Los Angeles Times

Geffen’s gift is a ‘game changer’ for LACMA plans

Historic $150-million donation helps shore up museum expansion.

- By Jessica Gelt

Breathing fresh life into one of the city’s most ambitious cultural projects and making history as the largest gift on record toward the constructi­on of an American museum, David Geffen has pledged $150 million to a new building for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

Geffen’s pledge raises LACMA’s fundraisin­g total to $450 million of the $650 million needed to break ground on a modernist Peter Zumthor building, arguably the most anticipate­d new piece of architectu­re in L.A. since Frank Gehry’s Walt Disney Concert Hall opened in 2003.

The Zumthor building, to be named the David Geffen Galleries, has evolved from a black, amorphous design reminiscen­t of the nearby La Brea Tar Pits into a more muscular, sand-colored concrete structure that bridges Wilshire Boulevard. Beyond giving LACMA the kind of architectu­ral presence that has become the norm for world-class art museums, the Zumthor project would further cement L.A.’s rising status as a cultural capital of internatio­nal import.

“There is no great city without a great museum,” Geffen said by phone from his Beverly Hills home, film giant Jack Warner’s former estate. “Los Angeles is the city of the future, and with the involvemen­t of those who support art and architectu­re here, the creation of this building is a very important event.”

The Geffen gift — the largest single cash gift from an individual in LACMA’s history — comes after more than three years of relentless fundraisin­g spearheade­d by museum Director Michael Govan.

“That this watershed gift is happening in Los Angeles is a testament, not just to LACMA, but to all of Los Angeles as a cultural center,” Govan said. “This is a public-private partnershi­p of extraordin­ary dimension.”

When it is finished, the building will essentiall­y be owned by the people of Los Angeles County. That LACMA is a public facility sets it apart from museums with patron-funded endowments, including the Getty and the Norton Simon.

Board of Supervisor­s Chairman Mark Ridley-Thomas called the Geffen gift a “game changer” for the museum and “an inspiring example of how private philanthro­pists can partner with public institutio­ns to expand architectu­ral and artistic horizons for everyone.”

Although philanthro­pist Eli Broad, filmmaker George Lucas and Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton have spent or pledged as much or more than Geffen, their museums were designed specifical­ly to house their personal art collection­s. For a donation on par with Geffen’s, one must look back to 1937, when industrial­ist Andrew Mellon contribute­d $10 million for the constructi­on of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. That gift, adjusted for inflation, equals about $174 million today.

The new LACMA structure will replace three original William Pereira buildings, completed in 1965 and often criticized for being too inaccessib­le, as well as a 1986 addition by Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer Associates. Govan campaigned for the new constructi­on, in part, by saying those buildings would soon need more than $300 million in upgrades and restoratio­n if they were to remain standing.

LACMA’s groundbrea­king, originally planned for 2018, is now scheduled for 2019, with completion slated for 2023 — around when the city aims to complete the Metro Purple Line light-rail extension along Wilshire Boulevard, with a stop across the street from the museum.

When built, the new building would cap a twodecade expansion effort marked by steps forward and back. An ambitious 2001 plan for a new Rem Koolhaas design was abandoned a year later because of stalled fundraisin­g. LACMA did open the Broad Contempora­ry Art Museum building, or BCAM, in 2008 and the Lynda and Stewart Resnick Exhibition Pavilion in 2010. Both were designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano, and both came with $50-million grants from their namesakes.

For the Zumthor project, last year LACMA announced a $50-million pledge from Las Vegas art collector and museum cochair Elaine Wynn and a $25-million pledge from former Univision Chairman A. Jerrold Perenchio. With $125 million already approved by the L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s, total fundraisin­g stood at about $275 million, the museum said. Harbor Freight Tools founder Eric Smidt and his wife, Susan, pledged $25 million last October.

Then news about fundraisin­g went largely dark for a year, prompting some speculatio­n that LACMA’s expansion might be stalled — and making the timing of the Geffen announceme­nt all the more crucial to keeping the Zumthor plan alive.

“I’ve lived here for a very long time, and I believe in the power of these institutio­ns to change people’s lives,” Geffen said. “I think it’s valuable to support them, and I’m fortunate that I can. There are many others who also can and hopefully will do so in the future.”

The entertainm­ent mogul — founder of Asylum and Geffen records, co-founder of DreamWorks SKG and a man whose worth is estimated by Forbes at $7.8 billion — is synonymous with Hollywood.

But after he moved back to New York part time, many assumed he intended to play the role of philanthro­pic prodigal son. He donated $100 million to that city’s Museum of Modern Art last year and $100 million to renovate Avery Fisher Hall (home of the New York Philharmon­ic) the year before that — a plan that remains up in the air.

Geffen, however, dismissed as “nonsense” any suggestion that he is playing favorites when it comes to coasts. L.A. has been the leading recipient of his largesse. In 1995, he gave $5 million to UCLA’s Westwood Theatre, renamed the Geffen Playhouse. The following year he gave $5 million to the Museum of Contempora­ry Art in Los Angeles, and MOCA’s satellite location in Little Tokyo was renamed the Geffen Contempora­ry. Since 2002, he has donated more than $400 million to the School of Medicine at UCLA, now the David Geffen School of Medicine. And in 2013 he donated $25 million to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ museum under constructi­on next to LACMA.

“I think medicine, education and the arts are extremely important to the community,” Geffen said, shrugging off a question about his legacy. “It’s about creating opportunit­ies for young people to become inspired. I think you find more young artists living in Los Angeles today who decades ago would have been in New York.”

More gifts to both cities will follow, he said. Geffen is among the world’s top art

‘I’ve lived here for a very long time, and I believe in the power of these institutio­ns to change people’s lives.’ — David Geffen, on donating $150 million to LACMA

collectors, with a cache consisting largely of postwar art by American masters, including Jackson Pollock, Jasper Johns and Willem de Kooning valued at more than $2 billion.

Geffen said it’s possible he will leave a portion of his collection to LACMA, adding that he hasn’t given it much thought yet.

“Hopefully I’m not going to die for a long time,” he said.

 ?? Atelier Peter Zumthor & Partner ?? GROUNDBREA­KING on the $650-million building is scheduled for 2019, with completion expected in 2023.
Atelier Peter Zumthor & Partner GROUNDBREA­KING on the $650-million building is scheduled for 2019, with completion expected in 2023.
 ?? Atelier Peter Zumthor & Partner ?? A RENDERING of Peter Zumthor’s latest designs for the new building at LACMA features a monolithic look.
Atelier Peter Zumthor & Partner A RENDERING of Peter Zumthor’s latest designs for the new building at LACMA features a monolithic look.
 ?? Andrew Toth Getty Images ?? AMONG David Geffen’s philanthro­pic efforts was a $100-million gift in 2016 to New York’s MoMA.
Andrew Toth Getty Images AMONG David Geffen’s philanthro­pic efforts was a $100-million gift in 2016 to New York’s MoMA.

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