San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

RENOVATED ART MUSEUM TO REOPEN IN APRIL

La Jolla site underwent $105M makeover, adding more gallery space, park

- BY ELISABETH FRAUSTO

After a four-year, $105 million renovation, the Museum of Contempora­ry Art San Diego plans to reopen its flagship La Jolla location to the public April 9.

The reopening, a free event from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., will feature two inaugural exhibition­s and architectu­ral tours of the newly named Joan and Irwin Jacobs Building, along with the opportunit­y to view the ocean-facing Art Park, new event spaces and outdoor terraces.

The museum, at 700 Prospect St., will follow the reopening celebratio­n with Prebys Play Day, a new monthly family-focused event funded by the Conrad Prebys Foundation.

The public reopening will follow a private ribbon-cutting ceremony April 5, and private events for donors and others April 5-8.

The entire main building, previously unnamed, is now called the Joan and Irwin Jacobs Building in honor of longtime supporters Joan and Irwin Jacobs, whose $20 million provided the foundation for the museum’s extensive fundraisin­g efforts.

“We are especially excited that many others will now have the opportunit­y to enjoy great contempora­ry art with this beautiful expansion of MCASD in La Jolla,” Irwin Jacobs said in a statement.

Kathryn Kanjo, the David C. Copley director and chief executive of MCASD, said in a statement that the Jacobses’ philanthro­py “enables nonprofit organizati­ons such as MCASD to look to the future, allowing the innovation of art and ideas to come to fruition.”

The Jacobses further celebrated MCASD’S La Jolla reopening with the donation of two additional sculptures: a stainless-steel pumpkin with colorful polka dots by Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama

and an oversize stack of lead books by German painter and sculptor Anselm Kiefer.

MCASD’S renovation­s doubled the museum’s square footage to 104,400. The museum now boasts four times the previous gallery space, two levels of galleries, a public park and new terraces overlookin­g the coastline.

Interior spaces were renovated as new spaces were added, all designed by Selldorf Architects.

Kanjo said “the design honors the museum’s rich architectu­ral history as it frames distinctiv­e views of The Village and the coast, providing an updated space for the art and for today’s audience.”

One of the inaugural exhibition­s, “Selections From the Collection,” will highlight works from the more than 5,600 in the museum’s collection, curated since 1950 and including pieces by John Baldessari, Larry Bell, Sam Gilliam, Robert Irwin, Barbara Kruger, Bruce Nauman, Helen Pashgian, Martin Puryear and Marcos Ramírez ERRE. The exhibit will be accompanie­d by a printed 460-page handbook.

The museum’s new 6,800square-foot special exhibition space, called the Iris & Matthew Strauss Galleries, will host “Niki de Saint Phalle in the 1960s,” the first exhibit to focus on the experiment­al and prolific work of French American artist de Saint Phalle, who spent her last years in La Jolla and died in 2002. The exhibition, co-curated by The Menil Collection in Houston, will feature major paintings, sculptures and assemblage­s from the artist’s career. It will begin April 9 and run until July.

In the fall, MCASD will present “Alexis Smith: The American Way,” the first retrospect­ive of the California artist in more than 25 years.

A full events schedule and details will be posted at mcasd.org/events.

“We look forward to inviting the public to explore our world, our region and ourselves through the prism of contempora­ry art,” Kanjo said.

 ?? MAHA BAZZARI ?? The Museum of Contempora­ry Art San Diego is poised to reopen its La Jolla flagship site to the public April 9.
MAHA BAZZARI The Museum of Contempora­ry Art San Diego is poised to reopen its La Jolla flagship site to the public April 9.
 ?? ELISABETH FRAUSTO U-T COMMUNITY PRESS ?? The expansive suite of Strauss gallery spaces will function as a special exhibits hall at the museum.
ELISABETH FRAUSTO U-T COMMUNITY PRESS The expansive suite of Strauss gallery spaces will function as a special exhibits hall at the museum.

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