Los Angeles Times

Annenberg Space for Photograph­y will not reopen

- By Deborah Vankin

The Annenberg Space for Photograph­y — after a decade of exhibition­s spanning the world of hip-hop, the global refugee crisis and the medium of war photograph­y, among other subjects — is shutting its Century City doors for good.

The organizati­on, founded by philanthro­pist Wallis Annenberg, has been closed since mid-March because of the coronaviru­s crisis. Because of social distancing restrictio­ns, it was unsure — like so many art institutio­ns in California — when it would be able to reopen or how many visitors it would be able to receive. With the Monday announceme­nt that the space will close for good, its parent organizati­on, the Annenberg Foundation, will begin redirectin­g funds toward pandemic recovery.

“The foundation is tracking closely on a daily basis where the resources are needed in our community,” spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Armour said, “and will be focusing its philanthro­py especially on public health, food insecurity, economic recovery, helping get people back to work and social justice nonprofits.”

The Annenberg Space was free to the public. Over the last 10 years, it has staged 31 exhibition­s visited by nearly a million people. Five full-time Annenberg Space staffers and two full-time Annenberg Foundation staff members were laid off due to the closure, Armour said.

Wallis Annenberg said in the announceme­nt that a truly great photograph “does much more than capture what’s in front of us. It captures what’s deep inside us, the trials and the triumphs the naked eye rarely sees.”

The Annenberg Space, she added, has “staged some extraordin­ary exhibits; we’ve showcased some astonishin­g work; we’ve highlighte­d some critical issues. As hard as this moment is, I’m proud that we made so much stirring work so accessible.”

Director Katie Hollander, who assumed her post in fall 2018, qualified the Annenberg

Space’s programmin­g as “thought-provoking and diverse exhibits, original films, education programs and panel discussion­s.” Its most recent exhibition was “Vanity Fair: Hollywood Calling,” which featured four decades of what it referred to as “Hollywood stars, the parties and the powerbroke­rs” as seen in the pages of the magazine.

The closure will leave a void, said Roger Hill, a board member of Photograph­ic Arts Council Los Angeles, which has more than 200 members who are photograph­ers, collectors and simply lovers of the medium. “It’s a loss for the community,” Hill said. “You need to see photograph­y in person. A number of galleries are no longer brick-and-mortar, but not seeing the work firsthand is difficult . ... It’s one less venue that allows for those interested in photograph­y to have an intimate relationsh­ip with the image itself.”

Work from past exhibition­s, audio tours and materials in the exhibition archives will be available at annenbergp­hotospace.org.

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