Los Angeles Times

Delay to see ‘Star Wars’ narrative art

Lucas Museum pushes opening to 2023 as COVID-19 protocols slow constructi­on.

- By Deborah Vankin

The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art in Los Angeles will open later than initially expected, with pandemicre­lated delays pushing its debut to 2023.

Health and safety protocols have slowed progress, museum Director Sandra Jackson-Dumont said by email Thursday. “Substantia­l constructi­on,” originally on track to finish this year, is now expected to continue into 2022.

The steel structure for filmmaker George Lucas’ $1-billion museum, which was designed by Ma Yansong and which broke ground in March 2018, is complete. The last beam was put in place March 12. Because of COVID-19, the museum did not hold the typical topping-out party to mark the occasion.

The museum is working on interior build-outs of core areas, including two theaters and fourth-floor galleries, which will have about 80,000 square feet of exhibition space.

Items from Lucas’ 100,000-object personal collection of fine and popular art — paintings, sculpture, photograph­y, movies, illustrati­on, comic art and “Star Wars” ephemera — will be transferre­d to the museum and exhibition­s installed. Landscape design by Studio-MLA on about 11 acres also will need to be installed.

The hiring of museum staff has accelerate­d during the pandemic.

In July, Jackson-Dumont announced six key hires, including Pilar Tompkins Rivas as chief curator and deputy director of curatorial and collection­s.

On Wednesday, the museum announced it had acquired Judith F. Baca’s archive documentin­g the creation of her epic mural, “The Great Wall of Los Angeles.”

The archive features concept drawings, site plans, sketches, notes and correspond­ence between the artist and collaborat­ors — more than 350 objects in all related to the making of the half-mile-long artwork, which sits along the Tujunga Wash flood control channel in the San Fernando Valley. Baca is the first female muralist represente­d in the museum’s collection.

 ?? MAD Architects ?? LUCAS MUSEUM of Narrative Art, in a bird’s-eye view rendering, is rising in L.A.’s Exposition Park.
MAD Architects LUCAS MUSEUM of Narrative Art, in a bird’s-eye view rendering, is rising in L.A.’s Exposition Park.

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