Los Angeles Times

MOCA’S ousting of curator is a misfire

- CHRISTOPHE­R KNIGHT ART CRITIC

Who is the director of the Museum of Contempora­ry Art? According to the museum, it’s Jeffrey Deitch, the former New York art dealer who — with virtually no prior museum experience — assumed the top job at one of America’s leading institutio­ns two years ago. But don’t be so sure. Late Wednesday, MOCA dumped Paul Schimmel, its chief curator for 22 years and a prime reason for the museum’s stellar internatio­nal reputation. No curator working in the United States today has a more impressive record of exhibition­s and acquisitio­ns in the field of art since 1950 than Schimmel.

His sudden firing speaks of an intrusive board of trustees and a weak profession­al staff, which is a lethal combinatio­n for an art museum.

Here’s the shocking part: Trustees voted on the firing, and Eli Broad, one of eight life trustees at MOCA, delivered the news.

The board voted? On a curator’s job status?

And a trustee did the dirty work? Where was the

museum director?

“The trustee’s duty,” in the pointed words of museum historian Laurence Vail Coleman, “is to have the museum run, not to run it.”

Not since the bad old days of the late 1960s and 1970s, when the then-new Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the old Pasadena Art Museum suffered the slings and arrows of outrageous trustees, have we seen something like this. The result back then was one hobbled museum (LACMA) that was barely a national joke, and a once-adventurou­s institutio­n (PAM) that went under.

It is the job of the director, not trustees, to — well, direct the day-to-day operation, including profession­al staff. What MOCA’s board did is what a corporatio­n’s board might do in dealing with a company president or CEO. That’s chilling.

An art museum is not a business, but MOCA has a businessma­n installed in the director’s office and a billionair­e-clogged board (at least four, with a total net worth in excess of $21 billion). Schimmel’s dismissal means that the museum’s institutio­nal culture is now entirely corporate.

What an extraordin­ary, tragic devolution. MOCA was born in 1978 and 1979 when a group of artists — not collectors, art dealers, civic leaders or wealthy businessme­n and businesswo­men — got together to brainstorm. The seed germinated. The new museum slowly profession­alized during the next decade. Over the course of a generation, it grew into an internatio­nal powerhouse. For most of that time Schimmel was lead curator. Tremendous tenure

His 20-year run of ambitious exhibition­s is remarkable. It began with 1992’s eyebogglin­g “Helter Skelter: L.A. Art in the 1990s,” which catapulted the city’s burgeoning reputation as a production center for new art, and “Hand-Painted Pop: American Art in Transition, 195562,” an incisive historical show that revised our understand­ing of the way Pop art emerged from an age of abstractio­n.

That initial artistic focus — L.A. plus history — came together in last fall’s “Under the Big Black Sun: California Art, 1974-81,” Schimmel’s sprawling extravagan­za for Pacific Standard Time. The wide-ranging survey scanned the difficult years bracketed by the ouster of Richard Nixon and the coronation of Ronald Reagan — two U.S. presidents from Los Angeles — in no fewer than 500 works from 130 artists. Not incidental­ly, it also surveyed the city’s artistic runup to MOCA’s birth.

Many shows came in between, including one from 2006 that ranks among the great modern museum achievemen­ts.

“Robert Rauschenbe­rg: Combines” was based on MOCA’s unparallel­ed collection of 11works from a revolution­ary series that, between 1954 and 1964, cross-pollinated painting, sculpture, photograph­y and printing in ways that still resonate in today’s art. Schimmel managed to assemble 70 combines — works that are fragile, extremely valuable and difficult to borrow. That no one had done it before spoke volumes about the museum and its chief curator.

Now, with Schimmel’s departure, no one is left on MOCA’s staff with the stature or experience to pull off a coup like that — including its director. He certainly wasn’t the only gifted curator building the permanent collection and doing important exhibition­s. But as chief curator, he just as certainly set the tone.

One less-noticed measure of a museum’s long-term institutio­nal success is the quality of the jobs filled by curators who leave, moving on to expand their horizons. Take two of MOCA’s curatorial defections, both after the tumultuous 2008 fiscal meltdown.

Ann Goldstein, 55, is now director of the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, since World War II one of Europe’s most adventurou­s museums. In September, Philipp Kaiser, 39, assumes the directorsh­ip of the Museum Ludwig in Cologne, Germany, epicenter of new European art.

It’s instructiv­e that Goldstein and Kaiser are heading European museums rather than American ones. In Europe, art museums are largely curator-driven. In the U.S., they are more trustee-driven. MOCA was fertile ground for curators deeply involved in an institutio­nal mission where, among its constituen­cy, artists are first among equals.

Funding is the primary reason for the difference. Many European museums receive public subsidies that American institutio­ns do not enjoy. Both systems have their strengths and weaknesses. But the balancing act between staff profession­als and trustees in the U.S. is precarious — and this week MOCA toppled it. A clumsy move

No curator does — or should — have a lifetime appointmen­t. But neither should a curator who was instrument­al in establishi­ng a museum’s remarkable reputation over the course of 22 years on the job be repaid with a shoddily delivered pink slip.

How can we tell that this was handled badly? Easy.

Word of the firing did not initially come from the museum. It came instead from outside by way of anonymous late-night email, followed by blog posts, Twitter blurbs and old-fashioned reporting.

Even then, MOCA said it would issue a press release about Wednesday’s decapitati­on — on Friday. (When it finally appeared, nothing much was added to the news beyond gushing praise for the victim, though it clung to the euphemism “resigned.”) That 36-hour sequence speaks not of unconventi­onal thinking but of institutio­nal ineptitude, indifferen­ce and even callousnes­s. The museum was unprepared.

Terminatio­n was, frankly, not unexpected. Tensions between Schimmel and Deitch, MOCA’s director, were obvious from the start. They’ve only gotten worse over time. The conflict has been a regular topic of art-world gossip.

Tensions were also evident with various trustees, dating at least to 2008. Some board leaders, faced with their own fiduciary irresponsi­bility in spending down the museum endowment to cover years of deficits, had taken the unconscion­able step of considerin­g sales of art from the permanent collection. Schimmel was not shy in objecting.

The curator knew, as some trustees apparently didn’t, that paying operating debts through sales of the museum’s art was suicidal. It would imperil future art donations and destroy the institutio­n’s hard-won reputation among its peers.

It would also reflect on the curator’s legacy. Still, his position was both principled and practical — and regarded as obstructio­nist by some business people on the board. Buying, selling, investing, making money — that’s what business people do.

Sunday starts the museum’s new fiscal year. With Schimmel’s crude ouster Wednesday, the financial position of the “company,” its equity accounts and balances for long-term assets are all accounted for. Liabilitie­s have been cleared.

The deed was hardly different than a movie studio dumping talent — business as usual in Hollywood. Corporate arrogance goes with the territory. Apparently, it’s also now the style — and substance — at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin L.A. Times ?? PAUL SCHIMMEL was MOCA’s chief curator.
Jay L. Clendenin L.A. Times PAUL SCHIMMEL was MOCA’s chief curator.

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