Los Angeles Times

Will this S. F. mural survive?

San Francisco Art Institute mulls future of $ 50 million Diego Rivera artwork.

- By Jessica Gelt

A Diego Rivera mural estimated to be worth $ 50 million has sparked outcry from artist Catherine Opie and others who worry that its owner, the financiall­y troubled San Francisco Art Institute, might sell the work to keep its doors open.

The school grounds and buildings — but not the 1931 mural — are owned by the University of California, which paid off the art institute’s $ 19.7 million bank debt last fall in order to save the 150- year- old school from losing its Chestnut Street campus in a foreclosur­e sale.

The art institute has up to six years to pay off this debt, plus interest and minus its lease payments, if it wants to reclaim ownership of the property, spokeswoma­n Sara Fitzmauric­e said. If it cannot pay off or refinance that amount by 2026, UC will take possession and the art institute will vacate.

The school acknowledg­ed that if it does have to vacate, it might need to move the Rivera mural, titled “The Making of a Fresco Showing the Building of a City,” Fitzmauric­e said. The board has begun “a feasibilit­y study on if and how the mural could potentiall­y be moved,” she added.

Filmmaker George Lucas is reportedly interested in buying the mural for the inthe- works Lucas Museum of Narrative Art in L. A. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art also has been mentioned as a party that could take ownership but leave the mural in place on campus as part of an annex.

The Lucas Museum declined to comment. Pam Rorke Levy, chair of the art institute’s board of trustees, would say only that “a number of conversati­ons have been taking place with several institutio­ns about the possibilit­y to endow or acquire the mural to ensure the future of the school and uphold our mission.”

In the meantime, the possible sale has prompted many to speak out, including prominent alumni such as Opie, who received her bachelor’s degree from San Francisco Art Institute in 1985. In an open letter, Opie wrote that selling the mural would

be an “incredibly unconscion­able decision,” and that as a result she will be pulling a piece of her work from an upcoming auction for alumni works.

“Solely the fact that the Diego Rivera mural has become a monetary asset in the minds of the trustees; an asset thought to help the institutio­n survive,” Opie wrote. “Of course, I want SFAI to survive, but not by gutting one of the most important artworks in the history of the institutio­n. The Diego Rivera mural has lived and inspired many generation­s of artists at 800 Chestnut.”

Whether the school sells the artwork to remain on Chestnut Street or brings the Rivera with it to a new home, the question remains: How, exactly, does one move a $ 50 million piece of monumental art without wrecking it?

Curator and art conservato­r Rosa Lowinger has successful­ly moved largescale architectu­ral artworks including an exterior mosaic by Bruce Hayes at Houston Methodist Hospital and a Millard Sheets glass mosaic designed for a savings and loan building in Santa Monica. She said moving the Rive

ra wouldn’t be easy but could be done.

Lowinger said a project of that scale could take up to two years and could cost between $ 1.5 million and $ 2 million, excluding whatever repairs might be needed in the building from which the mural was removed.

From a conservato­r’s point of view, the priority is the health of the artwork. A great deal of attention must be devoted to an initial explorator­y phase, examining the structure and material of the wall housing the mural as well as the medium and substrate of the art itself. Is the mural a true fresco, a painting on panels, a fresco on panel or something else?

The art institute was told during its feasibilit­y study that the mural is not painted directly on the wall. If this is the case, Lowinger said, a conservato­r would need to know how it is affixed to the wall.

“Presumably there is informatio­n on how Rivera typically did this, since he did it more than once before. But even if there is not, there are probes that can be done to ascertain the manner of attachment and how it comes apart, if it does,” Lowinger said. If the mural was brought in on panels, knowing how they were installed would be crucial.

Another question: Can the mural be laid on a f latbed truck for transporta­tion?

“These are vertical works of art, and in order to lay them down horizontal­ly there is a lot of reinforcem­ent that needs to be done,” Lowinger said. “You don’t want to create any buckling or stresses.”

The paint on the mural would have to be protected in some way, likely with a layer of Japanese tissue and an adhesive that would not cause damage upon removal.

Lowinger generally works with a team that would include an engineer, a contractor and a qualified art- handling team.

In a statement to The Times, Levy said that the board’s first choice would not be to sell the Rivera mural but to endow it in place, “attracting patrons or a partner organizati­on who would create a substantia­l fund that would enable us to preserve, protect and present the mural to the public, as well as helping the board fulfill its fiduciary role to protect the school as an educationa­l institutio­n and ensure its future survival.”

 ?? DIEGO RIVERA’S MURAL Robert Holmes Corbis vi a Getty I mages ?? might need to be moved from its site at the San Francisco Art Institute.
DIEGO RIVERA’S MURAL Robert Holmes Corbis vi a Getty I mages might need to be moved from its site at the San Francisco Art Institute.

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