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L.A. Social Diary

The scene at the Opening of the Broad Contemporary Art Museum at LACMA.
Last Saturday night in Los Angeles, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (known locally as LACMA), particularly its newest addition, the travertine-marble clad Renzo Piano designed Broad Contemporary Art Museum (already known as BCAM –pronounced bee-cam) had its star-studded opening.

There were more than 1,100 guests, not only from the area but also from all over the United States and Europe, as well prominent entertainment industry figures, artists, executives and civic leaders who gathered for the grand occasion. They entered on a red carpet by greeted by costumed stilt-walkers to the sound of Taiko drums. Think guests arriving for Oscar night and you get the picture.

Eli and Edythe Broad
 
Tables for the dinner ran from $25,000 (silver), $50,000 (gold) to $100,000 (platinum),  and the event raised more than $5 million. There were museum directors from all over too: Nicholas Serota of Britain's Tate Gallery, Earl A. "Rusty" Powell III of the National Gallery of Art (and former LACMA director), Thomas Krens of Guggenheim Museums Worldwide and from L.A.’s MoCA (Museum of Contemporary Art), the Getty, the Hammer and other local institutions. And there were artists, such as John Baldessari, Chris Burden, Damien Hirst, Ellsworth Kelly, Jeff Koons, Barbara Kruger, Richard Serra, Robert Graham, Ed Ruscha, all of whom have works on display in BCAM. And of course, Edythe and Eli Broad, the benefactors of the newest addition to this sprawling museum that now resides on what is called a “campus” of buildings on a plot just a block away from the famous La Brea Tar Pits where ancient mammals, predators and prey were trapped, died and were fossilized for the world to continue to see and contemplate.

Mr. Broad (rhymes with road) is a Los Angeles billionaire (recent estimated net worth:  $5 billion) who made his fortune in the home building business (Kaufman & Broad, now KB homes). With his wife, Edythe he donated $50 million to build this part of the museum. Originally the planners had hired Rem Koolhaus who came up with a design that would require tearing down some of the existing structures, (of course) and building a vast and mammoth edifice that would cover the entire area and cost about $300 million. No, was the answer the tax payers voted to fund the proposed project. So the Broads came in with the subsequent offer.

Mr. Broad, who began his serious collecting of contemporary art in the early 1980s, has amassed a collection of more than two thousand pieces. It was widely believed that his fifty million donation would be followed with a donation of his collection, more or less. However, just before the opening, he announced that he would NOT be donating his collectcion to the new museum bearing his name, but only LENDING pieces of it. The entire collection would remain with the Eli Broad Foundation.

There was quite a to-do in the art world about this decision, much of which did not favor Mr. Broad and his decision. However, it became clear that after spending his millions acquiring art, the collector was not about to hand it over to generations of highly paid, self-important managers to trade around the acquisitions at their will and leisure. So now the Eli Broad Foundation will be in charge and can lend parts of its collections to museums and exhibitions all over the world, including to the new BCAM. Everybody is now more or less happy.

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art is a municipal museum, unlike many of the important museums of the world. Its employees are municipal employees, and so it is governed by a county charter that many think inhibits its progress. It has vast and important collections of all kinds, but the government charter doesn’t give it the opportunities that private museums have. For example, two years ago it had been displaying the famous Klimt gold portrait of Vienna aristocrat Adele Bloch-Bauer, which had been looted by the Nazis and returned to a Los Angeles woman and her relatives. When they decided to sell the picture, LACMA was unable to raise the funds to buy it and it went to Ronald Lauder and his new museum Neue Galerie in New York for $135 million.

As a result of moments such as this, and because its development as a major museum is only thirty or forty years old, LACMA is often regarded as somewhat of a stepsister to the world class museums. This attitude is a creaky one that reflects more the earlier cultural growing pains of a city that is now a major world metropolis than the reality. Two years ago, the museum appointed Michael Govan as Director and CEO.
Champagne for the hundreds of "cool" attendees.
Mr. Govan, a young dynamic museum executive, was formerly President and Director of the Dia Art Foundation in New York which is considered one of the leading cutting edge institutions in the world of contemporary art. A graduate of Williams whose passion for the art of Renaissance and baroque Italy adds luster to his background, and his presence in Los Angeles ramps up LACMA’s reputation in the art world considerably. The BCAM addition reflects and adds to the museum’s international reputation.

Besides the $56-million cost of erecting the new building that Eli and Edythe Broad covered, the Broads also donated $10 million more for artworks on the inside. For the grand opening, BCAM’s interiors were dominated by about 200 pieces borrowed from Broad and his foundation, as well as other collections, including LACMA's.

The buzz in the art world continues to be, “will LACMA make it,” so to speak, on international terms. They should forget about it; it’s already there. Saturday night’s opening was a celebration not only of the Renzo Piano structure and the Broad generosity, but of the fact that the Los Angeles County Museum of Art has already made it.
Joel Madden and Nicole Richie
Jamie Tisch
Katie Holmes
Michael Govan and Katherine Ross
Anne Philbin
Ari Weisman
Cornelia Guest
Christina Aguilera
Ellsworth Kelly
Jami Gertz
Mike and Irena Medavoy
Takashi Murakami
Angelica Huston and Robert Graham
Lauralee Bell and Scott Martin
Susan Bay and Leonard Nimoy
Stephanie Seymour
Pat and Michael York
Frank and Berta Gehry
Katherine Ross, Michael Govan, Mrs. Strick, and Jeremy Strick
Natalia and Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa with Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes
Terri and Michael Smooke
Bettina Korek
Eileen Norton and Thelma Golden
Irena Medavoy, Renby Pittman, and Florence Sloan
James and Victoria Spader
Katherine Ross, Eli Broad, Edyth Broad, Lorenzo Piano, Michael Govan, and Jeff Koons
Chris Burden
Jacqueline Anderson and Mark Tilmchler
Jessica Berman and Susan Comisar
Joann Heyler and friend
Emi Foantana
Maria Bell
Jane and Mark Nathanson
Kelley and Don Johnson
Lisa and Dustin Hoffman
Lauren Hutton, Dennis Hopper, and Victoria Duffy
Maria Shriver and Robert Shriver
Lauren Sanchez
Petra Nemcova
Rosett Delug
Michael Govan, Linda Resnick, and Tom Gregory
Robert Iger and Michael Eisner
Melody Kanschant and Chris Hansen
Michael Govan, Renzo Piano, and Jeff Koons
Sherry Lansing
Stewart and Linda Resnick
Sarah Watson and James Franco
Wendy Starck
Willow Bay, Debbie Attanasio, and Tina Kotick
Terry and Jane Semel
Nancy Daly and Melody Kanschant
Rita Wilson, Tom Ford, and Maria Shriver
Mrs. and Mr. Michael Brand
Rusty Powell and Michael Govan
Shalla McCoy and Larry Gagosian
Terry and Jane Semel with Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes
Victoria and Dennis Hopper with Lauren and Benedict Taschen
Anne Philbin and friend
Last Friday in Los Angeles, Michael Govan, Director and CEO of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and Melody Kanschat, the museum’s president hosted an exclusive luncheon for The President’s Circle Members celebrating the Opening of the Broad Contemporary Art Museum at LACMA.
Angela Gordon and Rachel Speiser
Katie and Cecilia Loftus
Buzz Aldrin and Melody Kanschat
David Streets and Barbara Lazarov
Elizabeth Smith and John Bowsher
Justin Cavin and Kyle DeWoody
Melissa Lilly and Blake Olsen
Peter Bodell
Robert Garlipp and Iris Lee
Kathy Ebrahimian and Renzo Piano
Lois Aldrin
Liz Goldwyn
Candy Spelling and Herb Rappaport
Kim Marshall, Harriette Levan, and Melody Kanschat

Photographs by ©PatrickMcMullan.com

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© 2007 David Patrick Columbia & Jeffrey Hirsch / NewYorkSocialDiary.com