Geffen Interiors Will Be Tinted Red, Blue, Black

David Geffen Galleries. Photo: Iwan Baan

The Los Angeles Times reports that LACMA has begun installing art in its David Geffen Galleries. Architect Peter Zumthor has settled on a plan to tint some of the gray concrete walls in glazes of red, blue, and black. The tinting will affect the interior walls of the 27 enclosed "core" galleries (nicknamed "houses") for light-sensitive work. 

The colors are described as reddish black, Renaissance ultramarine blue, and blackish burgundy. They use the same pigments as traditional artist's colors: lapis lazuli (ultramarine blue) and hematite (Venetian red). Ground to nanoparticles, pigments will be mixed with silica and applied to the walls quickly, to avoid visible brushstrokes. The glazes do not hide the concrete's texture and imperfections, but the colors are pronounced. The Times' Jessica Gelt describes one room, partly installed with early 20-century American art, as "blushing in a deep wine color." (There are no photos, however.)

The nine northernmost rooms will get the black glaze; the nine middle rooms will be blue, and the nine southernmost rooms will be red. 

This is a new technique that's never been used before. 

Old rendering of a core gallery showing gray walls. Rooms like this will be tinted


Comments

Regrettably, lipstick on a pig. The black mold underlayer will never go away.
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Will the art be hung by wires? Screwed onto the wall? Hung on hooks?
Anonymous said…
^ LOL. I've been quite critical for several years of the Zumthor/Govan building. But now that's it's about ready to open to the public, I'm more hopeful than pessimistic. In the past, particularly around 2020, I felt just the opposite.

Regardless whether the physical aspects of Geffen Galleries are lousy or not, the programming of them is already making me slightly annoyed.

An artwork by Todd Gray that really should be in the Broad building (for contemporary art) or in the Resnick gallery (for special temporary exhibits) is going to be inserted into the Geffen: I wouldn't even mind that if the square footage of Zumthor's building were much larger---not even factoring in all the loss of wall space due to the windows.

> Gray’s photo sculpture,
> for example, will be
> adjacent to a gallery
> featuring African art and
> near another with Latin
> American art.

^ Okay, Gray is a black guy, so therefore his artwork just has to be near African art---presumably older and non-contemporary. In turn, black and Latino people are sort of culturally-politically aligned (or not?---but, hey, there are ghettos and barrios!). So being near Latin American art makes sense too?

My hunch is that just as William Pereira's design in 1965 had plenty of qualities of "is this the best they could do?!," Peter Zumthor's design in 2026 (as influenced by Michael Govan) will be a variation of the same thing. Or history repeating itself.

Still, LACMA pre-2020 (in a maze of 1965-1986 structures) was admittedly starting to feel more and more like yesterday's news.
Anonymous said…
I dare say (regrettably) if not for this blog where else would some of you post your ignorant and provincial takes on art and architecture.
It takes no savvy on art and architecture at all to tell that the only color those walls need is tincture of iodine.
Anonymous said…
For those who don't know the Govan museum is the realization of any grad school art theory class syallbus from the last 30 years: no hierarchies, all cultures are equal, decolonize the museum, deconstruction ...which means tear down all privileged binaries, intersectional and of course "histories" plural. The art will serve as illustrations of the post-modern wall texts and audio tours.
I did not know. If what you say is true, are you in favor or opposed, and why? Please say more.
Anonymous said…
^ I don't trust Govan's judgment. He makes me think of an accountant who keeps insisting that 2 plus 2 equals 6.5. Apply that to not just outright financial issues the museum's director is affecting (LACMA is running up the bills), but also creative-aesthetic-political-technical matters he's involved in too.

The last major cultural building with "David Geffen" on its name, a concert hall in NYC, apparently landed with sort of a thud. Will another cultural building with the same name on it - but on the other coast - turn out the same way in 2026?
Anonymous said…
LACMA's website has posted an article about the installation of the artwork by Todd Gray. It includes a photo of the artist and museum employees standing in front of the piece. The gray concrete wall as a background is making me think that exhibits in the Broad building (for contemporary, no less, and presumably also modern after the Geffen opens), will be to the average visitor more friendly or appealing.

Never mind that Gray's work is of a contemporary look or style too, so if any piece should go better with a gray concrete wall (as compared with older art) it should be "Octavia's Gaze."

Not sure if this is an early warning sign about the Geffen---tinted concrete walls or not. So if Pereira's 1965 building was a "tract house," Zumthor's 2026 building may be a "freeway" or "Public Storage."