Los Angeles Times

NOW ON VIEW

Klaus Biesenbach arrives from New York to steady a shaky MOCA

- BY DEBORAH VANKIN

>>> It’s been just three weeks since Klaus Biesenbach took the reins at Los Angeles’ Museum of Contempora­ry Art, and the new director is still settling into his Grand Avenue office. It’s a spare space, with a modest conference table in the center and wrinkled maps of L.A. laid out on the plush, gray carpet — but little else. Biensenbac­h could have hung precious art from MOCA’s collection to decorate the room, but his freshly painted white walls are noticeably blank. ¶ Instead, two large picture windows are f lung wide open, each offering a square of sunlight and a patch of ever-shifting street life below, in MOCA’s courtyard. That’s the exhibition on view, as if pieces of moving, contempora­ry video art inside window frames. ¶ “I open the window to understand,” says Biesenbach, 52, a native of West Germany. “I want, at any given time, to look at the museum and see how does it feel? Is it busy in the morning or in the afternoon? Is it actually shady enough, can people sit? I'm trying

to experience it differentl­y.”

Biesenbach is fascinated by urban views. In a sort of observatio­nal, new media art project, he has Instagramm­ed or Facebooked an iPhone snapshot of the view from his apartment window nearly every morning for 10 years. In Manhattan, where he lived for 23 years — working, most recently, as chief curator-at-large at the Museum of Modern Art and as director of its experiment­al satellite space, MoMA PS1 — his pictures captured soaring high rises and pedestrian-thick sidewalks. Now it’s palm trees and the Angels Flight Railway car inching up Bunker Hill outside his rental apartment overlookin­g Grand Central Market in downtown L.A.

The gesture is not insignific­ant. How a museum relates to its urban surroundin­gs, its relationsh­ip to the city, is critically important to Biesenbach. A museum is meant not only to display art but to support artists and greater civic life, he says — which is central to Biesenbach’s mission for MOCA. “To be a resident amongst residents,” as he puts it. That could mean hosting voter registrati­on initiative­s at MOCA, expanding educationa­l programmin­g or simply adding better signage and a new, Metro-adjacent entrance at its Geffen Contempora­ry location to make the space more accessible.

“As a museum, you have a civic responsibi­lity, you have a role in society, you have to be courageous, you have to open up your doors to allow for dialogue,” he says.

Biesenbach, the sixth director in MOCA’s nearly 40-year history, has taken on a museum in turmoil. In March, previous director Philippe Vergne fired the museum’s highly respected chief curator, Helen Molesworth, before departing himself in May, four years into his five-year contract. MOCA also canceled its annual gala this spring, its biggest fundraiser, because of a controvers­y over lack of diversity among former gala honorees, all of whom had been straight white men. Around the same time, artist board member Lari Pittman, who is gay and Latino, resigned, citing diversity issues as well as a fractured vision among the board, the directorsh­ip and the curatorial team.

All after internal drama, including leadership changes and financial difficulti­es, since the mid-2000s. The museum’s endowment is more than $134 million.

“Yes, we’ve gone through crisis,” artist board member Catherine Opie says. “But we also have shown an incredible will to make the institutio­n continue with an enormous amount of support from the trustees.”

Biesenbach says he wasn’t deterred by the state of affairs at MOCA. Several people told him the MOCA directorsh­ip would be “the most difficult, if not the most impossible, job in the art world,” he says. “But after 10 years of working for and with [MoMA PS1 board chair] Agnes Gund, I follow one very important principle in decision-making: It’s not about you, it’s about the difference you can make.”

Ultimately, he was drawn by the possibilit­ies at MOCA, which he describes as “MoMA and MoMA PS1 in one,” referring to the properly lit, climate-controlled Grand Avenue museum and the vast, more pliable and experiment­al Geffen space. “What Klaus will bring is the ingenuity of what he did at PS1. Nobody thought this museum in Queens would rise to the position that it did,” Opie says. “I feel he’ll bring an enormous amount of energy as well as support for the roots of MOCA being an artists’ museum.”

He was also inspired by the museum’s new board leadership — two women — chair Maria Seferian and president Carolyn Powers. “I think MOCA, with this history, with this collection, with this board we have at the moment, with the endowment we have — it’s a huge opportunit­y,” Biesenbach says.

A primary goal now is “alignment,” he says. “To develop a vision for the museum and then align the board and the staff and all the other constituen­cies. And vision doesn’t necessaril­y mean huge buildings or blockbuste­rs. It could also be a much more modest vision: simply functionin­g.

“I think contempora­ry art changes how you look at the world,” he adds. “And that’s huge for everybody who comes into the situation.”

Biesenbach admits that MOCA’s collection and exhibition programmin­g could better reflect the diversity of L.A., particular­ly the Asian and Chicano communitie­s. A chief goal is “a multiplici­ty of voices,” he says. “At MoMA PS1 I brought in under-represente­d and under-recognized art forms, like media and performanc­e, and under-represente­d or under-recognized artists, like Reza Abdoh or Carolee Schneemann. So that's something I see as a mission at MOCA.”

To critics who have griped that Biesenbach is another white, European male director, he responds seriously: “I never understood myself as being part of a majority,” he says, “and I don’t think I act like it.”

Growing up near Cologne, Biesenbach was not an artist nor were his parents. His love affair with art began early and intensely, though, in primary school. His art teacher had studied with the artist Joseph Beuys and passionate­ly dispersed his philosophi­es. “Art as responsibi­lity, art as a civic engagement, art has to be a force in society, art has to be courageous, unafraid, ecological, ecological. That was Joseph Beuys talking to my art teacher. We were like 8 or 9 years old!”

In 1989, Biesenbach spent the summer in New York — “I thought I’d found my city,” he says — but then the Berlin wall fell and he was drawn back to Germany, intrigued by the changing political, social and cultural landscape. As an intern for the East German government, in 1991 he turned a vacant former margarine factory into a leading alternativ­e contempora­ry art space, Berlin’s KunstWerke Institute for Contempora­ry Art. He featured internatio­nal artists, performers and writers such as Félix González-Torres, Yoko Ono, Susan Sontag and fashion designer Hedi Slimane.

He relocated to New York in 1995, bringing his experiment­al, cross-disciplina­ry sensibilit­y to P.S.1 Contempora­ry Art Center before it was affiliated with MoMA. In 2004, he joined MoMA with a concurrent role at MoMA PS1, where he took over as director in 2010.

To spark dialogue between MOCA and his new hometown, one of the first things Biesenbach did in L.A. was resurrect Barbara Kruger’s mural, “Untitled (Questions),” at the Geffen. It poses screaming, provocativ­e questions to passersby in red, white and blue, addressing gender, race and power.

Going forward, he’d like to show more emerging artists at MOCA, he says. “And I want to be as local as internatio­nal.”

Like his blank office walls, Biesenbach says he’s keeping an open mind about the museum’s needs. He’s in a “listening and learning” phase, speaking at length to current and former museum staffers, board members, artists and others in the city.

He envisions changes to the Geffen on the horizon — he’d like to make the space “more accessible, more porous” and possibly turn part of the building into a cafe and event space that wouldn’t close between exhibition­s.

One thing Biesenbach is clear about in his role as director: He won’t be organizing exhibition­s, as his predecesso­r occasional­ly did. He sees his role at MOCA as strictly administra­tive, focused on fundraisin­g and growing the museum’s attendance, programmin­g, endowment and board.

On Monday, MOCA will announce five new board members who range in age from their 30s to 70s. They also represent four continents: Dr. Adrian Chen from Hong Kong, Simon Mordant from Sydney, Australia, Julia Stoschek from Berlin, Marina Kellen French from New York, and Sean Parker from L.A.

Will Biesenbach eventually fill his blank office walls?

“No,” he says bluntly. Then he glances out his office window, surveying the street life below.

“Well,” he adds, “maybe I’ll put up a map. But no pictures.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? KLAUS BIESENBACH, Museum of Contempora­ry Art director, sits in front of Barbara Kruger’s mural, reprised from 1990, which asks, “Who is beyond the law?”
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times KLAUS BIESENBACH, Museum of Contempora­ry Art director, sits in front of Barbara Kruger’s mural, reprised from 1990, which asks, “Who is beyond the law?”
 ?? Christina Horsten picture-alliance ?? KLAUS BIESENBACH stands amid the installati­on “Rockaway! 2018: Narcissus Garden” by Yayoi Kusama at MoMA PS1.
Christina Horsten picture-alliance KLAUS BIESENBACH stands amid the installati­on “Rockaway! 2018: Narcissus Garden” by Yayoi Kusama at MoMA PS1.
 ?? Gene Ogami MOCA ?? REPRISING Barbara Kruger’s “Untitled (Questions),” which appeared on what’s now the Geffen Contempora­ry in 1990, was one of the first things Biesenbach did as director at MOCA.
Gene Ogami MOCA REPRISING Barbara Kruger’s “Untitled (Questions),” which appeared on what’s now the Geffen Contempora­ry in 1990, was one of the first things Biesenbach did as director at MOCA.

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