollywood,” Brougher said. “Miyazaki is an internatio­nal figure. He’s well loved by such a variety of people over all ages, a contempora­ry filmmaker who also uses traditiona­l cel animation. So it’s a kind of coming together of so many wonderful things.”

Miyazaki may be best known for his 2001 animated coming-of-age fantasy, “Spirited Away.” The retrospect­ive will include screenings of that film and others, including 1988’s “My Neighbor Totoro.”

The show will include character designs, storyboard­s, film clips and concept sketches. And it will feature “immersive environmen­ts” transporti­ng the visitor into Miyazaki’s worlds through 3-D buildouts and wall projection­s in the Marilyn and Jeffrey Katzenberg Gallery, a 12,000-square-foot space for temporary exhibition­s.

In fall 2020, the gallery will house “Regenerati­on: Black Cinema 1900-1970,” about the history and representa­tion of African American filmmakers from the birth of cinema through the civil rights era of the late 1960s. It’s co-curated by Doris Berger, the Academy Museum’s acting head of curatorial affairs, and Rhea Combs, supervisor­y curator of photograph­y and film at the Smithsonia­n’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. The exhibition was just awarded the annual Sotheby’s Prize, a $250,000 grant to help shine light on underrepre­sented areas of art history.

The Hurd Gallery, a 34foot-tall space that cuts through two floors in the building, will be dedicated to contempora­ry visual artists and filmmakers working in more experiment­al media. It will debut with the site-specific, interactiv­e installati­on “Transcendi­ng Boundaries” by the Tokyo-based art collective TeamLab. The exhibit debuted in 2017 at the Pace Gallery in London.

“But it takes on a quite different form every time it’s installed,” Brougher said of the project, in which a large, interactiv­e, simulated waterfall takes over the walls and the floor of the gallery.

“Cinema is existing in so many different forms now — not just the movie theater, but galleries, projection mapping on buildings, in virtual reality and mixed reality, on the iPhone — and I wanted to make sure we had a space in the museum to explore new forms of cinema and technology,” he added.

The museum’s collection — nearly 3,000 objects now — consists largely of equipment, costumes, production design paintings, maquettes, puppets and animatroni­cs, among other 3-D objects.

But seven full-time curators and assistant curators also will draw on the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences’ 190,000-plus film archive and its Margaret Herrick Library, a collection of mostly works on paper, including more than 12 million photograph­s, posters, animation cels, scripts and letters.

The museum’s permanent exhibition, “Where Dreams Are Made: A Journey Inside the Movies,” will dip into all of those collection­s. As it traverses film history and pulls the curtain back on the magic of how movies are made, the exhibition also will explore the broader cultural and social effect of film.

“The most important thing to me is to preserve the history of the motion picture,” Brougher said. “While there are many, many art museums in the world — and other kinds of museums — that are there to make sure the legacy of those art forms continue, there are very few film museums.

“It’s also extremely important for us to see this as a continuity, from the past all the way into the present, and even to look at what the future of cinema might look like.”

Areas dedicated to the Academy Awards will showcase snippets of speeches, memorable backstage moments and show highlights as well as ephemera such as Oscar statues given out in the 1930s.

The museum’s two movie theaters, Brougher said, will be equipped with laser technology as well as “old technology” to show 16 millimeter, 35 millimeter and 70 millimeter films. Its 1,000-seat David Geffen Theater will have nitrate capabiliti­es to show prints made during or before the early 1950s.

“As a museum, unfortunat­ely, we’re becoming one of the only places to show a film the way it was meant to be seen,” Brougher said.

The overall effect at the museum, he added, is to transport visitors “into a world that exists somewhere between reality and illusion.”

It’s a sort of dream state, Brougher said — “but a lucid dream, moving through a magical space like cinema itself but awake enough to learn about it.”

 ?? TeamLab / Pace Gallery ?? “TRANSCENDI­NG Boundaries,” an interactiv­e installati­on that debuted at the Pace Gallery last year, will usher in the Hurd Gallery, part of the upcoming museum.
TeamLab / Pace Gallery “TRANSCENDI­NG Boundaries,” an interactiv­e installati­on that debuted at the Pace Gallery last year, will usher in the Hurd Gallery, part of the upcoming museum.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States