Los Angeles Times

Architect behind Getty Villa dies

STEPHEN GARRETT, 1922 - 2019

- By Suzanne Muchnic Muchnic is a former Times art critic.

Stephen Garrett, who helped turn J. Paul Getty’s dream into a world-famous museum in Malibu, was 96.

Stephen George Garrett, a British American architect who helped oil tycoon J. Paul Getty transform his improbable dream of a Roman-style villa in Malibu into a world-famous cultural attraction and became its first director, has died at a care facility in Santa Monica.

Garrett, who enjoyed working with the demanding and sometimes unpredicta­ble billionair­e, died Monday of natural causes, his daughter Rebecca Garrett said. He was 96.

“Stephen Garrett’s first and foremost contributi­on was working with Getty on the whole concept and developmen­t of the villa, in which Getty’s collection would reside,” said Timothy Potts, director of the J. Paul Getty Museum.

Born in a ranch house in Malibu in 1954, the museum moved to the facility now known as the Getty Villa in 1974 and later expanded into the Getty Center in Los Angeles. Although the villa was Getty’s “brilliant” idea, Potts said, “Stephen was very much involved with making it happen. He was an architectu­ral consultant who provided expert advice. Getty was not on the ground. He was in England. Stephen was the man here on the ground.”

The immensely wealthy but notoriousl­y frugal Getty was not an easy boss. Historical accounts are peppered with tales of his complaints about the tiniest museum expenses, such as a $17 electric pencil sharpener, and demands that guests at his Sutton Place estate near London make telephone calls from an outdoor phone booth. Long after he had become a serious art collector, Getty had to be assured that acquisitio­ns proposed by his curators were good buys before he would approve them.

But Garrett “adored working for Getty,” his daughter said in a telephone conversati­on. “I think, in great part, it was because Getty knew what he wanted. My father loved working for someone who had an opinion and was very well educated and well researched.”

Born in Ashtead, England, on Dec. 26, 1922, Garrett got his early education at Dragon School in Oxford and Charterhou­se School in Surrey. Following his passion for architectu­re and design, he studied at Trinity College at Cambridge University, where he earned a master’s degree in architectu­re. After working four years at the Design Research Unit in London, he establishe­d a private architectu­ral practice, ultimately specializi­ng in the restoratio­n of historic buildings. He also became the father of two girls, Carey and Georgia, with his first wife, Peta Jones. Their marriage ended in divorce, and in 1964 he married Jean Macintosh, who had two children of her own.

Garrett met Getty in 1967, when the oil baron was looking for a “good, inexpensiv­e architect” to advise him on the possible renovation of structures on Gaiola Island in the Bay of Naples in Italy, his daughter said. He agreed to make a quick, cheap trip — flying back and forth in one day and packing his own lunch — and then file a report.

But it was only the beginning of an adventure that led to other projects, including the possible expansion of Getty’s ranch house in

Southern California. Getty had purchased the 64-acre property in 1946 and added a wing to create the first version of the J. Paul Getty Museum, but he wanted more space for the art.

Garrett agreed to take a look, this time with room and board provided, and concluded that there was no way to expand the building without destroying its architectu­ral integrity. Because plenty of land was available, he suggested that Getty construct a new building for his collection. The following year, 1968, Getty came up with the idea of reconstruc­ting the Villa dei Papiri, a Roman villa in Herculaneu­m that was buried by the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in AD 79.

An exact replica was impossible, but he envisioned a building based on available informatio­n with scholarly imaginatio­n filling the gaps. Garrett declined Getty’s invitation to take charge, feeling unqualifie­d to deal with such a complex project in a city with a plethora of unfamiliar rules, but he became Getty’s architectu­ral consultant, embarking on a five-year marathon of travel at the behest of a fiercely engaged man who wanted to know about every last detail and loved to peruse photograph­s of workers pouring concrete and installing marble walls.

At the time, Getty, who was living in London, had become ill and developed a fear of flying. In 1973, the year before the villa opened, Getty appointed Garrett as the villa’s deputy director, retaining the top position for himself. But, either because of his health or his aversion to flying, he never saw his dream come to life.

After Getty’s death in 1976, Garrett was promoted to director and presided over an unsettled period when the unexpected gift of Getty’s fortune led to speculatio­n that the museum would end up dominating the entire world art market. Garrett stepped down in 1984 and spent the next few years working with the Long Beach Museum of Art and the Hammer Museum. Later, he traveled the world with his with longtime partner, Phyllis Nugent.

“Even in his final years, when I got to know him, he was an expansive, dynamic, enthusiast­ic, adventurou­s, amusing character,” Potts said. “He was admired. He was not someone you forgot. All of that played into his ability to work for a famously difficult man, namely Mr. Getty.”

Garrett is survived by his children, Carey Cowham, Georgia, Rebecca and Jason Garrett, and partner Nugent.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? DREAM COME TRUE Stephen Garrett helped oil baron J. Paul Getty transform his vision of a Roman-style villa in Malibu into a world-famous cultural attraction and became the museum’s first director.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times DREAM COME TRUE Stephen Garrett helped oil baron J. Paul Getty transform his vision of a Roman-style villa in Malibu into a world-famous cultural attraction and became the museum’s first director.

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